Remember the movie Jerry Maguire, that great movie from the 1990s about the sports agent who finds professional happiness and true love? One of the iconic lines
It's been an offseason to forget for the Toronto Blue Jays, who have missed out on nearly every big-name free agent they've targeted.
After missing out on Roki Sasaki, the Blue Jays "remain involved in" the starting pitching market, Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith writes.
Just when you think things couldn't get any worse for the Toronto Blue Jays, they hit another new low yesterday. The Blue Jays seemingly started
Zachary D. Rymer of Bleacher Report predicts that Los Angeles will ultimately be the ones to sign him. "This is a boring pick, given that the Dodgers have most often been Sasaki's favorite throughout this process. But that isn't even why they're also the sensible pick," Rymer wrote.
While the Dodgers, Padres and Blue Jays were battling it out for Roki Sasaki, the defending World Series champs seem to have won.
A potential free agent option for the New York Mets, outfielder Anthony Santander, agreed to a five-year, $92.5 million deal, with the Toronto Blue Jays on Mond
Japanese pitching phenom Roki Sasaki is joining the Los Angeles Dodgers on a minor-league deal. Sasaki announced the decision himself in an Instagram post on Friday. Sasaki will receive a signing bonus of $6.5 million, according to reports from The Athletic's Fabian Ardaya and ESPN's Alden González.
Step aside New York Yankees, there's a new evil empire in Major League Baseball. The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the reigns as MLB's most hated team, and for good reason. Twenty-nine fan bases are incredibly jealous of one of the best teams we've seen in recent memory, at least on paper.
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 A
Kirby Yates is joining the Los Angeles Dodgers' bullpen just two days after the club went out and signed another All-Star closer in Tanner Scott.