The Los Angeles Dodgers made yet another splash move this winter that has added more strength to their bullpen. Dodgers
After a flurry of moves earlier in the offseason, the New York Yankees have been dormant for almost a month. According to Joel Sherman of the New York Post, the
The New York Yankees are already flirting with MLB’s top competitive balance tax threshold, set at $301 million for 2025. That means some steep financial penalties, so the organization is trying to stay below that number.
The New York Yankees should be spending more of their money, according to one MLB insider. ESPN reporter Jeff Passan joined The Michael Kay Show and ripped the Yankees' lack of spending this offseason.
The Dodgers continue to spend in free agency, officially signing reliever Kirby Yates. But it is a different deal than originally reported.
Before landing Yates, the Dodgers agreed to terms with former Padres closer Tanner Scott on a four-year, $72 million deal. And before that, they brought back Blake Treinen on a two-year, $22 million deal.
The Dodgers have been spending a lot of money on stars like Shohei Ohtani and Roki Sasaki and other teams are frustrated by it.
Concern is mounting about a potential MLB work stoppage following the 2026 season, largely due to the Los Angeles Dodgers' massive spending.
The New York Yankees have responded nicely to the crushing blow that was Juan Soto departing for their crosstown rivals by acquiring players like Max Fried, Dev
Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner said it is "difficult" for other teams to keep up with the Dodgers' offseason spending.
Forbes' list of most valuable sports teams in the world ranked the New York Yankees at the third spot overall at $7.
The recent massive spending by the big-market Dodgers and Mets and the ensuing criticism of Major League Baseball’s economic system has led some bright folks to recycle a familiar defense that, as far it goes,