Clayton Kershaw not quite done pitching, will play for U.S. in World Baseball Classic

CARY, N.C. — Clayton Kershaw isn’t done pitching just yet, agreeing to join the U.S. team for this year’s World Baseball Classic.

A left-hander who turns 38 two days after the March 17 championship game, Kershaw announced last September that he was retiring at the end of the season, his 18th in a stellar career for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He won his third World Series title and finished 223-96 with a 2.53 ERA and 3,052 strikeouts.

The three-time NL Cy Young Award winner wanted to pitch for the Americans in the 2023 tournament but was prevented because of insurance issues at a time he had a one-year, $20 million contract with the Dodgers.

New Chicago Cubs third baseman Alex Bregman also announced he will join the U.S. team.

Kershaw joins a U.S. pitching staff that includes right-handers David Bednar, Clay Holmes, Griffin Jax, Nolan McLean, Mason Miller, Joe Ryan, Paul Skenes and Logan Webb along with left-handers Tarik Skubal and Gabe Speier.

The American roster also includes catchers Cal Raleigh and Will Smith; infielders Ernie Clement, Gunnar Henderson, Brice Turang and Bobby Witt Jr.; outfielders Byron Buxton, Corbin Carroll, Pete Crow-Armstrong and Aaron Judge; and designated hitter Kyle Schwarber.

The U.S., which lost the 2023 championship game to Japan, opens March 6 against Brazil at Houston, part of a group that also includes Brazil, Britain, Italy and Mexico.

Michael Lorenzen and the Colorado Rockies finalize 1-year, $8 million contract

DENVER — Right-hander Michael Lorenzen and the Colorado Rockies finalized their one-year, $8 million contract.

Lorenzen gets a $7.75 million million salary this year, and the deal includes a $9 million club option for 2027 with a $250,000 buyout plus award bonuses.

Right-hander Bradley Blalock was designated for assignment to open a roster spot.

Lorenzen, 34, was 7-11 with a 4.64 ERA in 26 starts and one relief appearance last year for Kansas City, which guaranteed him $7 million in a one-year deal. He earned an additional $1 million in performance bonuses for innings and games pitched.

Lorenzen struck out a career-high 127 in 141 2/3 innings, but also tied for the major league lead with 12 wild pitches.

Colorado has lost 101 or more games in each of the past three years, including a major league-high 119 in 2025. It’s last winning record was 91-72 in 2018.

Paul DePodesta was hired as Colorado’s president of baseball operations in November, and Warren Schaeffer was promoted to full-time manager after finishing last season as the interim skipper.

The current nucleus for the rebuilding Rockies includes All-Star catcher Hunter Goodman and shortstop Ezequiel Tovar. The team also selected shortstop Ethan Holliday with the No. 4 pick in last year’s amateur draft.

Lorenzen broke into the majors with Cincinnati in 2015. He is 54-55 with a 4.08 ERA in 395 career appearances, also pitching for Texas, Detroit, Philadelphia and the Los Angeles Angels.

Lorenzen was traded from Detroit to Philadelphia on Aug. 1, 2023. He threw a no-hitter in his home debut with the Phillies, striking out five and issuing four walks in a 7-0 victory over Washington.

He would get $100,000 each for winning an MVP award or Cy Young Award and $50,000 for second through fifth in the voting. Lorenzen also would earn $100,000 apiece for BBWAA Reliever of the Year and Rivera/Hoffman Reliever of the Year, and $50,000 for second through fifth in the BBWAA voting and second or third in the Rivera/Hoffman.

He would earn $100,000 for World Series MVP, $75,000 for League Championship Series MVP, $100,000 for Comeback Player of the Year and $25,000 each for All-Star selection and winning a Gold Glove.

One last roundup for Clayton Kershaw: He'll pitch in World Baseball Classic

Los Angeles, Calif., United States - November 03: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw (22) stands on stage at the Dodgers' 2026 World Series victory celebration at Dodger Stadium on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025 in Los Angeles, Calif.. (Carlin Stiehl/For The Times)
Clayton Kershaw stands on stage at the Dodgers' 2025 World Series victory celebration at Dodger Stadium in November. (Carlin Stiehl / For The Times)

On the eve of the Dodgers’ final regular season series at Dodger Stadium, Clayton Kershaw announced his retirement. There would be one final regular season start at home, then one final regular season start at Seattle, then one final World Series appearance at Dodger Stadium, then one final World Series championship celebration at Dodger Stadium.

“I know they’re going to get one more next year,” Kershaw told the crowd, “and I’m going to watch just like all of you.”

This is Hollywood, so get me rewrite. Kershaw did not change his retirement script Thursday, but he did alter it, joining Team USA for the World Baseball Classic.

Team USA opens the World Baseball Classic in Kershaw’s home state of Texas, facing Brazil on March 6. For all that Kershaw has accomplished in his Hall of Fame career — a most valuable player award, three Cy Young awards, three World Series championships, 3,000 strikeouts and a no-hitter among them — he never has participated in the World Baseball Classic.

Read more:Why $100 million in endorsements says Shohei Ohtani is the global face of sport

Kershaw committed to play for Team USA in 2023, saying it would be "probably my last chance to do it." He was unable to secure the insurance required for MLB participants after spending time on the injured list in 2022 because of a back injury.

When Team USA manager Mark DeRosa called, Kershaw thought he would be offered a chance to coach. He said he was excited to play, however he might be used.

"I just want to be the insurance policy," Kershaw told MLB Network. "If anybody needs a breather, or if they need me to pitch back-to-back-to-back, or if they don’t need me to pitch at all, I’m just there to be there. I just want to be a part of this group.

"I learned a long time ago, you just want to be a part of great things."
 

At the height of his career, Kershaw would have been an easy choice to start the most important games for Team USA. But the Team USA roster features Cy Young winners Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubal as well as top starters Logan Webb and Joe Ryan, so Kershaw appears more likely to make any appearances out of the bullpen.

That is how the Dodgers used him in the postseason. Kershaw made two relief appearances during their championship run, most memorably in the 12th inning of Game 3 of the World Series. The Toronto Blue Jays had the bases loaded with two out, and Kershaw came in to retire Nathan Lukes on a ground ball, in a dramatic eight-pitch at-bat.

Edgardo Henriquez and Will Klein combined to follow Kershaw with six scoreless innings, and the Dodgers won in the 18th inning — their only World Series victory at Dodger Stadium — on a home run by Freddie Freeman.

This will be the sixth World Baseball Classic. Team USA has won once, in 2017 at Dodger Stadium. Japan has won three times, including the most recent tournament in 2023, with Shohei Ohtani striking out then-Angels teammate Mike Trout for the final out.

Kershaw laughed at the thought that he might face Ohtani in this year's WBC, with the tournament on the line.

"I think something will have gone terribly wrong if I have to pitch against Team Japan in the finals or something," he said. "I think we’ve got plenty of guys to get that guy out — and not me. But, if that happens, I’ll be nervous."

Kershaw will join longtime Dodgers catcher Will Smith on Team USA. The WBC finals this year are scheduled for Miami from March 15-17.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets sign No. 2 international prospect Wandy Asigen

The Mets are making a splash in the international market.

Dominican shortstop Wandy Asigen signed with the Mets on Thursday for $3.9 million.

Asigen, 16, had originally agreed to a deal with the Yankees but reversed course to make a deal with the Mets.

