It’s been a rough start to the offseason for Mets fans.
They’ve now seen three of their favorites leave town after last season’s ugly collapse that ended with the club falling short of the playoffs for the second time in three years.
The first blow came when Brandon Nimmo was dealt to the Rangers.
As expected, the moves have drawn emotional reactions from fans all over social media.
Mets owner Steve Cohen is empathetic, but he stressed in a text to Jon Heyman of the NY Post that the winter is just getting started.
“I totally understand the fans’ reaction,” Cohen wrote. “There is lots of offseason left to put a playoff team on the field.”
Cohen is right, it is early, and there’s plenty of talent remaining in both the trade and free agent markets, but this team has holes to fill over the next few months.
New York still needs a top-tier starting pitching after injuries and underperformance came back to bite them during their devastating second-half collapse last season.
Devin Williams, the team's biggest free agent signing so far, adds a legit bullpen arm, but without Diaz, president of baseball operations David Stearns will need to find another reliever or two.
And now with Alonso joining the Orioles, they’ll need someone to reciprocate that production in the middle of this lineup at first base or elsewhere.
Certainly a tall task for Cohen and co. as they look to make their way back to the postseason.
DETROIT — Right-hander Kyle Finnegan and the Detroit Tigers agreed to a $19 million, two-year contract pending a physical, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on Wednesday.
The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the agreement had not been announced.
A 34-year-old who was an All-Star in 2024 when he had a career-high 38 saves, Finnegan was acquired by the Tigers from Washington on July 31 for minor league pitchers Josh Randall and R.J. Sales. He throws mostly fastballs that averaged 96.3 mph this year and splitters, also mixing in some sliders.
Finnegan was 3-0 with a 1.50 ERA and four saves in 16 relief appearances for the Tigers, striking out 23 and walking four in 18 innings. He didn't pitch for the Tigers between Aug. 31 and Sept. 20 because of a right adductor strain.
He was 4-4 with a 3.47 ERA with 24 saves in 56 relief appearances overall this year, striking out 55 and walking 18 in 57 innings. He had a $6 million, one-year contract that included $4 million in deferred money payable through January 2028.
He is 26-30 with a 3.55 ERA with 112 saves over 347 relief appearances in six seasons with the Nationals (2020-25) and Tigers. He struck out 343 and walked 135 in 347 1/3 innings.
Finnegan is part of a bullpen that includes right-handers Will Vest and Brenan Hanifee, and lefties Tyler Holton and Brant Hurter.
ORLANDO, Fla. — Major League Baseball finalized plans for a two-game series between the Arizona Diamondbacks and San Diego Padres at Mexico City's Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú on April 25-26.
The series was anticipated when the regular-season schedule was announced in August but was not confirmed until Wednesday. Arizona will be the home team for both games.
This will be the third set of regular-season games in Mexico City after the Padres swept San Francisco in 2023 and Houston swept Colorado in 2024, both in two-game series.
Scheduled games at San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Mexico City in 2020 were canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic and contemplated games for 2025 were scrapped over finances.
Regular-season games were played in Monterrey, Mexico, in 1996 (Padres and New York Mets), 1999 (Padres and Rockies), 2018 (Los Angeles Dodgers and Padres) and 2019 (Cincinnati and St. Louis, and Houston and Los Angeles Angels).
MLB's collective bargaining agreement also called for games in Paris in 2025 and London next year but the France trip was canceled because of a failure to find a promoter and the Britain series because of scheduling issues with West Ham's Olympic Stadium and Fox television. The CBA called for games at San Juan in 2026 but none have been announced.
You can trace the trail of bread crumbs back to David Stearns making run-prevention his primary talking point in the aftermath of the Mets’ implosion last season. Actually, farther than that, considering Pete Alonso only played in Queens last season because he was treated like an outcast on the free agent market.
Stearns clearly thinks the Mets are better off without his most prolific slugger, and now the burden of proof is on the team’s president of baseball operations to demonstrate why that is the case.
It’s one thing to break up a core that has underachieved or failed when it mattered most in three of the last four seasons, and Stearns does deserve some credit for having the guts to do that. But it’s quite another to have a plan in place to replace that core and make the team better.
From the outside looking in it’s hard to see how the Mets won’t miss Alonso’s power and productivity, at least in the short term over the next couple of years, which should be a priority for a team that is supposed to be trying to win a championship in that same window of opportunity.
And while I thought it was vital that Alonso agreed to DH at least part-time, due to whatever yips caused him to make every throw he made an adventure, let’s be real: He was their best clutch hitter last season on a team that was wildly inconsistent with the bats, especially when it counted most.
