New York Mets stars Francisco Lindor and Jeff McNeil have let the team know they'd like Pete Alonso back for next season.
With spring training less than two weeks away, the free agent first baseman remains unsigned and seems destined to settle for a contract that will be considerably lower than his expectation, just like the “Boras Four” from last season. Even so, he doesn’t seem desperate enough to accept just anything — reports indicate quite the opposite, in fact.
Flaherty is projected for a three-year, $63 million deal by Spotrac, which is $12 million less than the Mets gave Sean Manaea to return to Queens. But there hasn't been much noise about the offers Flaherty has been fielding, so that might not be enough to get the deal done.
Despite negotiations breaking down, a top MLB insider still feels the New York Mets are the favorite to sign Pete Alonso this winter.
The New York Mets have ... Regardless of the Mets' offseason success, the Los Angeles Dodgers' insane series of signings (such as them adding Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki, Kirby Yates, and Tanner ...
The New York Mets' quest for another deep playoff run has gotten a lot harder. Japanese phenom starting pitcher Roki Sasaki announced on his Instagram account
New York Mets owner Steve Cohen spoke candidly about the ongoing negotiations with Pete Alonso and said he made a "significant offer" to the free agent slugger.
Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner sees what the Los Angeles Dodgers are doing. But that doesn’t mean he’s intent on joining the defending World Series champions in their spending spree.
But that is not what worries Boone. Speaking on WFAN, Boone hinted he was concerned about how this would affect the next collective bargaining negotiations.
It's the Los Angeles Dodgers' world, and we're just living in it. That's what it feels like, at least. The Dodgers won the World Series, and have gotten substan
As has become typical over the last few years, the New York Mets have made a very big splash on the free agency market this offseason, once again showing that they’ll go all out to sign the top players across Major League Baseball.
The New York Yankees used to be the most economically powerful team in Major League Baseball, to the point of being known as the 'Evil Empire' and not many teams and fans liked the