It seems like a boon for the Mets as Asigen was ranked as the No. 2 international prospect by MLB Pipeline

"The excitement around Asigen’s prospect profile stems primarily from his special left-handed swing," MLB Pipeline writes. "He has ripped off 110+ mph exit velocities and is repeatedly able to find the barrel during in-game action. Asigen has a knack for creating loft from his frame, something that should allow him to continue to tap into his above-average power as he continues to fill out. The quickness of his hands has evaluators excited about the future potential impact he can have with the bat."

MLB Pipeline has rated the left-handed hitting shortstop with 60 power and a 55 fielding rating. And while his arm strength is "average" at this stage of his development, Asigen's reaction time and speed are touted by evaluators. 

Almost a year ago, the Mets signed shortstop and No. 3 international prospect Elian Peña for a franchise-record $5 million bonuswhen the signing period opened in January 2025. Peña is currently the Mets' No. 9 prospect according to SNY's Joe DeMayo's latest rankings after a solid first year in the Dominican Summer League. 

Phils sign Francisco Renteria as international period opens

Phils sign Francisco Renteria as international period opens originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

International signing day is here, and the Phillies wasted little time making a splash.

Charlotte Varnes of The Athletic reported Thursday that the club has signed 17-year-old outfielder Francisco Renteria out of Venezuela to a $4 million contract.

Renteria, who hails from Maracaibo — the birthplace of Hall of Fame infielder Luis Aparicio — stands 6-foot-3, 200 pounds, and ranks as the No. 3 prospect in the international class, according to MLB Pipeline. He is widely viewed as one of the most complete players available this year.

On MLB’s 80-grade scouting scale, Renteria received the following grades:• Hit: 60

Power: 65

Run: 60

Arm: 55

Field: 60

Overall: 60

The combination of size and athleticism at such a young age has evaluators optimistic about the right-handed hitter’s long-term offensive ceiling. Renteria already shows advanced bat-to-ball skills, and there is confidence that added strength could translate into above-average power as he matures. That power was on display recently in a Home Run Derby in his home country.

MLB.com’s Jesse Borek recently compared elements of Renteria’s offensive profile to current MLB Pipeline No. 1 prospect Konnor Griffin.

Defensively, Renteria’s athleticism gives the Phillies flexibility. He projects as a potential center fielder but could also settle into a corner spot while providing above-average defense.

Thursday does not mark the end of the Phillies’ international activity. The signing period runs through the calendar year (Dec. 15), and eligible players must be at least 16 years old at the time of signing and turn 17 before the following year. Renteria, who was born in January 2009, met that criterion.

Philadelphia entered the signing period with $6,679,200 in international bonus pool money. Renteria ties the club’s largest amateur international signing, as outfielder Jhailyn Ortiz received $4 million back in 2015.

The Phillies have found success in Venezuela before, signing pitchers like Ranger Suárez (2012) and infielder César Hernández, along with current No. 5 organizational prospect Aroon Escobar in 2022. Renteria now becomes the latest high-upside addition to that pipeline.

The club has also been rumored to sign shortstop Juan Parra (No. 39), yet another highly-touted position player from Venezuela.

Giants sign top international prospect, Venezuelan shortstop Luis Hernández

Giants sign top international prospect, Venezuelan shortstop Luis Hernández originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — For a second straight year, the Giants started the international signing period by picking up the best position player available. 

Venezuelan shortstop Luis Hernández signed on Thursday morning during a ceremony at the organization’s Felipe Alou Baseball Academy in the Dominican Republic. Hernández signed exactly one year after Josuar Gonzalez, who already is a top 100 prospect overall and is considered the organization’s second-best prospect. 

Hernández will get a signing bonus of about $5 million, per sources, the second-biggest international bonus in franchise history. The Giants gave Lucius Fox $6 million in 2015 before restrictions were put in place, and Gonzalez signed for just under $3 million a year ago. 

A right-handed hitter, Hernández is the No. 1 player on both the Baseball America and MLB Pipeline boards. He has long been connected to the Giants, who were on him early and had no doubts in recent months that Hernández would sign. 

“He is so mature for his age as a player,” senior director of international scouting Joe Salermo said recently. “He can play short with plus skills, he’s a plus hitter, he’s going to have plus power. The only thing you can knock him for is he’s an average runner, but the way he controls the game is incredible for a younger kid.”

Hernández vaulted to the top of the class in part because of an eye-opening performance in a professional league in Venezuela last summer. Playing against some former big leaguers and pitchers who were a decade older than him, the teenager hit .346 and struck out just 11 times in 114 plate appearances. 

Salermo visits Venezuela four or five times a year and the Giants have also had a good relationship with the Carlos Guillen Academy in Maracay, where Hernández trains. The longtime big league shortstop played on the Seattle Mariners with Randy Winn, who now runs the Giants’ player development department

“Our evaluators [in Venezuela] did a really good job of identifying the player and feeling comfortable with the player,” Salermo said. 

The Giants came away impressed not just with Hernández’s physical skills, but also his makeup. Because he’s so advanced at the plate, it’s possible that he will skip the Dominican Summer League and go straight to Arizona this summer to begin his professional career. 

The Hernández signing will continue to add to a farm system that is on the rise. In addition to Gonzalez and Hernández, the Giants will add the No. 4 overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft this July after getting lucky in December’s lottery. Now that he’s officially a Giant, Hernández joins one of the best groups of young middle infielders in the minors. 

Scouts also are high on Jhonny Level, signed out of Venezuela in 2024. In the first round of last year’s draft, the Giants took Tennessee infielder Gavin Kilen. When Bryce Eldridge graduates from prospect lists this summer, it’s possible that the organization’s top four prospects will be middle infielders, including three teenagers. 

The two likely leading the way — Gonzalez and Hernández — come with similar rankings but bring different traits. Gonzalez draws Francisco Lindor comps and is a more athletic and flashier player with what is considered a higher ceiling. Hernández, the Giants believe, has a significantly higher floor. There’s no certainty when dealing with 17-year-olds, but Hernández is considered about as safe a bet as it gets for a player his age.

“It’s amazing how these two guys are totally different, but we feel that they can both play a premium position,” Salermo said. “We’re excited to see it.”

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Fantasy baseball dynasty rankings: Rotoworld's Top 500 players for 2025 MLB season

Dynasty leagues are unique because they ask us to predict the future with a confidence we rarely apply to our real lives. We convince ourselves we know which 19-year-old prospect will blossom into a superstar, which 31-year-old slugger will age gracefully, and which team context will still matter two seasons from now — even though the sport keeps reminding us that everything is temporary and nothing is linear. And that’s exactly why it’s so addicting.

Rotoworld’s Top 500 Dynasty Rankings exist at that intersection of certainty and delusion: a snapshot of what feels true right now, calibrated against what history keeps telling us we’re probably wrong about. Whether you’re chasing a title or tearing it down to the studs, this list evaluates long-term fantasy value through talent, trajectory, stability, volatility, and opportunity — all wrapped in the understanding that the dynasty landscape can transform overnight.

If you’re looking for a compass in a universe built on chaos, this is it — at least until everything changes again.

⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Note: Rankings updated as of January 15

RankPlayerPositionTeamAgeLevelETAMiLB
1 Shohei Ohtani UT, SP LAD 31 MLB
2 Bobby Witt Jr. SS KC 25 MLB
3 Juan Soto OF NYM 27 MLB
4 Elly De La Cruz SS CIN 23 MLB
5 Ronald Acuña Jr. OF ATL 28 MLB
6 Corbin Carroll OF AZ 25 MLB
7 Aaron Judge OF NYY 33 MLB
8 Tarik Skubal SP DET 29 MLB
9 Gunnar Henderson SS BAL 24 MLB
10 Paul Skenes SP PIT 23 MLB
11 Julio Rodríguez OF SEA 25 MLB
12 Fernando Tatis Jr. OF SD 27 MLB
13 Kyle Tucker OF FA 29 MLB
14 Junior Caminero 3B TB 22 MLB
15 Nick Kurtz 1B ATH 23 MLB
16 Jackson Chourio OF MIL 22 MLB
17 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 1B TOR 26 MLB
18 Roman Anthony OF BOS 21 MLB
19 José Ramírez 3B CLE 33 MLB
20 Konnor Griffin SS PIT 19 AA 2026 1
21 Garrett Crochet SP BOS 26 MLB
22 James Wood OF WSH 23 MLB
23 Wyatt Langford OF TEX 24 MLB
24 Jazz Chisholm Jr. 2B, 3B NYY 27 MLB
25 Zach Neto SS LAA 25 MLB
26 Yordan Alvarez OF HOU 28 MLB
27 Pete Alonso 1B BAL 31 MLB
28 Francisco Lindor SS NYM 32 MLB
29 Cal Raleigh C SEA 29 MLB
30 Yoshinobu Yamamoto SP LAD 27 MLB
31 Kevin McGonigle 3B, SS DET 21 AA 2026 2
32 Pete Crow-Armstrong OF CHC 24 MLB
33 Ketel Marte 2B AZ 32 MLB
34 Jackson Merrill OF SD 22 MLB
35 Logan Gilbert SP SEA 28 MLB
36 Hunter Brown SP HOU 27 MLB
37 CJ Abrams SS WSH 25 MLB
38 Rafael Devers 1B SF 29 MLB
39 Cristopher Sánchez SP PHI 29 MLB
40 Manny Machado 3B SD 33 MLB
41 Trea Turner SS PHI 32 MLB
42 Eury Pérez SP MIA 22 MLB
43 Kyle Schwarber UT PHI 33 MLB
44 Jesús Made 2B, SS MIL 18 AA 2027 3
45 Bryce Harper 1B PHI 33 MLB
46 Riley Greene OF DET 25 MLB
47 Corey Seager SS TEX 31 MLB
48 Matt Olson 1B ATL 31 MLB
49 Hunter Greene SP CIN 26 MLB
50 JJ Wetherholt 2B, SS STL 23 AAA 2026 4
51 Logan Webb SP SF 29 MLB
52 Josh Naylor 1B SEA 28 MLB
53 Mookie Betts SS, OF LAD 33 MLB
54 Samuel Basallo C BAL 21 MLB - 5
55 Bryan Woo SP SEA 26 MLB
56 Mason Miller RP SD 27 MLB
57 Chase Burns SP CIN 23 MLB - 6
58 Jeremy Peña SS HOU 28 MLB
59 Brent Rooker OF ATH 31 MLB
60 Joe Ryan SP MIN 29 MLB
61 Jacob deGrom SP TEX 37 MLB
62 Chris Sale SP ATL 36 MLB
63 Freddie Freeman 1B LAD 36 MLB
64 Leo De Vries SS ATH 19 AA 2026 7
65 Cody Bellinger OF FA 30 MLB
66 George Kirby SP SEA 28 MLB
67 Bo Bichette SS FA 28 MLB
68 Blake Snell SP LAD 33 MLB
69 Spencer Schwellenbach SP ATL 25 MLB
70 Nolan McLean SP NYM 24 MLB - 8
71 Trey Yesavage SP TOR 22 MLB - 9
72 Austin Riley 3B ATL 28 MLB
73 Jacob Misiorowski SP MIL 24 MLB
74 Sebastian Walcott SS TEX 20 AA 2026 10
75 Jarren Duran OF BOS 29 MLB
76 Brice Turang 2B MIL 26 MLB
77 Edward Florentino OF PIT 19 A- 2027 11
78 Luke Keaschall 2B MIN 23 MLB
79 Cole Ragans SP KC 28 MLB
80 Walker Jenkins OF MIN 21 AAA 2026 12
81 Ben Rice C, 1B NYY 27 MLB
82 Oneil Cruz OF PIT 27 MLB
83 William Contreras C MIL 28 MLB
84 Max Clark OF DET 21 AA 2026 13
85 Randy Arozarena OF SEA 31 MLB
86 Freddy Peralta SP MIL 29 MLB
87 Seiya Suzuki OF CHC 31 MLB
88 Aidan Miller SS PHI 21 AAA 2026 14
89 Tyler Soderstrom 1B, OF ATH 24 MLB
90 Maikel Garcia 3B KC 26 MLB
91 Geraldo Perdomo SS AZ 26 MLB
92 Vinnie Pasquantino 1B KC 28 MLB
93 Jackson Holliday 2B BAL 22 MLB
94 Max Fried SP NYY 32 MLB
95 Jordan Westburg 3B BAL 27 MLB
96 Michael Busch 1B CHC 27 MLB
97 Byron Buxton OF MIN 32 MLB
98 Edwin Diaz RP LAD 32 MLB
99 Zack Wheeler SP PHI 35 MLB
100 Luis Peña 2B, 3B, SS MIL 19 A+ 2027 15
101 Cam Schlitter SP NYY 25 MLB
102 Lawrence Butler OF ATH 25 MLB
103 Dylan Cease SP TOR 30 MLB
104 Michael Harris II OF ATL 25 MLB
105 Emmet Sheehan SP LAD 26 MLB
106 Dylan Crews OF WSH 24 MLB
107 Bryce Eldridge 1B SF 21 MLB - 16
108 Shea Langeliers C ATH 28 MLB
109 Kyle Bradish SP BAL 29 MLB
110 Josue De Paula OF LAD 20 AA 2026 17
111 Agustín Ramírez C MIA 24 MLB
112 Jesús Luzardo SP PHI 28 MLB
113 Sal Stewart 1B, 3B CIN 22 MLB - 18
114 Gerrit Cole SP NYY 35 MLB
115 Andy Pages OF LAD 28 MLB
116 Spencer Strider SP ATL 27 MLB
117 Christian Yelich OF MIL 33 MLB
118 Pablo Lopez SP MIN 30 MLB
119 Jose Altuve 2B, OF HOU 35 MLB
120 Drake Baldwin C ATL 24 MLB
121 Tyler Glasnow SP LAD 32 MLB
122 Andrés Muñoz RP SEA 27 MLB
123 Isaac Paredes 3B HOU 27 MLB
124 Jhoan Duran RP PHI 28 MLB
125 Carson Benge OF NYM 23 AAA 2026 19
126 Framber Valdez SP FA 32 MLB
127 Thomas White SP MIA 21 AAA 2026 20
128 Rainiel Rodriguez C STL 19 A+ 2028 21