Offering protection for Juan Soto in the lineup was no small matter in itself. Who might that responsibility fall to next season? Right now there’s no obvious choice, and even signing Cody Bellinger wouldn’t necessarily be the answer.
So how can the Mets be better without Alonso, especially after Scott Boras made it clear weeks ago that Alonso indeed was willing to be that part-time DH?
That’s the question at the heart of what is currently The David Stearns Winter of Discontent, if you will. He has to know most Mets fans are convinced he wants to operate with the small-market mentality that was a necessity for him as GM of the Milwaukee Brewers.
And that can’t be a comfortable feeling, especially for a native New Yorker. So Stearns must be truly convinced he can make the right moves to put a winning team on the field next season, knowing he would have to take the slings and arrows that come with being committed to moving on from players like Alonso, Diaz, and Brandon Nimmo.
Whether that proves to be the self-confidence of a smart baseball man or the misplaced confidence of a value-driven analyst is context of sorts for what now becomes the most fascinating of offseasons for the Mets.
Whatever you think of Stearns at the moment, he still has to have a plan, right? Surely he wouldn’t subject himself to such unpopularity without one. He also has Steve Cohen’s billions and a highly-regarded farm system, which means he has the resources to be bold and creative.
I know, I know, he has done nothing to indicate he’ll act in that matter, but he has also never been in this position while running the Mets, with essentially a blank slate in front of him.
Is he truly consumed with finding exceptional value in every acquisition, as it seems to this point? Or can he pivot when needed to spending Cohen’s money for the best talent, even if it feels like an overpay?
From Day One, Cohen essentially has talked about making the Mets a Dodgers West of sorts. Is it possible Stearns is actually determined to build something of a Brewers East, winning with a scrappy, pitching-and-defense ballclub?
That philosophy worked in Milwaukee, at least to a point. The Brewers’ lack of success in the postseason for the last several years is more than the crapshoot nature of October: It’s also a reminder that it’s harder to win at that time of year without stars in the lineup and on the mound as well.
Just last season the Dodgers dominated the Brewers like it was the varsity against the JV.
All of this is a way of saying Stearns needs to re-discover and embrace his inner New York, if that’s possible. Run-prevention is a nice catch-phrase and there’s no disputing the Mets’ defense hurt them down the stretch last season, but I’d make the case the offensive failures were at least as costly, if not more so, in September, and, most notably, the lack of quality pitching was the biggest issue of all.
With that in mind, I believe this could still be the type of eventful offseason that at least gets Stearns back in the favor of Mets fans.
There are a lot of ways he could go now. Bellinger brings the type of all-around game that Stearns seems to prioritize, with his defense and base-running and solid hitting.
Alex Bregman would provide defense and a productive right-handed bat at third base, and he is hailed for his leadership as well, which may or may not be something Mets’ management feels the need to address. Brett Baty likely could slide over to first base if necessary, having proven to be versatile enough to play well at third and second.
Kyle Tucker could be the thumper the Mets need now, though his desire for a long-term contract seems to be exactly what Stearns wants to avoid.
You know the names on the pitching front as well: Michael King is uber-talented and available on a relatively short-term deal due to his injury history, if indeed Stearns wants no part of longer deals for Framber Valdez or Ranger Suarez.
I still don’t think the Detroit Tigers are trading Tarik Skubal, but he has the pieces to go get Freddy Peralta, Joe Ryan, or Eury Perez.
And if he signs Robert Suarez for the back of the bullpen, it’s possible the Mets won’t miss Diaz all that much.
Finally, as one scout told me on Wednesday, “I guarantee you Stearns has two or three guys in mind as trade targets that nobody sees coming yet. I think everybody in baseball is curious to see what he does from here.”
In short, there are still plenty of ways Stearns can change the narrative of this offseason in the coming weeks.
But he has a long way to go to earn the trust of the fans again.
Edwin Díaz delivers a pitch for the New York Mets during the ninth inning in Game 2 of the 2024 NLCS against the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
As the hotel lobby at the Signia by Hilton Orlando filled at MLB’s winter meetings on Tuesday morning, an unexpected prize was falling into the Dodgers’ lap.
Edwin Díaz, the top reliever on this year’s free-agent market, was suddenly slipping away from the incumbent New York Mets, who reportedly made the fan favorite closer only a three-year offer that did little to entice him to re-sign with the team.
