Carlos Correa’s $200 million deal with the Twins came after agreements with the San Francisco Giants and New York Mets came apart.
Author: Gabe Lacques, USA TODAY
Carlos Correa’s free agency was MLB’s never-ending saga. Now comes the fallout.
Carlos Correa’s six-year, $200 million agreement with the Minnesota Twins may be the most unprecedented free agency dalliance in major league history.
Trevor Bauer won’t be missed if he’s pitched his last MLB game | Opinion
Bauer, the 2020 NL Cy Young winner, was designated for assignment by the Dodgers on Friday after serving a 194-game suspension.
Mets, Carlos Correa aim to preserve $315 million deal after physical exam issues arise
The Mets have expressed concern over imaging around a lower leg injury that Correa suffered as a minor leaguer with the Astros in 2014.
Dodgers pitcher Trevor Bauer reinstated, MLB suspension reduced to 194 games by arbitrator
Bauer hasn’t pitched in the majors since June 2021 and now the Dodgers must decide whether or not to put him back on their roster.
From New York to San Francisco, Mets’ stunning Carlos Correa coup is deal of A-Rod proportions
Carlos Correa was thought to a deal with the San Francisco Giants, but instead will sign a 12-year, $315 million contract with the Mets.
With superstar free agents off the board, who’s ahead of the game in MLB’s wild, wild winter?
A total of $2.15 billion was committed to just 10 players during November and December combined. A division-by-division look at where teams stand.
Dansby Swanson or bust? Shortstop’s free agent move can make or break these teams’ winter
Dansby Swanson went from No. 4 of the “big four” shortstops available on the market to holding all the cards.
The 40-year-old shortstop: How MLB’s new math drives lengthy megadeals for $300 million men
In winter of wild spending, MLB is suddenly dotted with decadelong commitments to elite players, bucking a trend that had chilled free agent market.
Blue Jays sign Chris Bassitt to three-year, $63 million deal as starting pitching market narrows
The winter market for starting pitchers has narrowed after Chris Bassitt agreed on a three-year, $63 million contract with the Toronto Blue Jays.