MLB Free Agent Rankings 2025-26: Kyle Tucker, Dylan Cease, Bo Bichette, Alex Bregman headline Top 100 list

As always, with the conclusion of the World Series comes this year’s ranking of the winter’s top free agents. Players are ranked based on how I expect teams will view them, not on how I perceive them myself. As such, they’re listed from predicted biggest contract to smallest, using an adjustment for multi-year deals.

Excluded from the rankings are players whose options seems certain to be exercised, a group that includes Luis Robert Jr., Chris Sale and several others. I’m also expecting the likes of Tyler O’Neill, Joc Pederson and A.J. Minter to exercise their player options. I’ve included two Japanese sluggers who are set to be posted, but I held back on top right-hander Tatsuya Imai, since his status isn’t as clear at this point.

Don’t forget: Check out the Rotoworld player news feed for all the latest news, rumors, and transactions as MLB’s Hot Stove gets underway!

MLB: Playoffs-Philadelphia Phillies at Los Angeles Dodgers
Everything you need to know about MLB free agency, including key dates, the top names on the market, qualifying offers, and draft pick compensation.

All ages are as of Apr. 1, 2026.

▶ Top 100 MLB Free Agents

1. Kyle Tucker (29, OF, Cubs)

Back-to-back seasons marred by injury won’t help Tucker’s market, but he put up the best numbers of his career during his half season in 2024 and he was off to another great start in 2025 before suffering a hand injury that was only much later revealed to be a fracture. Both that and the fractured shin from 2024 seem like fluky injuries, and Tucker played 505 out of a possible 546 games the previous four years. Of some concern is that, in spite of his excellent basestealing ability, Tucker is slow and getting slower, leaving him with subpar range in the outfield. However, he seems like someone who would take well to first base a few years down the line.

Prediction: nine years, $360 million

2. Dylan Cease (30, SP, Padres)

Cease’s ERAs are all over the place, but the underlying stats have been remarkably stable over the last five years, with only a modest blip as his velocity dipped some in 2023. While he wound up 8-12 with a 4.55 ERA for the Padres in his walk year, his strikeout rate held steady at 30% and he had a 3.46 xERA and a 3.58 SIERA. Teams will also be enthralled by his durability; he’s never missed a start since debuting in mid-2019. It’s still entirely possible that he has a year or two of Cy Young contention in his future.

Prediction: seven years, $210 million

3. Bo Bichette (28, SS, Blue Jays)

Bichette was all set to lead the AL in hits for a third time this year before a sprained knee cost him the final 20 games. Even so, at 181, he still finished just three behind Bobby Witt Jr. for the major league lead. That he returned from the knee injury as a second baseman in the World Series is a fascinating turn ahead of his free agency; it’s doubtful anyone was going to look at him as a long-term shortstop anyway, and if he’s willing to change positions now, it would open up his market. There will probably come a time at which Bichette’s lack of bat speed leads to real problems, but he’s a difference-maker on offense right now.

Prediction: eight years, $216 million

4. Alex Bregman (32, 3B, Red Sox)

Bregman didn’t get the long-term deal he wanted last winter, settling for a three-year, $120 million pact with Boston that gave him the right to opt out. Now he’ll give it another try after a season in which he was fantastic for two months before missing 43 games with a quad injury. He continued to produce initially after returning, but he hit just .180/.273/.262 in his final 31 games, dropping his OPS from .933 to .821. Bregman remains a strong defender, and he’s showed an impressively steady bat since his steep decline from his near-MVP campaigns in 2018 and ’19. Still, it’d be dangerous to give him the kind of rest-of-career contract he obviously desires.

Prediction: five years, $160 million

5. Framber Valdez (31, SP, Astros)

On paper, Valdez seems like the best pitcher available; he’s made 121 starts with a 3.21 ERA the last four years and shown no real decline in stuff in the process. Still, questions about his conditioning and attitude linger, and his recent postseason performances were particularly discouraging. It might serve to knock a year or two off of what will still be a very healthy contract.