The Dodgers, meanwhile, were swooping in late to snatch away the hard-throwing right-hander, submitting a more lucrative three-year bid that would pay Díaz a relief-pitcher-record $23 million per season.
“There were a lot of scenarios [that could have potentially played out this winter] where we didn't necessarily end up with a top-end reliever,” president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said Tuesday night, while declining to comment on Díaz directly since the transaction wasn’t finalized. “But we just kind of prepared on a bunch of different fronts. And being aggressive, if something lined up, we've known all along [it is something we would do].”
The Díaz signing was an affirmation of the team’s operating procedure on the free-agent market. They always at least target top talent. They always at least stay around the proverbial blackboard, as Friedman calls it, in case a player’s market doesn’t develop as expected. And now, they are armed with the kind of endless resources that can make them a threat to scoop up any rebound.
As they leave Orlando this week and embark on the rest of this offseason, it serves as a reminder:
The Dodgers might not need to make another big move, in the same way they downplayed the needfor any big acquisition coming into the winter.
But they’ll certainly be ready to pounce if another opportunity materializes.
"I would say we definitely can,” Friedman hinted when asked if another big move this offseason could be possible. “Whether that makes the most sense within the timing of our roster — there's so many factors that go into it, and any decision you make has a future cost. It’s just weighing that. So, yes, we can. How likely it is, is probably another question."
Start with the top overall available free agent, Kyle Tucker.
The Dodgers are not expected to entertain a long-term contract for the soon-to-be 29-year-old and four-time All-Star. If his bidding war, as projected, results in offers upwards of 8-10 years and $400 million, the club is unlikely to engage; given the glut of long-term contracts already on their books, and the crop of young outfield prospects expected to reach the majors in the next several seasons.
But what if Tucker’s market cools? What if, like Díaz, he is left to consider relatively shorter-term deals with higher annual salaries? Granted, that’s unlikely to happen, considering the wide interest Tucker is reportedly attracting, including from the Toronto Blue Jays and their suddenly big-spending front office. If it does, however, the Dodgers could once again become candidates for a blockbuster, still needing to fill out their outfield as they embark on a quest for a World Series three-peat.
The same dynamic could be in play with other top free agents. The Dodgers have already shown interest in familiar face Cody Bellinger, who could bring both positional versatility and a more refined hitting approach than he had during his first stint with the club. Bo Bichette also presents the kind of balanced offensive profile the Dodgers are believed to seeking, as they try to shore up a lineup that too often was boom-or-bust last year.
Like Tucker, both players are unlikely to fit the Dodgers’ bigger-picture plans if their free agencies develop as expected (with Bellinger pegged for roughly five years and $150 million, and Bichette perhaps eight years and more than $200 million).
But thanks to the team’s flush financial outlook — and the fact that a salary cap could be coming next year, potentially incentivizing extra spending right now — all it could take is a slight cooling in either player’s market to make them more realistic targets for the two-time defending champions.
As long as there isn’t an overburdensome long-term risk, the Dodgers don’t seem afraid of lucrative shorter-term commitments to sustain their newly cemented dynasty.
“We have not only a really talented group of players, but an extremely driven group of players, who want to take care of their legacy and create a dynasty and be part of something really special,” Friedman said. “Because of that mindset, it makes it easier to invest. And do everything we can to help support that and be a part of helping bring that to fruition.”
The Dodgers could alternatively get aggressive on the trade market. Brandon Donovan and Lars Nootbaar of the St. Louis Cardinals are seen internally as fits. Steven Kwan of the Cleveland Guardians would be an even bigger-name addition, albeit is less likely to be dealt this winter.
Then there is the real white whale: Two-time Cy Young Award-winning pitcher Tarik Skubal of the Detroit Tigers.
For now, it’s uncertain at best that Skubal, who will be a free agent after next season and is unlikely to sign a contract extension with the Tigers (or any other team that trades for him) before then, gets moved this winter.
If he does, it figures to come at an extremely steep cost for a starting pitcher with one year remaining of team control.
If there’s any team that has the ammunition to pull it off, however, it’s the Dodgers, with their ample pitching depth and top-ranked farm system. Like with their free-agent pursuits, there is likely to be a limit for how much they’d part with. But if the Tigers seriously consider a trade, it would be no surprise to see the Dodgers be seriously involved.
There are less splashy routes for this offseason to go down, of course. If the Dodgers don’t make another marquee addition, they still feel confident with the roster core they have in place.
Then again, that’s the tone they were striking coming into these Winter Meetings, before swiping away Díaz in the surprise move of the week.