129 Alex Bregman 3B CHC 31 MLB
130 Eduardo Quintero OF LAD 20 A+ 2027 22
131 Colt Emerson SS SEA 20 AAA 2026 23
132 Willy Adames SS SF 30 MLB
133 Michael King SP SD 30 MLB
134 Jacob Wilson SS ATH 23 MLB
135 Ozzie Albies 2B ATL 29 MLB
136 Bryce Rainer SS DET 20 A- 2028 24
137 Bubba Chandler SP PIT 23 MLB - 25
138 Iván Herrera UT STL 25 MLB
139 Nick Lodolo SP CIN 28 MLB
140 Dylan Beavers OF BAL 24 MLB - 26
141 Will Smith C LAD 30 MLB
142 Caleb Bonemer SS, 3B CWS 20 A+ 2028 27
143 Payton Tolle SP BOS 23 MLB - 28
144 Noelvi Marte 3B, OF CIN 24 MLB
145 Kyle Stowers OF MIA 28 MLB
146 Jasson Domínguez OF NYY 23 MLB
147 Ceddanne Rafaela 2B, OF BOS 25 MLB
148 Joshua Baez OF STL 22 AA 2026 29
149 Jac Caglianone OF KC 23 MLB
150 Roki Sasaki SP LAD 24 MLB - 30
151 Addison Barger 3B, OF TOR 26 MLB
152 Zyhir Hope OF LAD 21 AA 2026 31
153 Cade Smith RP CLE 26 MLB
154 Jonah Tong SP NYM 22 MLB - 32
155 Matt Shaw 3B CHC 24 MLB
156 Nick Pivetta SP SD 33 MLB
157 Cam Smith OF HOU 23 MLB
158 Kevin Gausman SP TOR 35 MLB
159 Hunter Goodman C COL 26 MLB
160 Nico Hoerner 2B CHC 28 MLB
161 Luis Robert Jr. OF CWS 28 MLB
162 Carlos Rodon SP NYY 33 MLB
163 Jonathan Aranda 1B TB 27 MLB
164 Tatsuya Imai SP HOU 27 MLB 2026 33
165 Cade Horton SP CHC 24 MLB
166 Royce Lewis 3B MIN 26 MLB
167 Travis Bazzana 2B CLE 23 AAA 2026 34
168 Shane Bieber SP TOR 30 MLB
169 Gavin Williams SP CLE 26 MLB
170 Jo Adell OF LAA 26 MLB
171 MacKenzie Gore SP WSH 27 MLB
172 Ryan Waldschmidt OF AZ 23 AA 2026 35
173 Josue Briceño C DET 21 AA 2026 36
174 Brandon Woodruff SP MIL 33 MLB
175 Teoscar Hernández OF LAD 33 MLB
176 Mike Trout OF LAA 34 MLB
177 George Springer OF TOR 36 MLB
178 Josuar Gonzalez SS SF 18 DSL 2029 37
179 Adley Rutschman C BAL 28 MLB
180 Josh Hader RP HOU 31 MLB
181 Brandon Nimmo OF TEX 32 MLB
182 Yandy Díaz 1B TB 34 MLB
183 Devin Williams RP NYM 31 MLB
184 Ian Happ OF CHC 31 MLB
185 Jordan Lawlar 3B AZ 23 MLB - 38
186 Francisco Alvarez C NYM 24 MLB
187 Kyle Manzardo 1B CLE 25 MLB
188 Carter Jensen C KC 22 MLB - 39
189 Eugenio Suarez 3B FA 34 MLB
190 Chase DeLauter OF CLE 24 MLB - 40
191 Marcelo Mayer 3B BOS 23 MLB - 41
192 Robbie Ray SP SF 34 MLB
193 Liam Doyle SP STL 21 RK 2026 42
194 Matt Chapman 3B SF 32 MLB
195 JoJo Parker SS TOR 19 RK 2029 43
196 Drew Rasmussen SP TB 30 MLB
197 Tanner Bibee SP CLE 27 MLB
198 Ryan Pepiot SP TB 28 MLB
199 Jett Williams SS, OF NYM 22 AAA 2026 44
200 Kristian Campbell 2B BOS 23 MLB
201 Munetaka Murakami 3B CWS 26 MLB 2026 45
202 Chandler Simpson OF TB 25 MLB
203 Willson Contreras 1B BOS 33 MLB
204 Anthony Volpe SS NYY 24 MLB
205 Jakob Marsee OF MIA 24 MLB
206 Alejandro Kirk C TOR 27 MLB
207 Brenton Doyle OF COL 27 MLB
208 Nathan Eovaldi SP TEX 36 MLB
209 Lazaro Montes OF SEA 21 AA 2027 46
210 Zebby Matthews SP MIN 25 MLB
211 Sonny Gray SP BOS 36 MLB
212 Trevor Story SS BOS 33 MLB
213 Jarlin Susana SP WSH 22 AA 2027 47
214 Masyn Winn SS STL 24 MLB
215 Mike Sirota OF LAD 22 A+ 2027 48
216 Edward Cabrera SP CHC 27 MLB
217 Brody Hopkins SP TB 24 AA 2026 49
218 Mark Vientos 3B NYM 26 MLB
219 Heliot Ramos OF SF 26 MLB
220 Brandon Lowe 2B PIT 31 MLB
221 Gleyber Torres 2B DET 29 MLB
222 Steven Kwan OF CLE 28 MLB
223 Ranger Suárez SP BOS 30 MLB
224 Yainer Diaz C HOU 27 MLB
225 Shota Imanaga SP CHC 32 MLB
226 Jack Flaherty SP DET 30 MLB
227 Kade Anderson SP SEA 21 RK 2026 50
228 Brett Baty 2B, 3B NYM 26 MLB
229 Kaelen Culpepper 2B, 3B, SS MIN 23 AA 2026 51
230 Robby Snelling SP MIA 22 AAA 2026 52
231 Shane Baz SP BAL 26 MLB
232 Andrew Painter SP PHI 22 AAA 2026 53
233 Michael Arroyo 2B SEA 21 AA 2026 54
234 Spencer Torkelson 1B DET 26 MLB
235 Connelly Early SP BOS 23 MLB - 55
236 Braden Montgomery OF CWS 22 AA 2026 56
237 Dansby Swanson SS CHC 32 MLB
238 Ryan Sloan SP SEA 20 A+ 2027 57
239 Emmanuel Rodriguez OF MIN 23 AAA 2026 58
240 Jared Jones SP PIT 24 MLB
241 Alfredo Duno C CIN 20 A- 2028 59
242 Corbin Burnes SP AZ 31 MLB
243 Bryce Miller SP SEA 27 MLB
244 Sandy Alcantara SP MIA 30 MLB
245 Kerry Carpenter OF DET 28 MLB
246 Alec Burleson 1B, OF STL 27 MLB
247 Justin Steele SP CHC 30 MLB
248 Kyle Teel C CWS 24 MLB
249 Shane McClanahan SP TB 28 MLB
250 Jaxon Wiggins SP CHC 24 AAA 2026 60
251 Dax Kilby SS NYY 19 A- 2029 61
252 Ezequiel Tovar SS COL 24 MLB
253 Matt McLain 2B CIN 26 MLB
254 Grayson Rodriguez SP LAA 26 MLB
255 Taylor Ward OF BAL 32 MLB
