New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman did a lot this offseason to make his team more well-rounded — and potentially better — in the aftermath of losing Juan Soto to the New York Mets via free agency. But the flurry of moves might have exposed a different soft spot in their roster.
The Mets hosted their “Amazin’ Day” fan event at Citi Field on Saturday — a yearly tradition designed to give Mets fans early access to players and autograph sessions ahead of the new season. However, one huge aspect was missing from this year’s Amazin’ Day: Juan Soto.
Several weeks ago, the New York Mets signed the largest contract in MLB history when they signed Dominican Juan Soto to a 15-year, $765 million deal. The question is whether they w
Cease is set to earn just under $14 million in the coming season and will be heading to free agency in 2026. Though the 29-year-old is coming off a strong season where he had a 3.47 ERA with 224 strikeouts in 33 starts, the Mets already paid a high cost to land Soto.
Weeks after Juan Soto signed a monster 15-year, $765 million contract with the Mets, there was still a buzz among his new teammates.
One MLB executive believes that Juan Soto's decision to leave the New York Yankees for the New York Mets in free agency on a 15-year, $765 million deal
The only move that left the industry scratching its heads, however, was the December deal that sent catcher Jose Trevino to the Cincinnati Reds in exchange for right-handed reliever Fernando Cruz and catcher Alex Jackson. ESPN MLB writer Jorge Castillo explained this on a recent episode of the “Baseball Tonight” podcast.
Mets owner Steve Cohen has publically made it clear he only wants the Polar Bear back on his terms. David Stearns, New York’s president of baseball operations, has internal options ready to replace Alonso in the scenario he signs elsewhere. However, the Mets could use Alonso’s bat in 2025.
The Major League Baseball season is months away but fans and players for the New York Mets got the party started early on Saturday, celebrating the arrival of generational hitting talent Juan Soto ahead of their 2025 campaign.
The deep freeze enveloping New York is symbolic of what’s going on between the Mets and Scott Boras over Pete Alonso, and it really is quite amazing how the euphoria over their$765 million Juan Soto deal has dissipated so much in just six weeks: Boras is scrambling mightily to find deals remotely close to his initial asking prices for Alonso — and his other high profile client Alex
Earlier this offseason, the New York Mets signed superstar free agent Juan Soto to a 15-year deal worth $765 million. Here's the breakdown of how much Soto will make per year, per hour, per minute and more.