Thus, the baseball world has been put on alert again: The Dodgers won’t be reckless. They want to maintain longer-term flexibility. But if they see value in a top-talent target in the short-term, they won’t be afraid to once again spend big.
"Fans don't really care about those details. They want what they want," Cashman told reporters Wednesday. "Ultimately, what we both want is to have a team that's going to rack up the win totals to push themselves into the postseason and win it all. But it's just the nature of the beast where you get into the frenzy of the winter times. 'Anything at all cost, doesn't matter,' but in reality, it does matter.
"Everything adds up. Everything counts. We're an aggressive franchise, but while being aggressive, we already have some very large commitments, and the more of those you have, the more impact it affects you in other areas. And so everything's tied together. Our ownership has obviously demonstrated year in and year out how massively committed they are. But at the same time, that's not an open blank checkbook either."
The longtime GM went on to discuss the current state of the free agent market, saying it's moving at "glacial speed," but the Yanks are confident in their group and still searching for ways to make a splash.
“We have a strong team," Cashman said. "The job is to make it better and make it stronger. (Saying) it and doing it are two different things. We’re trying to pull that off, and it takes time. There's a lot of time on the board still, and there's a lot of inventory still there, so there's a lot of possibilities in play.”
Cashman added that current talks with free agents have "been tough so far" and any trade proposals haven't made much progress.
“We’re just staying engaged, trying to match up with some things. But it's been tough so far," Cashman added. "Don't like the asks coming our way, and I guess the opposing teams don’t like what I'm trying to pull from them on the trade stuff. We do have some conversations that possibly could lead somewhere.”
Among the "inventory" still out there includes Cody Bellinger, who opted out of his deal with New York to become a free agent this offseason. Cashman said earlier in the week that the Yanks have had dialogue with Bellinger's agent Scott Boras and a reunion with the OF is "still in play."
He was asked Wednesday if the Yankees can "afford to wait" on resigning Bellinger because they already have youngsters Jasson Dominguez and Spencer Jones as replacement options, explaining they're taking an "opportunistic" approach when it comes to signings.
"I don't know if it's ‘afford’ to wait. I think we're opportunistic. We like our players. That is a fact," Cashman said. "But there's players outside of our current control system that we also like, and may very well like more and better because there's a lot more certainty there, which comes with cost, whether it's a trade acquisition or free agent dollars. So it's my job to play on that stuff and try to figure that out, and if we come to an area that this makes a lot of sense, then we're ready to pounce and kind of change the equation.
"But if not, we like what we have, too, at the same time. Jasson Domínguez is on his journey, and Spencer Jones is just beginning his journey. Those are two names, but I got no idea how this is going to play out."
The Yankees selected right-handed pitcher Cade Winquest from the St. Louis Cardinals in the first round of the 2025 Rule 5 Draft.
The selection came as a bit of a surprise, as the Yankees had not made a Rule 5 selection since 2011.
Winquest, 25, was originally drafted by the Cardinals in the eighth round of the 2022 MLB Draft.
Over the course of 58 minor league games (38 starts), Winquest has pitched to a 4.19 ERA with 219 strikeouts in 212.2 innings.
Winquest finished the 2025 season at the Double-A level, appearing in eight games for Springfield with a 3.19 ERA in 42.1 innings.
By rule, Winquest must remain on the Yankees’ 26-man active roster (unless he gets placed on the IL) for the entire 2026 season. If the Yankees elect to waive him and he clears waivers, Winquest must be offered back to the Cardinals.
The Orioles have captured a Polar Bear. After missing out on their bid to land free agent slugger Kyle Schwarber on Tuesday, the O's turned their attention to the next best bopper on the open market on Wednesday — agreeing to a five-year, $155 million contract with former Mets' first baseman Pete Alonso.
BREAKING: First baseman Pete Alonso and the Baltimore Orioles are finalizing a five-year, $155 million contract, sources tell ESPN. Alonso leaves the Mets to make a loaded AL East even better.
Alonso becomes the second Mets' star to leave in as many days after Edwin Díaz inked a three-year, $69 million pact with the Dodgers on Tuesday evening.
The agreement — which is still pending a physical — does not include any opt-outs or deferred money according to Chris Cotillo of MassLive.com.
Pete Alonso's five-year, $155 million deal with Baltimore includes no opt-outs and no deferrals, a source says.