256 Eli Willits SS WSH 18 RK 2029 62
257 Wilyer Abreu OF BOS 26 MLB
258 Colson Montgomery SS CWS 24 MLB
259 Travis Sykora SP WSH 21 AA 2027 63
260 Owen Caissie OF MIA 23 MLB - 64
261 Kris Bubic SP KC 28 MLB
262 Trevor Rogers SP BAL 28 MLB
263 Jeff Hoffman RP TOR 33 MLB
264 Bryan Reynolds OF PIT 31 MLB
265 Luis Castillo SP SEA 33 MLB
266 Colton Cowser OF BAL 26 MLB
267 Seth Hernandez SP PIT 19 RK 2029 65
268 Colt Keith 2B, 3B DET 24 MLB
269 Moises Ballesteros C CHC 22 MLB - 66
270 Jhostynxon Garcia OF PIT 23 MLB - 67
271 Luis Perales SP WSH 22 AAA 2026 68
272 Aaron Nola SP PHI 32 MLB
273 Charlie Condon 1B, 3B, OF COL 22 AA 2026 69
274 Matt Wallner OF MIN 28 MLB
275 Xander Bogaerts SS SD 33 MLB
276 Triston Casas 1B BOS 26 MLB
277 Aiva Arquette SS MIA 22 A+ 2027 70
278 Hurston Waldrep SP ATL 24 MLB
279 Sal Frelick OF MIL 25 MLB
280 Jorge Polanco 2B NYM 32 MLB
281 Ryan Helsley RP BAL 31 MLB
282 Carlos Correa SS, 3B HOU 31 MLB
283 Logan O’Hoppe C LAA 26 MLB
284 Zac Gallen SP FA 30 MLB
285 Otto Lopez 2B, SS MIA 27 MLB
286 Gage Jump SP ATH 22 AA 2026 71
287 Trent Grisham OF NYY 29 MLB
288 Salvador Perez C, 1B KC 35 MLB
289 David Bednar RP NYY 31 MLB
290 Jonny Farmelo OF SEA 21 A+ 2027 72
291 Xavier Edwards 2B, SS MIA 26 MLB
292 Dalton Rushing C LAD 25 MLB
293 Joe Musgrove SP SD 33 MLB
294 Luis Gil SP NYY 27 MLB
295 Alec Bohm 3B PHI 29 MLB
296 Daulton Varsho OF TOR 29 MLB
297 Andrew Abbott SP CIN 26 MLB
298 Evan Carter OF TEX 23 MLB
299 Anthony Santander OF TOR 31 MLB
300 Kazuma Okamoto 3B TOR 29 MLB 2026 73
301 Justin Crawford OF PHI 22 AAA 2026 74
302 Daylen Lile OF WSH 22 MLB
303 Coby Mayo 1B BAL 24 MLB
304 Franklin Arias SS BOS 20 A+ 2027 75
305 Spencer Jones OF NYY 24 AAA 2026 76
306 Kodai Senga SP NYM 33 MLB
307 Josh Lowe OF TB 28 MLB
308 Gabriel Moreno C AZ 26 MLB
309 Luis García Jr. 2B WSH 25 MLB
310 Ethan Holliday SS COL 19 A- 2028 77
311 Matthew Boyd SP CHC 35 MLB
312 Carson Williams SS TB 22 MLB - 78
313 Adolis García OF PHI 33 MLB
314 Ryne Nelson SP, RP AZ 28 MLB
315 Emil Morales SS LAD 19 A- 2028 79
316 Steele Hall SS CIN 18 RK 2029 80
317 Merrill Kelly SP AZ 37 MLB
318 Daniel Palencia RP CHC 26 MLB
319 Bryson Stott 2B PHI 28 MLB
320 Cooper Pratt SS MIL 21 AA 2026 81
321 Brayan Bello SP BOS 26 MLB
322 Caleb Durbin 3B MIL 26 MLB
323 Jacob Reimer SS NYM 22 AA 2026 82
324 C.J. Kayfus OF CLE 24 MLB - 83
325 Jack Leiter SP TEX 25 MLB
326 Trevor Megill RP MIL 32 MLB
327 Max Muncy 3B LAD 35 MLB
328 Jackson Jobe SP DET 23 MLB
329 Kyson Witherspoon SP BOS 21 RK 2027 84
330 Raisel Iglesias RP ATL 36 MLB
331 Nate George OF BAL 19 A+ 2028 85
332 Logan Henderson SP MIL 24 MLB - 86
333 Aroldis Chapman RP BOS 38 MLB
334 AJ Smith-Shawver SP ATL 23 MLB
335 Abner Uribe RP MIL 25 MLB
336 Ryan Clifford 1B, OF NYM 22 AAA 2026 87
337 Carlos Estévez RP KC 33 MLB
338 Jurickson Profar OF ATL 33 MLB
339 Theo Gillen SS TB 20 A- 2027 88
340 Tommy Edman 2B, OF LAD 30 MLB
341 Ha-Seong Kim SS ATL 30 MLB
342 Pete Fairbanks RP MIA 32 MLB
343 Quinn Priester SP, RP MIL 25 MLB
344 Austin Wells C NYY 26 MLB
345 Casey Mize SP DET 28 MLB
346 George Lombard Jr. SS NYY 20 AA 2027 89
347 Josh Jung 3B TEX 28 MLB
348 Marcus Semien 2B NYM 35 MLB
349 Arjun Nimmala SS TOR 20 A+ 2027 90
350 Jamie Arnold SP ATH 22 RK 2027 91
351 Reynaldo López SP ATL 32 MLB
352 Esmerlyn Valdez 1B, OF PIT 22 AA 2026 92
353 Brandon Pfaadt SP AZ 27 MLB - 93
354 Grant Taylor RP CWS 23 MLB - 94
355 Troy Melton SP DET 25 MLB - 95
356 Spencer Steer 1B CIN 28 MLB
357 Taj Bradley SP MIN 25 MLB
358 Ralphy Velazquez 1B CLE 20 AA 2027 96
359 Kumar Rocker SP TEX 26 MLB
360 Andrew Vaughn 1B MIL 27 MLB
361 Bo Davidson OF SF 23 AA 2027 97
362 Marcell Ozuna UT FA 35 MLB
363 Reese Olson SP DET 26 MLB
364 Luis Morales SP ATH 23 MLB - 98
365 Lars Nootbaar OF STL 28 MLB
366 Christian Walker 1B HOU 34 MLB
367 Griffin Jax RP TB 31 MLB
368 Jonathon Long 1B CHC 24 AAA 2026 99
369 Giancarlo Stanton OF NYY 36 MLB
370 Noah Cameron SP KC 26 MLB
371 Jung Hoo Lee OF SF 27 MLB
372 Brendan Donovan 2B STL 29 MLB
373 Ricky Tiedemann SP TOR 23 AAA 2026 100
374 José Soriano SP LAA 27 MLB
375 Carlos Lagrange SP NYY 22 AA 2028 101
376 Kenley Jansen RP DET 38 MLB
377 A.J. Ewing 2B, OF NYM 21 AA 2027 102
378 TJ Friedl OF CIN 30 MLB
379 Ryan Weathers SP NYY 26 MLB
380 Jordan Beck OF COL 24 MLB
381 Cam Caminiti SP ATL 19 A- 2028 103