Prediction: five years, $150 million

6. Pete Alonso (31, 1B, Mets)

Alonso’s first foray into free agency last year saw him coming off a down season in which he hit just .240/.329/.459. He’s back on the market now after hitting .272/.347/.524 and declining a $24 million player option to spend an eighth season with the Mets. Alonso’s exit velocity numbers last season were all the best of his career, with his 54% hard-hit rate towering well above his previous high of 47% from 2021. It makes him look like a pretty good bet on a four-year deal. He’ll want more, though.

Prediction: five years, $150 million

7. Cody Bellinger (30, 1B/OF, Yankees)

Bellinger’s nine-season MLB career breaks down rather remarkably:

2017-19: .278/.368/.559, 111 HR, 22% K rate in 450 games
2020-22: .203/.272/.376, 41 HR, 25% K rate in 295 games
2023-25: .281/.338/.477, 73 HR, 15% K rate in 412 games

Bellinger’s declining bat speed seems like a problem, but his approach is just so good these days. He does probably need to stick with a team that plays in a ballpark with a short porch in left. He’s great in the outfield corners and at first base, and he could still probably handle center if necessary.

Prediction: five years, $145 million

8. Kyle Schwarber (33, DH, Phillies)

Schwarber’s 56 homers and 132 RBI in his walk year bested his previous highs by nine and 28, respectively. That he hit .244 in the second half of his four-year deal with the Phillies, compared to .207 in the first half, has dramatically increased his value, with the caveat that no one can know how much longer it will last. Still, he’ll almost certainly get another four-year deal, this one worth considerably more than the $79 million he signed for in 2022.

Prediction: four years, $128 million

Kyle Schwarber
After a historic power season with the Phillies, Kyle Schwarber enters free agency at age 33 looking to cash in once again. Which teams make the most sense, and how high could the bidding go?

9. Ranger Suárez (30, SP, Phillies)

Suárez seems like the biggest risk among the top 10 free agents, but it’s impossible not to have him here. The largest cause for concern is that his fastball velocity has dropped 2.5 mph since 2023. Still, these last two seasons have been exceptional, with the left-hander posting a 3.33 ERA and a 23.2% strikeout rate. Suárez has also never made 30 starts in a season, though he has topped 150 innings three of the last four years, and he’s had just one arm problem as a major leaguer, costing him the first quarter of the 2023 season. Every team would love to have him, and every team that pursues him is going to be sweating the back half of the deal.

Prediction: five years, $135 million

10. Josh Naylor (28, 1B, Guardians)

Naylor is definitely hitting free agency at the right time; his 128 OPS+ was just off his career high, he went a ridiculous 30-for-32 stealing bases despite being one of the slowest guys in the league and his clubhouse rep got a big boost during Seattle’s run to the ALCS. Plus, thanks to the midseason trade, he can’t get be saddled with a qualifying offer.

Prediction: five years, $125 million

11. Shane Bieber (30, SP, Blue Jays)

Bieber’s return from 2024 Tommy John surgery has been a great success, as he’s shown his best velocity since 2021. The stuff still obviously wasn’t what it was when he was maybe the best pitcher on the planet in 2020, but what he has now should make an above average starter going forward.

Prediction: four years, $112 million

UPDATE: Bieber exercised the $16 million player option in his contract and will remain with the Blue Jays for 2026.

12. Munetaka Murakami (26, 1B/3B, Japan)

Murakami seemed very much like one of the best players in the world three years ago, when, at just 22 years old, he broke the NPB single-season record for Japanese-born players with 56 homers and hit .318 with a 125/118 K/BB for the Yakult Swallows. Since then, though, he’s hit just .254, and his strikeout rate has climbed from 21% to 29%. It’s a dead-ball era in Japan, but that doesn’t account for all the swings and misses he’s generating. His power is exceptional, and he’ll find the MLB baseball more to his liking. Hopefully, he’ll wind up as more of a .240-.250 hitter than a .200-.220 guy.