Last offseason, the 31-year-old slugger hit the free agent market for the first time, hoping to land a highly lucrative multi-year deal. He was coming off of a down year though in which he posted a career-worst .788 OPS and was also tied to draft pick compensation after the Mets extended him a qualifying offer. He languished on the free agent market for months before ultimately re-signing with the Mets on a modest two-year, $54 million deal with an opt-out after the 2025 season.
Whether or not that experience gave Alonso any additional motivation heading into the 2025 season can be debated. What can't be debated is that he was an absolute monster at the dish. He slashed .272/.347/.524 with 38 home runs and 126 RBI in a career-high 709 plate appearances, making his fourth consecutive National League All-Star squad and winning his first Silver Slugger award while finishing 11th in the MVP voting.
Naturally, after a season like that, Alonso opted out of the final year of his contract with the Mets and chose to hit the free agent market once again.
Alonso took his marketing campaign into his own hands this week, choosing to attend the winter meetings himself to meet with interested teams. Apparently, his meeting with the Orioles went well. They had offered a five-year, $150 million contract to Schwarber on Tuesday before he ultimately re-signed with the Phillies. The Orioles then took that money and offered it to Alonso to add some much-needed right-handed thump to the middle of their lineup.
Joel Sherman of the New York Post confirmed afterwards that the Mets never made a formal offer to Alonso this offseason after they heard rumblings of where his market was headed. He notes that they were reluctant to give him a contract of more than three years.
Source: The Mets never made an offer as it became clear to them that Alonso was getting bids for more dollars and years than in their comfort zone. https://t.co/Iyy2eI3GBo
So how is Alonso's fantasy value impacted by the move from the Mets to the Orioles? Let's take a look.
Alonso has such prestigious power that no ballpark can hold him. He ranked in the 96th percentile or better in average exit velocity, hard-hit rate and barrel rate in 2025. The change in venue shouldn't cause any sort of negative impact — especially since the Orioles moved their left field wall back in and lowered its height before the 2025 season.
Citi Field still ranks as a much better park for right-handed power than Oriole Park at Camden Yards does, that doesn't take into account the natural raw power that Alonso possesses. He slugged 38 home runs during the 2025 season. His expected home runs by ballpark pegged him for just 36 at Citi Field, though he would have had an expected 45 in Baltimore. He should be just fine.
The only place that I'm anticipating a potential change in his projection for the 2026 season is in the RBI department. Alonso has always had a knack for driving in runs, having eclipsed the 100-RBI plateau in four of his six full seasons and never finishing with fewer than 88. There's something to be said about having Juan Soto and his league-leading .396 on-base percentage hitting ahead of you though — along with Francisco Lindor as a table-setter atop the lineup. Jackson Holliday and Jordan Westburg posted OBP's of .314 and .313 in 2025 while Gunnar Henderson checked in at .349. There's always a chance that those young players take major leaps forward in 2026, but it's not a bold take to say that Alonso is likely to have fewer RBI opportunities presented to him in his first season with the Orioles.
You also never know how a player is going to adjust to new surroundings. Alonso has spent his entire career with the Mets and is coming off of a season in which he had extra motivation to produce at the plate after a miserable experience on the free agent market following the 2024 season. We have seen plenty of players over the years struggle in their first season with a new club or see their production tail off a bit after landing such a massive contract, as the pressure to perform to get that deal has been removed. That's not to say that I expect either of those things to happen to Alonso in 2026, it's just something that fantasy managers should keep in mind.
Prior to this news, Alonso was coming off of draft boards on average at pick 28, making him the third first baseman off the board behind only Nick Kurtz and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. I anticipate that his draft stock will stay pretty static, as this move really doesn't change much for him overall.
I would expect a regression in batting average after hitting a career-best .272 in 2025 partially influenced by a career-high .305 BABIP. You're not drafting Alonso for his batting average though, you're drafting him because he's one of the safest and most secure power options in the game. He should have no problem once again clubbing around 40 home runs and driving in at least 100 runs. He only provides three categories of production, but those three categories are so good and reliable that it makes him worthy of a pick at the end of the second or beginning of the third round in fantasy baseball drafts.
Pete Alonso, left, with Francisco Lindor at the end of last season. Photograph: Lynne Sladky/AP
For the second day in a row, the New York Mets have seen a beloved star agree to terms with another team.
Pete Alonso, the Mets’ all-time leader in home runs, has reportedly agreed to a five-year, $155m contract with the Baltimore Orioles. The news comes a day after the Mets’ long-term closer, Edwin Díaz, reached a three-year deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The 31-year-old slugger had been unable to find a long-term deal last season and returned to the Mets on a shorter contract, which he opted out of after this year’s World Series. While the Mets were interested in re-signing him they reportedly never made an offer once other teams were willing to offer longer, more valuable deals to the the first baseman.