382 Jameson Taillon SP CHC 34 MLB
383 Parker Meadows OF DET 26 MLB
384 Aroon Escobar 2B, 3B PHI 21 AA 2027 104
385 Jhonny Level SS SF 18 A- 2028 105
386 Will Warren SP NYY 26 MLB
387 Clay Holmes SP NYM 32 MLB
388 Tyson Lewis SS CIN 20 A- 2028 106
389 Nick Castellanos OF PHI 34 MLB
390 Hagen Smith SP CWS 22 AA 2026 107
391 Jorge Soler OF LAA 34 MLB
392 Emilio Pagan RP CIN 34 MLB
393 Tyler O’Neill OF BAL 30 MLB
394 Ramón Laureano OF SD 31 MLB
395 Gage Wood SP PHI 22 A- 2027 108
396 Mickey Moniak OF COL 27 MLB
397 Héctor Rodríguez OF CIN 21 AAA 2027 109
398 Juneiker Caceres OF CLE 18 A- 2029 110
399 J.T. Realmuto C FA 35 MLB
400 Max Meyer SP MIA 27 MLB
401 Jacob Melton OF TB 25 MLB - 111
402 Reid Detmers RP LAA 26 MLB
403 Gavie Fien SS TEX 19 A- 2029 112
404 Ethan Conrad OF CHC 21 RK 2027 113
405 Zach McKinstry 3B, SS, OF DET 30 MLB
406 Juan Sanchez 3B TOR 18 DSL 2029 114
407 Jake Burger 1B TEX 29 MLB
408 Kyle Finnegan RP DET 34 MLB
409 Jesús Sánchez OF HOU 28 MLB
410 Demetrio Crisantes 2B, 3B AZ 21 A+ 2027 115
411 Esteban Mejia SP BAL 19 A- 2028 116
412 Sean Manaea SP NYM 34 MLB
413 Rhys Hoskins 1B FA 33 MLB
414 Cade Cavalli SP WSH 27 MLB
415 Slade Caldwell OF AZ 19 A+ 2027 117
416 Lenyn Sosa 1B, 2B CWS 26 MLB
417 Robert Suarez RP ATL 35 MLB
418 Angel Genao SS CLE 21 AA 2026 118
419 Dillon Dingler C DET 27 MLB
420 Felnin Celesten SS SEA 20 A+ 2027 119
421 Eduardo Tait C MIN 19 A+ 2028 120
422 Nolan Schanuel 1B LAA 24 MLB
423 Caden Scarborough SP TEX 20 A+ 2027 121
424 Justin Wrobleski SP LAD 25 MLB
425 Elmer Rodriguez SP NYY 22 AAA 2026 122
426 Seth Lugo SP KC 36 MLB
427 Ryan Mountcastle 1B BAL 29 MLB
428 Chad Patrick SP MIL 27 MLB
429 Spencer Horwitz 1B PIT 28 MLB
430 Kayson Cunningham SS AZ 19 A- 2029 123
431 Chase Meidroth 2B, SS CWS 24 MLB
432 Andrew Fischer 1B, 3B MIL 21 A+ 2027 124
433 Colby Thomas OF ATH 25 MLB - 125
434 Aidan Smith OF TB 21 A+ 2027 126
435 Joey Ortiz SS MIL 27 MLB
436 Noah Schultz SP CWS 22 AAA 2027 127
437 Luis Arraez 1B FA 28 MLB
438 Ronny Mauricio 3B NYM 24 MLB
439 Bailey Ober SP MIN 30 MLB
440 Jack Perkins SP ATH 26 MLB - 128
441 Ryan O’Hearn 1B, OF PIT 32 MLB
442 Shane Smith SP PIT 25 MLB
443 Brock Wilken 3B MIL 23 AA 2026 129
444 Cody Ponce SP, RP TOR 31 MLB
445 Brandon Sproat SP NYM 25 MLB - 130
446 Josh Bell 1B MIN 33 MLB
447 Brooks Lee 2B, 3B, SS MIN 25 MLB
448 Alejandro Rosario SP TEX 24 A+ 2027 131
449 Rhett Lowder SP CIN 24 AAA - 132
450 Andres Gimenez 2B TOR 27 MLB
451 Miguel Vargas 1B, 3B CWS 26 MLB
452 Bo Naylor C CLE 26 MLB
453 Elian Peña 2B, SS NYM 18 DSL 2029 133
454 Christian Oppor SP CWS 21 A+ - 134
455 JR Ritchie SP ATL 22 AAA 2026 135
456 José Caballero 2B, 3B, SS, OF NYY 29 MLB
457 Tanner Scott RP LAD 31 MLB
458 Harry Ford C WSH 23 MLB - 136
459 David Hagaman SP AZ 22 A+ - 137
460 Parker Messick SP CLE 25 MLB - 138
461 Ian Seymour SP TB 27 MLB
462 Harrison Bader OF FA 31 MLB
463 Cole Young 2B SEA 22 MLB
464 Austin Hays OF FA 30 MLB
465 Alex Freeland SS LAD 24 MLB - 139
466 Cam Collier 1B CIN 21 AA 2027 140
467 Ike Irish C BAL 22 A- 2028 141
468 Slade Cecconi SP CLE 26 MLB
469 Brady House 3B WSH 22 MLB
470 Josh Adamczewski 2B MIL 20 A+ 2028 142
471 Trey Gibson SP BAL 23 AAA 2026 143
472 Xavier Isaac 1B TB 22 AA 2027 144
473 Dauri Fernandez 3B CLE 19 A- 2029 145
474 Joey Cantillo SP CLE 26 MLB
475 Kevin Alcantara OF CHC 23 AAA - 146
476 Callan Moss 1B PIT 22 A+ 2028 148
477 Lucas Giolito SP FA 31 MLB
478 Luke Dickerson SS WSH 20 A- 2028 148
479 Leonardo Bernal C STL 22 AA 2027 149
480 Ernie Clement 2B, 3B, SS TOR 30 MLB
481 River Ryan SP LAD 27 MLB - 150
482 Brady Singer SP CIN 29 MLB
483 Tyler Bremner SP LAA 21 RK 2028 151
484 Kruz Schoolcraft SP SD 18 A- 2029 152
485 Kendall George OF LAD 21 A+ 2028 153
486 Kemp Alderman OF MIA 23 AAA 2027 154
487 Christian Scott SP NYM 26 AAA - 155
488 Tommy Troy 2B AZ 24 AAA 2026 156
489 Seaver King SS WSH 22 AA 2027 157
490 Jace LaViolette OF CLE 22 RK 2027 158
491 Bryce Cunningham SP NYY 23 A+ 2027 159
492 Brandon Clarke SP STL 22 A+ 2027 160
493 Ryan Johnson SP LAA 23 A+ - 161
494 Daniel Espino SP CLE 25 AAA 2026 162
495 Luis De Leon SP BAL 22 AA 2027 163
496 Brad Keller RP PHI 30 MLB
497 Alejandro Osuna OF TEX 23 MLB
498 Braxton Ashcraft SP, RP PIT 26 MLB
499 Mike Burrows SP HOU 26 MLB
500 Victor Robles OF SEA 28 MLB
501 Tony Blanco Jr. 1B PIT 20 A- 2028 164

