The Yankees can pivot and still sign a top international prospect when the 2025 signing period officially opens on January 15. With the three teams who remain in the running for Sasaki holding onto their International Signing Bonus Pool money, other teams can swoop in and grab some top, young talent.
The New York Yankees are looking to replace Gleyber Torres in the infield and acquiring former San Francisco Giants top prospect Marco Luciano could work.
There's only one way the San Francisco Giants will begin to consistently attract the biggest free agents on the market.
San Francisco Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey shared how he believes the organization eventually can lure a premiere superstar player.
Should the New York Yankees try to get the San Francisco Giants to part ways with this young, promising infielder?
The New York Yankees joined a growing list of teams Monday who have been informed they won't sign the top free agent in this year's international signing class.
Signs point to the strong possibility of a New York Mets-Pete Alonso reunion, in part because the free-agent first baseman's market has not been especially strong. Speaking of which, SNY reports the following: "According to league sources,
DeJong is projected by Spotrac to land a two-year, $9.4 million dollar deal ($4.7M AAV).
The San Francisco Giants, New York Yankees and Texas Rangers have been informed Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki won't be signing with them.
The New York Yankees have reportedly been informed that star Japanese pitcher Rōki Sasaki will not be signing with them this offseason, per Jack Curry of
Like every competent team in baseball, the Giants were in on the hot-shot Japanese free-agent pitcher, who, like Shohei Ohtani before him, is limited to signing a minor-league deal with a Major League team. That massively discounted rate allowed every team to sign him.