Alonso has spent his entire MLB career with the Mets, and last season broke Darryl Strawberry’s franchise record for home runs. He ends his Mets career with 264 home runs. He was also incredibly popular with the team’s fans due to his good-nature and power, earning the nickname Polar Bear. The Mets also lost another long-term popular player, Brandon Nimmo, last month in a trade with the Texas Rangers.
Alonso had one of the best offensive seasons of his career in 2025 – he hit .272 with 38 home runs and 126 RBIs – but there are concerns about his defense, a weak point for the Mets, and base running, and the Mets appeared reluctant to give him a multi-year deal when they have already have Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor on expensive, long-term contracts.
Over his Mets career, Alonso hit .253 with 264 home runs and 712 RBIs and an OPS of .857. He was the NL rookie of the year in 2019, when he hit 53 home runs, and a five-time All Star.
Alonso joins an Orioles team that finished last in the AL East last season, although they have several young stars such as Adley Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson and Jackson Holliday.
BALTIMORE — The Baltimore Orioles agreed to a $155 million, five-year deal with slugger Pete Alonso, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The Associated Press on Wednesday.
The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal was pending a physical.
It’s a major move for a Baltimore team that vowed to be aggressive following a last-place finish. Alonso hit .272 with 38 home runs and 126 RBIs this year for the New York Mets, posting an .871 OPS that was his highest since he hit 53 home runs as a rookie in 2019.
Alonso, who turned 31 on Sunday, hit 264 homers over seven seasons with the Mets. He’s earned All-Star honors five times, including each of the past four years.
Nicknamed the Polar Bear, Alonso became a Citi Field fan favorite as a home-grown member of the Mets. He was NL Rookie of the Year in 2019, when he hit .260 with a major league-high 53 homers — a rookie record — and 120 RBIs. He had a career-high 131 RBIs in 2022.
Alonso batted a career-low .217 in 2023 while hitting 46 homers and driving in 118 runs and hit .240 with 34 homers and 88 RBIs in 2024.
After a slow free agent market last winter, Alonso signed a $54 million, two-year contract to stay with the Mets, but he opted out of the final year of the deal.
Alonso met with teams at the winter meetings in Orlando, Florida.
“Pete lives in Tampa, it’s rather warm there,” his agent, Scott Boras, said Tuesday. “So the polar vortex of last year has kind of thawed. So the prior market — that prior bear market is exhausted.”
The offseason is picking up steam, and the Phillies continue to stay active — this time in the trade market.
The club has acquired right-handed pitching prospect Yoniel Curet from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for fellow right-hander Tommy McCollum, according to The Athletic’s Matt Gelb.
Curet, 23, has had stretches of real success in Tampa Bay’s system since signing out of the Dominican Republic in 2019.
Over his first four professional seasons, the Rays’ No. 22 prospect (per MLB.com) made 81 appearances — 61 of them starts — and delivered a 2.96 ERA, 424 strikeouts across 316 innings, reaching Double-A.
His 2025 season took a step back. Command issues resurfaced, leading to a career-worst 1.43 WHIP and 31 walks in 62 innings. After a strong five-start run in Double-A (1.45 ERA), Curet was promoted to Triple-A, where the struggles were more pronounced: 21 earned runs in 31 1/3 innings with a 6.03 ERA and 1.92 WHIP.
Curet features a power arsenal that fits a bullpen projection. His five-pitch mix is anchored by a 96–98 mph sinker — graded a 70 on MLB Pipeline’s 20–80 scale — along with a cutter, four-seamer, changeup and slider.
The Phillies believe the swing-and-miss traits translate, and President of Baseball Operations Dave Dombrowski noted that the club views Curet as a reliever and a depth piece as they continue shaping the 40-man roster.
Curet — now the Phillies’ No. 24 prospect on MLB.com — was designated for assignment by Tampa Bay earlier this week and has one Minor League option remaining.
McCollum, 26, has pitched all 165 of his professional games out of the bullpen. He owns a 3.42 ERA with 36 saves in 40 chances across five seasons since signing with the Phillies as an undrafted free agent out of Wingate University in 2021.
With potential bullpen adjustments coming in 2026, this move fits as an early step in reshaping the relief group, particularly in the middle innings.
Though the Giants have cautioned that they won’t spend wildly in MLB free agency, president of baseball operations Buster Posey could take a big swing in the trade market.