Prediction: five years, $120 million

13. Edwin Díaz (32, RP, Mets)

Three years into a five-year, $102 million contract that made him the highest-paid reliever of all-time, Díaz figures to opt out and sign a new deal that keeps him in that position. 2025 saw him finish with a sub-2.00 ERA for the fourth time in his career and strike out 38% of the batters he faced. One imagines he’ll get a four- or five-year deal with a slight raise.

Prediction: five years, $110 million

14. Michael King (30, SP, Padres)

After breaking out as a starter in his first year in San Diego, King was limited to 15 starts by shoulder and knee injuries last season and saw his strikeout rate dip from 28% to 25% and his hard-hit rate increase from 30% to 38%. On the other hand, his velocity held steady and stuff models didn’t see any drop off from 2024. His next contract seems like a high risk, high reward kind of deal, which should be of more interest to top contenders than those who need to play it a little safer.

Prediction: three years, $84 million

15. Eugenio Suárez (34, 3B, Mariners)

49 homers is remarkable regardless, but it’s especially impressive that Suárez got there with Chase Field and T-Mobile as his home parks. Still, Suárez is 34, his defense seems to be in decline and those 49 homers came with a .298 OBP. A two-year deal seems appropriate, but someone will probably go three.

Prediction: three years, $78 million.

16. Devin Williams (31, RP, Yankees)

Williams could opt for a one-year contract after a down season, but it’s doubtful he’ll need to. He finished pretty strong, and his 4.79 ERA for the Yankees still came with a 35% strikeout rate and his best walk rate since 2020. ERA estimator SIERA put him at 2.67, which is right at his 2.70 average from the previous four seasons. He ought to be valued as one of the game’s best relievers.

Prediction: four years, $88 million

17. Trevor Story (33, SS, Red Sox)

It would have been hard to fathom Story opting out of his deal with the Red Sox a year ago, but after a season in which he hit .263/.308/.433 and drove in 96 runs in 157 games, he could walk away from the $55 million he’s owed over the next two seasons. If he does so, the Red Sox would have the option to lock him in at $75 million for three years. That would seem to be about what Story is worth in a weak market for shortstops, so it’s just up to what he wants. If he stays in Boston, the team should think about moving him to second and installing Marcelo Mayer at short.

Prediction: three years, $75 million

18. Brandon Woodruff (33, SP, Brewers)

Fortunately, Woodruff’s season-ending setback in his return from shoulder surgery proved to be a lat strain and not something that figures to carry over into 2026. Even though his velocity was down about three mph from his prime, the right-hander performed incredibly well after his summer return, amassing a 3.20 ERA and an 83/14 K/BB in 64 2/3 innings. No one is going to want to risk a particularly long-term contract, so Woodruff might take a deal that allows him to opt out after one year.

Prediction: three years, $72 million

19. Lucas Giolito (31, SP, Red Sox)

Giolito was a nice surprise for the Red Sox in his first year back from Tommy John, going 10-4 with a 3.41 ERA in 26 starts before missing the postseason with what was apparently elbow inflammation. That late injury sets up the possibility that Giolito could exercise his half of a $19 million mutual option, but that still seems unlikely.

Prediction: two years, $48 million

20. J.T. Realmuto (35, C, Phillies)

Realmuto just finished up a five-year, $115.5 million contract that is still the standard for catchers (the extra half million gave him a $23.1 million average salary designed to put him just ahead of Joe Mauer’s $23 million-per-year deal from 2011-18). He’s no longer the player he was when he inked that contract, but he still stands out among this year’s catching crop with his durability and solid numbers at the plate. He’ll probably have his pick of two-year offers, and someone might go three.

Prediction: three years, $60 million

21. Zac Gallen (30, SP, D-backs)

One of the NL’s best pitchers in 2022, Gallen mostly kept it together in 2023 and ’24 even though his exit velocity numbers were thoroughly mediocre. In 2025, his strikeout rate dropped from 25-27% to 21.5% and his ERA skyrocketed to 4.83. Gallen has proved durable and his velocity has held pretty steady, so there should be no shortage of teams wanting to take a look at him. He’s a prime candidate for a contract that allows him to opt out after one season, or he might even accept the $22 million qualifying offer, assuming that the Diamondbacks make him one.