Just Missed: Denzer Guzman, Christian Encarnacion-Strand, Max Anderson, Brice Matthews, Denzel Clarke, Jordan Walker, Félix Bautista, Tyler Mahle, Dennis Santana, Isaac Collins, Cedric Mullins, Riley O’Brien, Cristian Javier, Adrian Morejon, Joe Mack and Braylon Payne

All ages are as of Opening Day — March 25, 2026 —

Report: Left-hander Ranger Suárez and Boston Red Sox agree to 5-year contract, $130 million

Left-hander Ranger Suárez and the Boston Red Sox agreed Wednesday to a $130 million, five-year contract, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the agreement had not been announced.

An All-Star in 2024, Suárez had spent his entire professional career with the Philadelphia Phillies after signing at age 16 in April 2012. The 30-year-old from Venezuela pitched out of the bullpen early on but has been a steady performer and mostly a reliable winner since moving into the rotation exclusively in 2022.

The deal is the first for a major league free agent for the Red Sox this season. It comes days after they were outbid for Alex Bregman by the Chicago Cubs, who gave the incumbent Boston third baseman a five-year, $175 million deal with a no-trade clause that the Red Sox wouldn’t offer.

Instead, Chief Baseball Officer Craig Breslow bolstered the pitching staff with a lefty who doesn’t throw hard but limits home runs and keeps batters off balance by changing speeds and hitting the corners.

Suárez was 12-8 with a 3.20 ERA last season in 26 starts covering a career-high 157 1/3 innings, then became a free agent for the first time and turned down a $22,025,000 qualifying offer from Philadelphia in November.

His calling card is consistency. Suárez went 8-5 with a 1.36 ERA and four saves in 12 starts and 27 relief outings in 2021. He finished 10-7 with a 3.65 ERA over 29 starts and 155 1/3 innings the following season, then fell off to 4-6 with a 4.18 ERA across 22 starts in 2023, when he landed on the injured list for a left elbow strain and later for a right hamstring strain. But he bounced right back the next year, going 12-8 with a 3.46 ERA in 27 starts and 150 2/3 innings.

During that stretch, he was a big reason the Phillies made four straight playoff appearances from 2022-25, winning one National League pennant and back-to-back NL East titles the past two years.

Suárez has been outstanding on the mound in postseason play, too, going 4-1 with a 1.48 ERA and one save in eight starts and three relief appearances totaling 42 2/3 innings.

Overall in eight regular seasons in the majors, he is 53-37 with a 3.38 ERA, two shutouts and four saves in 187 games, including 119 starts. He has struck out 705 batters and walked 240 in 762 innings.

Back trouble has been an issue occasionally. Three times in the past four seasons Suárez spent time on the IL for lower back spasms, soreness or stiffness.

He joins a rotation projected to include left-hander Garrett Crochet, right-handers Sonny Gray and Brayan Bello and perhaps rookie Payton Tolle or Connelly Early.

Because Suárez turned down the qualifying offer, the Phillies get an additional draft pick after the fourth round of the amateur draft this July as compensation.

Red Sox make free-agent splash with Ranger Suarez signing: Report

Red Sox make free-agent splash with Ranger Suarez signing: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

At long last, the Boston Red Sox have signed a free agent.

The Red Sox are acquiring left-handed pitcher Ranger Suarez on a five-year, $130 million contract, according to multiple reports. The New York Post’s Jon Heyman was the first to report Suarez’s signing.

Suarez is the first MLB-level free agent to sign with Boston this offseason. While the Red Sox have made several trades this winter, they’ve whiffed on a number of free agents, most notably Alex Bregman, who signed a reported five-year, $175 million contract with the Chicago Cubs.

Boston reportedly offered Bregman a deal worth $165 million over five years, so chief baseball officer Craig Breslow essentially has pivoted to invest that money in Suarez.

The 30-year-old left-hander spent his first eight MLB seasons with the Philadelphia Phillies and made an All-Star team in 2024. He posted a 3.20 ERA and 1.22 WHIP last season with a 12-8 record and 151 strikeouts in 157.1 innings and also boasts an impressive postseason track record, with a 1.48 ERA over 42.2 playoff innings.

The addition of Suarez gives the Red Sox a very competitive projected starting rotation for 2026 that should feature three new additions:

Young hurlers Payton Tolle, Connelly Early and Kyle Harrison could be in the mix for that fifth rotation spot, as well.

The Red Sox still could use another starting-caliber infielder after missing out on Bregman, but Suarez is a significant addition to the rotation that should make fans feel slightly better about the offseason.

Ranger Suárez reportedly inks five-year deal with Red Sox

Ranger Suárez reportedly inks five-year deal with Red Sox originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Ranger Suárez is reportedly signing with the Red Sox in free agency, leaving the organization he first joined as a teenager. Jon Heyman of the New York Post was the first to break the news. 

The five-year deal is worth $130 million, according to Bob Nightengale of USA Today. The deal has no opt-outs or deferrals.

In 2025, Suárez posted an 11-6 record with a 3.20 ERA and 151 strikeouts, marking his fourth season in the last five with an ERA under 4.00.

His consistency made him an anchor in multiple roles — long reliever, swingman, rotation mainstay, and, most notably, a postseason go-to.

Through 11 postseason appearances (eight starts), Suárez owns a 1.48 ERA, one of the lowest in MLB history for pitchers with more than 40 playoff innings.

Since joining the Phillies rotation full-time back in 2022, though, he failed to make 30 starts in a season once. Durability is not his strong suit.

Dave Dombrowski acknowledged the financial reality at the season’s end when discussing the club’s free agents, noting the Phillies “don’t have unlimited [funds]” with large contracts already committed to Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola and Taijuan Walker. The club has also expressed interest in an extension with Jesús Luzardo.

The Red Sox, on the other hand, were rumored to pursue Bo Bichette in free agency after they failed to re-sign Alex Bregman. With Suárez’s deal, Boston may not push their payroll as aggressively for Bichette, improving the Phils’ chances of signing the infielder.

All in all, Suárez leaves having become one of the most trusted pitchers on the staff, never phased by the moment or stage.

Philadelphia now turns to internal options — including top prospect Andrew Painter and the veteran Walker — as it rounds out the backend of the rotation heading into 2026.

The Phillies will receive a fourth-round pick in the 2026 Draft as compensation after tendering the qualifying offer to the lefty.

Ex-Padres co-owner Fowler to take Lincoln controlling stake

Ron Fowler pictured at a baseball game in white open-necked shirt and dark jacket while working as executive chairman of San Diego Padres
Ron Fowler left his role as executive chairman of the San Diego Padres in 2020 [Getty Images]

A former executive chairman and co-owner of Major League Baseball team the San Diego Padres is set to take a controlling stake in League One club Lincoln City.

American Ron Fowler initially bought a minority interest in third-tier Lincoln in April 2024, and he is now poised to replace Arizona-based Harvey Jabara as the majority shareholder if his bid is cleared by the English Football League.

Lincoln's board approved a proposal from Fowler to increase his stake - through his company Liquid Investments - to more than 25% on 11 December.

Fowler, whose son Andrew is also involved in the club, will take on the position of chairman at LNER Stadium and will "assume responsibility for the funding of the club for the immediate future".

The ownership shake-up at Lincoln, who are second in the table, was confirmed as a "future development" in the club's annual accounts covering the 12 months up to June 2025.

"Acquiring 25% or more of the share capital is regarded by the EFL as acquiring control and consequently Liquid Investments Inc will need to demonstrate they are eligible to acquire control and are able to and will provide the necessary funding to ensure the club can continue to operate post-acquisition," the club noted in its report.

Fowler will take on responsibility for a promotion-chasing club that reported a loss of just under £2.9m relating to the 2024-25 season.

While the club's turnover was a record £8.5m, up from just under £7m the previous season, their losses were down from just under £3m a year earlier.

It was also a season in which the club's shareholders put £3.6m into the club.

Funding that Fowler now intends to put into the club is said to have already been "earmarked" for "various projects at the LNER Stadium".

Fowler is a business owner in the beverage industry in the United States.

He turned his attention to English football after his involvement in the Padres came to an end in March 2022, having served as vice-chairman after passing on control of the MLB team 16 months earlier.

Yankees acquire left-hander Ryan Weathers from Marlins for 4 prospects

NEW YORK — The New York Yankees acquired left-hander Ryan Weathers from the Miami Marlins on Tuesday for four prospects, a move to bolster a rotation that will be missing Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón when the season starts.