The Giants are one of five teams currently “in on” trading for Brewers right-handed pitcher Freddy Peralta, The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal and Will Sammon reported Wednesday, citing people familiar with Milwaukee’s discussions. The addition instantly would upgrade San Francisco’s starting rotation.
Rosenthal and Sammon listed the Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees and Houston Astros as other teams currently pursuing Peralta, while the New York Mets “are also believed to be interested.”
The 29-year-old Peralta is coming off his best MLB season. He posted a 17-6 record with a 2.70 earned run average in 33 starts, garnering his second career MLB All-Star selection and finishing fifth in the National League Cy Young Award voting. Due just $8 million in 2026, Peralta will be a free agent after the season.
The Giants, meanwhile, have made clear their aim to prioritize pitching this offseason. Aces Logan Webb and Robbie Ray will return, along with promising right-hander Landen Roupp, but there is an obvious need for at least one reliable starting arm. Peralta would more than fill that void, fresh off three consecutive 30-start campaigns.
As Rosenthal and Sammon report, however, there is plenty of competition and “no deal appears close. Talks are fluid, and the teams interested in Peralta are also exploring free agents and trades for other starting pitchers.”
The Mets are losing Pete Alonso to the Orioles, who are signing him to a five-year deal worth $155 million, per multiple reports. There are no opt-outs in the contract.
With Alonso and Diaz gone, they join former franchise cornerstone Brandon Nimmo as ex-Mets.
Nimmo was traded to the Rangers earlier this offseason for Marcus Semien.
The Mets had reportedly been unwilling to go beyond three years for Alonso, who gets the long-term deal he desired and couldn't get last offseason, when he returned to the Mets on a two-year deal that contained an option after the first season -- which he exercised upon the completion of the 2025 campaign.
With Alonso gone, the Mets have a massive hole to fill in a lineup that has already downgraded this offseason by dealing Nimmo for Semien.
Alonso served as vital protection for Juan Soto last season, with the burly right-hander slashing .272/.347/.524 with 38 home runs, a career-high 41 doubles, and 126 RBI.
During his seven-year career in New York, Alonso -- who broke the Mets' all-time home run record last season -- hit .253/.341/.516 with 264 home runs, 183 doubles, and 712 RBI over 1,008 games.
Aug 12, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso (20) runs after hitting a two run home run to become the all time Mets franchise home run leader in the third inning against the Atlanta Braves at Citi Field. / Wendell Cruz - Imagn Images
Like Diaz, Alonso had repeatedly expressed a desire to stay.
But the Mets, under head of baseball operations David Stearns, are going in a different direction.
It is unclear how the Mets will attempt to fill the power void left by Alonso's departure.
They made a run at Kyle Schwarber, but he re-signed on a five-year deal with the Phillies on Tuesday.
The two biggest names remaining on the free agent market are Kyle Tucker and Cody Bellinger, but neither possess anything close to the game-changing power Alonso has. And they're both left-handed hitters.
Another option on the free agent market is Eugenio Suarez, who blasted 49 home runs last season. Suarez, a third baseman, could theoretically be used as a designated hitter.
When it comes to free agent first baseman, the Mets could conceivably turn to Japanese stars Munetaka Murakami or Kazuma Okamoto. Murakami has huge power but tons of swing and miss in his game, and is viewed as a poor defender. Okamoto is a strong defender, but does not provide nearly as much power potential as Okamoto.
The Mets' main in-house first base option is Mark Vientos, who is coming off a down offensive season and is relatively untested at the position.
Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani, right, with his former interpreter, Ippei Mizuhara, at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
After 18 months of shopping the script, the proposed Lionsgate Television series based on the gambling scandal involving Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani’s interpreter is in development at Starz.
The project will spotlight the audacious theft by Ippei Mizuhara of $16 million from Ohtani to pay off staggering gambling debts. Mizuhara was fired by the Dodgers after the crimes came to light in March 2024. A year later, he was convicted of defrauding Ohtani in federal court and sentenced to 57 months in prison.
The series will be produced by Tony Award winner Scott Delman, known for “The Book of Mormon” and “A Raisin in the Sun,” and sports journalist Albert Chen. Alex Convery, who wrote "Air," is on board as showrunner and screenwriter while Justin Lin (the “Fast and Furious” franchise) will direct, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
“This is Major League Baseball’s biggest sports gambling scandal since Pete Rose — and at its center is its biggest star, one that MLB has hitched its wagon on,” Chen said in a statement to The Times. “We’ll get to the heart of the story — a story of trust, betrayal and the trappings of wealth and fame.”