Prediction: two years, $45 million

22. Merrill Kelly (37, SP, D-backs)

Kelly is seven years older than Gallen and didn’t enjoy a great finish with the Rangers, but the fact that he, unlike his former Arizona rotationmate, can’t be handed a qualifying offer will make him the more desirable free agent option for a lot of teams. Kelly had a 4.23 ERA and a 19.7% K rate in 10 starts with Texas after coming in at 3.22 with a 23.5% K rate for the D-backs, but he’s been remarkably solid on the whole these last four years.

Prediction: two years, $44 million

23. Kazuma Okamoto (29, 1B/3B, Japan)

Okamoto is older than Murakami and has never had a season quite like Murakami’s 2022, but he’s been a consistently potent bat for the Yomiuri Giants for eight years now, and he did some of his best work while healthy last season, hitting .327/.415/.598 with 15 homers and a 33/33 K/BB in 69 games. He’s probably best suited for first base and he’s unlikely to show 30-homer power in MLB, but he should be a steady run producer and potentially a safer investment than Murakami.

Prediction: three years, $54 million

24. Chris Bassitt (36, SP, Blue Jays)

Bassitt lost one mph off his fastball last season, but he held steady otherwise, posting a 108 ERA+ and finishing with his usual 22% strikeout rate. He was also particularly impressive in returning from a back injury as a reliever in the postseason, something that could make him extra interesting to top contenders who might appreciate that flexibility in October.

Prediction: two years, $40 million

25. Shota Imanaga (32, SP, Cubs)

The three-year, $57 million option on Imanaga’s contract seemed like a no-brainer for the Cubs for most of the year, but he gave up 12 homers in his final six starts, taking his ERA from 3.03 to 3.73, and then continued to struggle into October, which led to the Cubs bypassing him in the decisive Game 5 of the NLDS against the Brewers. With his velocity down a little, Imanaga’s strikeout rate fell from 24% in his first year in Chicago to 21% last season. There’s still a good case for him being worth the $57 million, but the Cubs might decide to decline it and aim higher in free agency. Imanaga would then get player options for $15 million next year and $17 million in 2027, but he could probably do better than that in free agency.

Prediction: two years, $40 million

26. Ryan Helsley (31, RP, Mets)

Helsley believes it was pitch tipping that allowed the league to catch up to him last season, and given the lack of any real change in terms of stuff, it seems like that he’s right. Helsley had a 1.83 ERA from 2022-24, and his slider ranks as one of the game’s best.

Prediction: three years, $48 million

27. Jack Flaherty (30, SP, Tigers)

Flaherty’s odd campaign saw him essentially match his career strikeout, walk and home run rates, yet finish with an ERA a run higher than his career mark (4.64 to 3.63) and lead the AL in losses. The Tigers, incredibly, went 9-22 in his starts and 78-53 the rest of the time. Flaherty now has the option of sticking around Detroit for $20 million or taking his chances elsewhere. He’ll probably be able to do a little better in free agency while coming off a third straight relatively healthy season.

Prediction: one year, $24 million

28. Harrison Bader (31, OF, Phillies)

After settling for $6.25 million as a free agent last year, Bader put up his best offensive season to date, hitting .277/.347/.449 in a career-high 501 plate appearances with the Twins and Phillies. It took adding some more swing and miss to his game -- he struck out 27% of the time -- but his 40% hard-hit rate far outpaced his career mark of 32%. Most likely, he’ll fall back some offensively, but he remains an above average defensive center fielder, and there’s no one else on this list who fits that description.

Prediction: two years, $38 million

29. Gleyber Torres (28, 2B, Tigers)

Torres wanted a one-year deal as a free agent last winter and made good on it, turning in a better season offensively and defensively than he did in his final year in New York. How much of a reward that will provide remains to be seen. Teams don’t love making big commitments to second basemen, and Torres still lacks range at that position and the foot speed and arm strength to contribute anywhere else. He’s a nice enough player right now, but a long-term commitment still wouldn’t make much sense.

