The Los Angeles Dodgers won the World Series in 2024 and appear to be even better positioned in 2025, thanks to what has a chance to be a historically good pitching staff led by Tyler Glasnow, Blake Snell and Roki Sasaki.
A week after his upcoming deal was first reported, Yates has reached a one-year deal with Los Angeles, per MLB.com's Mark Feinsand. He'll be paid $13 million with a potential $1 million bonus if he reached 55 appearances, per ESPN's Jeff Passan.
Blake Snell joined Tyler Galsnow in the Los Angeles Dodgers rotation this year, with former Rays infielder Brian O'Grady reckoning both pitchers are worth the money spent on them.
The San Diego Padres are shopping right-hander Michael King. Mike Axisa of CBS Sports has the Giants as one of six "bubble teams' that are in need of rotation help.
It turns out the Los Angeles Dodgers aren't the only team in the NL West permitted to make offseason moves. According to Dan Hayes and Dennis Lin of
When Roki Sasaki announced he was signing with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black reacted just liike the rest of us.
Reliever Tanner Scott's $72 million, four-year contract was finalized Thursday by the Los Angeles Dodgers, raising the World Series champions' offseason spending to $452 million on eight players.
The Toronto Blue Jays, who have repeatedly struck out on top free agents two offseasons in a row, have been the most heavily rumored suitor of late. The San Francisco Giants, too, have long sought a big bopper and could use a first baseman.
The offseason keeps getting worse for the San Diego Padres – and better for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Three of the top four teams in the National League West hav
The Los Angeles Dodgers didn't just snatch the championship from New York Yankees, they also stole a major crown from them. The post How Dodgers Methodically Dismantled Their Biggest National League Threat,
Baking in the baseball oven right one is one huge concept—the salary cap. The post Insider Sells Out Reluctant MLB Owners for Ruining Baseball & Not the Dodgers appeared first on EssentiallySports.
So the first “true” Ray in Cooperstown — whether elected by the Baseball Writers' Association of America or one of the era committees (that handle older players and non-playing candidates) — likely will be someone who spent most of his career in Tampa Bay and/or did much of his best work there.