Miami received outfielders Brendan Jones and Dillon Lewis and infielders Dylan Jasso and Juan Matheus, all of whom are 21 to 23 years old.

Weathers, 26, was 2-2 with a 3.99 ERA in eight starts last year in his second straight injury-shortened season. He missed time with a strained left flexor, made his season debut on May 14, then didn’t pitch for Miami between June 7 and Sept. 11 because of a left lat strain.

He was 5-6 with a 3.63 ERA over 16 starts in 2024, when he was sidelined by a strained left index finger. He is a son of former Yankee David Weathers; they are the fifth father-son pair to play for the Yankees, including Yogi and Dale Berra and Clay and Cody Bellinger.

Eligible for arbitration for the first time, Weathers agreed last week to a one-year, $1.35 million contract. He is on track to become eligible for free agency after the 2028 World Series.

New York’s rotation projects to include Max Fried, Cam Schlittler, Will Warren and Luis Gil.

Cole is expected to return to the Yankees in May or June following Tommy John surgery last spring, and Rodón is projected back in late April or May after surgery this offseason to remove loose bodies in his left elbow and shave a bone spur.

The Yankees re-signed Ryan Yarbrough for pitching depth and have a pending agreement to re-sign Paul Blackburn.

Miami dealt its second pitcher in a week after sending Edward Cabrera to the Chicago Cubs.

Lewis, 22, is a 13th-round draft pick who batted .237 with 22 homers and 79 RBIs in Class A last season. Jones, 23, is a 12th-rounder who hit .245 with 11 homers and 69 RBIs in Class A and Double-A. Jasso, 23, an undrafted free agent, batted .257 with 13 homers and 76 RBIs with Double-A Somerset. Matheus, 21, is a native of Venezuela who signed as an undrafted free agent in 2022 and batted .275 with three homers and 56 RBIs for Class A Tampa last season.

Yankees acquire LHP Ryan Weathers in trade with Marlins

The Yankees have acquired left-hander Ryan Weathers from the Marlins.

As first reported by YES Network's Jack Curry, New York will send four minor leaguers to Miami for the southpaw in a move that will fortify the rotation in 2026 and beyond.

The minor leaguers the Yankees will send include outfielders Dillon Lewis, Brendan Jones, and infielders Dillon Jasso and Juan Matheus, according to multiple reports.

Jones is the No. 15 Yankees prospect according to MLB Pipeline, while Lewis (16) and Jasso (23) round out the prospects in the organization's top 30 prospects. 

Weathers, 26, is coming off an injury-laden season where he made just eight starts due to flexor and lat strains. In limited time on the field in 2025, Weathers pitched to a 3.99 ERA with a K9 of 8.7 and a WHIP of 1.27. 

In two-plus seasons with the Marlins, Weathers was 7-10 in 27 appearances (26 starts) while pitching to a 4.57 ERA. He was traded to Miami from the Padres in a deal that was headlined by first baseman Garrett Cooper in 2023. Before landing in South Beach, Weathers made 43 appearances (29 starts) and pitched to a 5.73 ERA with San Diego from 2021-23. 

Weathers will make $1.35 million this season and is arbitration-eligible for two more seasons, giving the Yankees control of the southpaw until 2029.

While not as splashy a move, the Yankees can use Weathers -- whose father David pitched for the Bombers in 1996 and 1997 -- to give the rotation some healthy bodies until Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodon and Clarke Schmidt return from injury. Currently, the Yankees' rotation will include Max Fried, Luis Gil, Cam Schlittler and Will Warren. Ryan Yarbrough is also slated to take a few starts as a swing man.

 

Mets' David Stearns 'not blind' to fan frustration: 'What we're doing is the right thing for our franchise'

It’s been an offseason of seismic changes for the Mets, and while there are still plenty of moves to be made between now and the Opening Day, president of baseball operations David Stearns sat down with reporters on Tuesday to discuss where things currently stand with the club.

The Mets have already said goodbye to Edwin Diaz, Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo, and Jeff McNeil this offseason, but Stearns believes the organization is in a very good spot, and with good reasoning.

"We’ve said goodbye to players who have performed really well here, people we care a lot about, players that out fans care a lot about who have meshed well with our community, who have done what we as organization have asked them to do for a long time, and that’s really tough and we all recognize that," Stearns said. "And we’re doing all of that because we are committed universally, from ownership down, to ensure that the next five years of the Mets are better, and that we win more games and meet the lofty expectations that we have for ourselves, than what we’ve done previously. What we’ve done previously has not been good enough. We all know that, I certainly know that, and we’ve got to do better. And we’re committed to doing that.

"We have tremendous ownership support to do that. We have elite talent at the top of our major league roster. We’ve got a very good farm system, and we’ve got a very good present-day major league team as we sit here today that’s going to get better before we get to Opening Day."

Stearns added that the Mets currently have a mix of “truly elite talent on our major league team, combined with some young players who have already established themselves at the major league level and are ready to take that next step."

"We have this pretty unique combination right now of MVP-caliber talent up top, players who have already established themselves at the major league level who are at that point of their career where there is the potential – not the certainty, but the potential – for a jump, and really exciting premium young prospects who are about to hit the major league level," Stearns said. "That is an enviable place for any organization to be." 

The timing of these statements is certainly of note, considering there's now reporting that the Mets have offered All-Star Kyle Tucker a short-team deal worth $50 million per season.

Losing fan-favorite pieces like Diaz and Alonso hasn't been an easy pill to swallow, but potentially adding Tucker, the best position player available via free agency this year, would completely change the narrative for the Mets.

And Stearns is committed to doing whatever it takes to achieve the ultimate goal.

“I certainly understand that there have been points this offseason that have been frustrating for our fan base. We’re not blind to that at all," Stearns said. "I’m certainly not blind to that. I hear it, I recognize it. I hear it from my friends and family at times. I’m also very convicted that what we are doing is the right thing for our franchise going forward to accomplish our goals of creating a consistent playoff team, a team that year after year is a true World Series contender, and ultimately a team that does what we are all here to do, which is to win a World Series. And that’s why we are doing all of this."

Diamondbacks acquire 8-time All-Star 3B Nolan Arenado in a deal with the Cardinals

PHOENIX — The Arizona Diamondbacks acquired eight-time All-Star third baseman Nolan Arenado from St. Louis for minor league pitcher Jack Martinez in a trade Tuesday in which the Cardinals are also including $31 million.

A 10-time Gold Glove winner, Arenado has played for the Cardinals the past five seasons and was shopped extensively after the 2024 season by a rebuilding team. The 34-year-old isn’t the offensive force he used to be but will still provide a veteran presence at the position after the D-backs traded slugger Eugenio Suárez at last season’s trade deadline.

Arenado batted. .237 with 12 homers and 52 RBIs last season. He has two years remaining on his contract worth $42 million, with salaries of $27 million this year and $15 million in 2027. The Cardinals will be sending Arizona $22 million to offset this year’s salary and $9 million to offset next year’s pay.

“We are grateful for Nolan’s five years as a Cardinal, on and off the field — for his drive, his competitiveness, and for all of the memories he gave us,” Cardinals president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom said in a statement. “

“As we continue to move forward, we are pleased to add another intriguing pitching prospect to our organization, and excited for the opportunity this move creates for a number of our players to step up and further establish themselves at the big league level,” Bloom added.

Martinez was an eighth-round pick by the D-backs out of Arizona State in 2025.

Arenado is a career .282 hitter and has 353 homers over 13 seasons with the Cardinals and Rockies.