Prediction: three years, $45 million

30. Robert Suarez (35, RP, Padres)

At age 34, Suarez had his most encouraging season since returning to the U.S., making it an easy call for him to opt out of the final two years and $16 million the Padres owe him. His K:BB has improved from 2.7 in 2022-23 to 3.7 in 2024 and 4.7 in 2025. It’ll be interesting to see if San Diego works to bring him back; if they do, it’d seem to be a sign that they really do want to try Mason Miller in the rotation.

Prediction: three years, $45 million

31. Tyler Mahle (31, SP, Rangers)

In the last 3 1/2 years, Mahle has had several rounds of shoulder problems and undergone Tommy John surgery, but he did impress while healthy for the Rangers last season, posting a 2.18 ERA in 16 starts. A big-budget team could roll the dice on him staying relatively healthy for the first time since 2021, when he had a 125 ERA+ and a 28% strikeout rate in 33 starts for the Reds.

Prediction: two years, $36 million

32. Trent Grisham (29, OF, Yankees)

Grisham’s 34-homer breakout was quite the story, and there’s enough improvement in his strikeout and exit velocity numbers to think some of it will stick around. Unfortunately, however, he’s lost so much speed that, unless he can get that back somehow, he needs to be looked at as a corner outfielder going forward. Also, he was definitely a little lucky to rack up the 34 homers; Statcast gave him an expected total of 28, and besides the homers, he totaled just 10 extra-base hits all year (nine doubles, one triple).

Prediction: two years, $34 million

33. Jorge Polanco (32, 2B/3B, Mariners)

Polanco followed up the worst year of his career with the best, hitting .265/.326/.495 with 26 homers in his return to Seattle. It didn’t seem fluky, either, as he made consistent hard contact while striking out just 16% of the time. He even fared better than expected at second base after being signed to play third and then, in part because of knee soreness, spending much of the year as a DH. It’s still hard to project Polanco as a second baseman going forward, and continued time at DH might keep him from breaking down.

Prediction: two years, $34 million

34. Ha-Seong Kim (30, SS, Braves)

Kim’s return from shoulder surgery didn’t go as well as hoped, but he did pick it up in the end after the Braves claimed him off waivers from the Rays, hitting .253/.316/.368 with three homers in his final 24 games. The thrifty Rays dropped Kim because they didn’t want to risk him picking up his $16 million player option, but as a fine defensive shortstop and at least the potential for league-average offense, he figures to be worth at least that much in his first full season back. It’s just a matter of whether he wants to try to further rebuild his value on a one-year pact or if he would prefer to lock in for two or three years now.

Prediction: one year, $18 million

35. Raisel Iglesias (36, RP, Braves)

25 appearances into his 2025 season, Iglesias had a 6.75 ERA, four blown saves in 12 chances and five losses, briefly costing him his job as Atlanta’s closer. Fortunately, he turned things around extremely well from there, posting a 1.25 ERA and a 48/10 K/BB in his final 43 1/3 innings. He allowed one run in his final 27 outings. He’ll probably become more homer-prone as he enters his upper-30s, but he’s still a reasonable closing option for now.

Prediction: two years, $28 million

36. Ryan O’Hearn (32, 1B, Padres)

O’Hearn’s decline after being traded away by the Orioles is more of a concern than it might otherwise be, as his exit velocity numbers fell way off while his strikeout rate went in the other direction. Of course, it was still a nice season overall, as he hit .281/.366/.437 in 544 plate appearances. That he’s turned himself into an above average defender at first base also adds to his case for a multiyear deal.

Prediction: two years, $28 million

37. Tyler Rogers (35, RP, Mets)

Rogers is a 35-year-old who never breaks 85 mph and has no history of closing, yet he might also be the safest relief investment on the market. In spite of his heavy workloads -- he’s topped 70 innings in five straight seasons -- the submarining Rogers was as effective as ever in amassing a 1.98 ERA last season and his 83.5 mph average on his fastball was actually a career high.

