After signing the biggest deal in baseball history this offseason, New York Mets outfielder Juan Soto is projected to join an elite group in baseball history in 2025. Per Sarah Langs of MLB.com: Juan Soto is projected for 137 walks per ZiPS that’d be his 5th season with 120+ walks most career seasons with 120+ walks: Barry Bonds: 11 Babe Ruth: 10 Ted Williams: 8 Eddie Yost: 8 Juan Soto: 4 Soto signed a 15-year deal worth $765 million which could tether him to the Mets for the rest of his career.
Spring training is less than a month away, but there is still plenty of MLB offseason business to tackle. A handful of notable players remain on the free-agent market, including Alex Bregman, Pete Alonso and Anthony Santander.
The New York Mets are reportedly squeezing a homegrown star this offseason and that might cause concern for their $765 million superstar.
Now the goal is to reach the Hall of Fame,” Juan Soto said in an interview during a recent Tigres del Licey LIDOM game. The Mets’ new superstar is humble, but the stats don’t lie -- Soto is already on a Hall of Fame-caliber path.
Ever since generational slugger Juan Soto made his departure from the New York Yankees final on December 8, accepting a whopping, 15-year, $765 million contract with the Bronx Bombers’ National League crosstown rivals,
In the immediate aftermath of Juan Soto choosing the Mets, Brian Cashman addressed media and scanned through his roster for areas of need.
SportsLine simulated the entire MLB season 10,000 times and identified 2025 Fantasy baseball sleepers, breakout and busts
A new report details what the Toronto Blue Jays want in a trade package for star slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr.
Some like the spotlight, while some don't. International free agent buzz Roki Sasaki belongs to the latter category, as per insider Buster Olney on Thursday on The Michael Kay Show.
The New York Mets are reportedly targeting Juan Soto's former New York Yankees teammate to strengthen their outfield ahead of the upcoming MLB season.
Takeaways on the teams, players, executives and more that have been among the stories of the offseason — for good reasons, and bad.
And he's been far less successful with his other big-name clients. As Pete Alonso and Alex Bregman continue to twist in the wind, running out of leverage by the day, let's take a look at some players who probably aren't thrilled with their agent right about now.