Lionsgate was having trouble selling the project to companies with media rights agreements with Major League Baseball — Disney, Warner Bros., Discovery, Apple, Netflix and Comcast — because the companies didn't want to jeopardize their relationships with the league, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Lionsgate is the former parent company of Starz, but the two formally separated in May.
The story unquestionably is compelling. Mizuhara befriended Ohtani in Japan when the player who would become the most accomplished hitting and pitching combination in baseball history was an 18-year-old rookie with the Hokkaido Nippon-Ham Fighters.
Ohtani came to the United States in 2018 at age 23, signing with the Angels. Mizuhara soon became his most trusted friend and interpreter, serving as an intermediary between Ohtani and nearly everyone who spoke English, including the media, his agent and Angels officials.
Mizuhara arranged wire transfers from Ohtani’s bank account without the player's knowledge or permission and impersonated him during more than two dozen phone calls with bank employees, all to feed a gambling habit that accumulated $40 million in losses across thousands of bets.
Mizuhara allegedly collected $142 million in winnings but lost about $183 million.
Ohtani signed a 10-year, $700-million contract with the Dodgers in December 2023 and the scandal came to light three months later. Ohtani was absolved of wrongdoing and described as a victim by federal authorities.
“Ippei has been stealing money from my account and has told lies,” Ohtani said through his new interpreter, Will Ireton, shortly after Mizuhara was arrested. “I never agreed to pay off the debt or make payments to the bookmaker.
“I’m just beyond shocked. It’s really hard to verbalize how I am feeling at this point.”
Ohtani quickly put the episode behind him, leading the Dodgers to World Series championships in 2024 and 2025. He was named National League Most Valuable Player both years.
On the final day of the Winter Meetings, the Rule 5 Draft wrapped up in Orlando.
As expected, the Phillies lost Griff McGarry — who they chose not to add to the 40-man roster on Nov. 18 — to the Nationals. Washington took the 26-year-old right-hander with the third pick in the Major League phase.
McGarry, a fifth-round pick out of the University of Virginia in 2021, is coming off one of his best pro seasons. He posted a 3.44 ERA across 21 starts, primarily at Double-A, and struck out 124 batters in 83 2/3 innings. According to MLB.com, his 13.3 strikeouts per nine innings ranked fourth in the Minors.
The Phillies were also active. With the 12th pick in the Major League phase, they selected another 26-year-old righty, Adam McCambley.
The New Jersey native spent five seasons in the Marlins’ system, bouncing between the rotation and bullpen. In his first two years as a starter, the 2020 third-rounder logged a 4.99 ERA over 39 starts. Since shifting primarily to relief, he’s posted a 3.23 ERA over 94 appearances across the past three seasons.
Like McGarry, McCambley is coming off a career year. He recorded a 2.90 ERA between Double-A and Triple-A in 2025, racking up 83 strikeouts over 62 innings. After walking 18 batters in 22 2/3 frames in 2024, he cut his walk rate by more than half to 3.2 walks per nine this past season.
His fastball sits 92–94 mph, and he generates heavy spin and movement on his slider, curveball and cutter, each eclipsing 3,000 rpm.
McCambley is now on the Phillies’ 40-man roster, as the 34th member.
In the Minor League phase, the Phillies added a pair of prospects. With the 24th selection, they took outfielder Austin Murr from the Tigers’ system. With the 42nd pick, they grabbed right-hander Evan Gates from the Giants.
Murr is coming off a strong year. In 72 games at High-A West Michigan, the 26-year-old slashed .280/.386/.451 with 26 extra-base hits and 43 RBIs. Power hasn’t been his calling card, but the former sixth-round pick has shown consistent plate discipline over five pro seasons, carrying a 192-to-275 walk-to-strikeout ratio.
Austin Murr – Credit: Jeff Lange (USA TODAY NETWORK)
Gates, 27, has worked exclusively out of the bullpen for San Francisco. Over 260 2/3 innings in five seasons, he owns a 3.52 ERA with 307 strikeouts and 113 walks.
The lone Phillie lost in the Minor League phase was catcher Carson Taylor, who went to Seattle. The Phillies originally selected Taylor two winters ago in the Rule 5 Draft from the Dodgers. He hit 16 homers in his first season with the organization in 2024 before a right labrum tear ended his 2025 campaign.
One notable name who will be staying put is 6-foot-4 outfielder Felix Reyes. The 24-year-old returns after winning the Eastern League batting title, hitting .335 in 95 games for Double-A Reading.