Three months into the Orioles’ offseason, the club has yet to make a major splash. Baltimore has addressed several of its roster needs with the signings of outfielder Tyler O’Neill (three years, $49.5 ...
Five years ago, right-hander Corbin Burnes reimagined his arsenal and changed his mental approach. The tweaks helped him develop into one of baseball’s better pitchers, one who surprised the ...
Corbin Burnes, the 30-year-old four-time All Star and 2021 National League Cy Young winner who topped this offseason’s free agent pitching class, stunned the baseball world Friday night by ...
Even though it had been nearly three weeks since ace right-hander Corbin Burnes had agreed with the Arizona Diamondbacks on a ...
As the Diamondbacks signed Corbin Burnes to a massive deal, the star pitcher speaks on his goals for the team.
As they did with Greinke in 2015, the Diamondbacks shocked the baseball world by making an aggressive move for the right player at the right time. With Corbin Burnes, they are betting that he is ...
There weren't many landing spots Corbin Burnes could have ended up with this offseason that would have been better for his Fantasy Baseball value than the Orioles squad he just spent his 2024 with.
D-backs RHP Corbin Burnes has had to evolve throughout his career, and he explained the recent dip in strikeouts as an ...
Objectively, the Baltimore Orioles are one of the best teams in baseball. They won 101 games ... Early Saturday morning, the Orioles lost ace Corbin Burnes to free agency. To the Diamondbacks ...
even the rest of the baseball fans. In a significant offseason move, the Arizona Diamondbacks have reportedly agreed to a six-year, $210 million contract with right-handed pitcher Corbin Burnes.
The Arizona Diamondbacks and starting ace Corbin Burnes agreed a six-year, $210 million contract, sending the NL West into shivers. The Diamondbacks missed out on the postseason after going to the ...
Signing Roki Sasaki and Corbin Burnes could bring some balance to the iconic NL West rivalry, according to Larry Krueger. "I think it’s better for baseball—like, way, way, way better for ...