Prediction: three years, $33 million

38. Max Muncy (35, 3B, Dodgers)

With their unmatched payroll and potentially a desire to get younger in the lineup, it’s reasonable to ask if the Dodgers might want to move on from Muncy this winter. Still, his club option is a paltry $10 million, which seems like a bargain for a player coming off another three-WAR season.

Prediction: option exercised

39. Justin Verlander (43, SP, Giants)

Although he has indicated he wants to keep pitching until age 45, it looked like Verlander might be finished at 42 with the way he threw the first half of last season. Fortunately, he bounced back nicely afterwards, going 4-3 with a 2.60 ERA and a 70/24 K/BB over 72 2/3 innings in his final 13 starts. He allowed one or no runs in eight of those. He seems like at least as good of a bet now as he did last winter, when he got $15 million from the Giants.

Prediction: one year, $15 million

40. Luis Arraez (28, 1B/2B, Padres)

Arraez’s down year came at the worst possible time, as he hit .292/.327/.392 in 2025 after coming in at .328/.371/.426 over the previous three years. He doesn’t seem like a legitimate second baseman at this point, and he needs to bat at least .310 to be of much help as a first baseman. He’s just turning 29 in April, so a bounce-back is certainly possible. But it’s hard to see why any team would want to commit to him for more than a year or two.

Prediction: one year, $14 million

41. Brad Keller (30, RP, Cubs)

A one-time sinkerballing, mid-rotation starter for the Royals, Keller had nearly fallen out of the league entirely before his sudden emergence as a flamethrowing setup man for the Cubs last season. He struck out 27% of the batters he faced while averaging 97 mph with his fastball, and he was still a strong groundball pitcher in the process. That seems worth a two-year commitment.

Prediction: two years, $22 million

42. Max Scherzer (41, SP, Blue Jays)

Scherzer, who had a 3.77 ERA in his three postseason starts, indicated after Game 7 that he plans on returning from another year, and he’s already been linked to the Giants, since that team just hired his good friend Tony Vitello as their new manager.

Prediction: one year, $13 million

43. Marcell Ozuna (35, DH, Braves)

Ozuna’s 2025 fade can seemingly be explained by a tear in his hip. He had an .883 OPS through two months after coming in at .905 and .925 the previous two years, both of which saw him drive in 100 runs. He’s strictly a DH and it’s possible he’ll continue to decline, but he presents a chance to lock in a pretty good cleanup hitter on a one-year deal.

Prediction: one year, $13 million

44. Cody Ponce (31, SP, Korea)

Ponce was last seen in the majors going 0-6 with a 7.04 ERA in 38 1/3 innings for the 2021 Pirates. He then spent three years in Japan and 2025 in Korea, where he turned in one of the KBO’s best seasons of all-time in going 17-1 with a 1.89 ERA and a 252/41 K/BB in 180 2/3 innings. That’s not with Japan’s dead ball, either; the KBO had a 4.31 ERA last season. Ponce always had good command, and he’s throwing harder now than he used to. He should be useful in the middle of a rotation for a couple of years.

Prediction: two years, $20 million

45. Kenley Jansen (38, RP, Angels)

While obviously not the dominant force he was, Jansen has also never been ineffective as he continues his steady march towards 500 saves (now 24 away). The day is coming when he’ll lose it -- last season’s career-worst 24.4% strikeout rate isn’t a good omen -- but his velocity has held steady and stuff models still like him plenty.

Prediction: one year, $12 million

46. Dustin May (28, SP, Red Sox)

May stayed healthy enough to make 23 starts and two relief appearances, but with his velocity down 2-3 mph and his cutter lacking its former movement, he just wasn’t the same pitcher in his return from flexor tendon and esophageal surgeries last season. Fortunately, he still has youth on his side, and if he is stronger in his second year back, he’s someone a team can imagine starting a postseason game.

Prediction: one year, $12 million

47. Victor Caratini (32, C, Astros)

Caratini’s performance warrants a starting job in free agency, but that was also the case last time around, when he took a two-year, $12 million contract to play behind Yainer Diaz in Houston. He went on to hit .263/.329/.406 in 660 plate appearances over the two seasons. Of some concern is that he’s never started more than 81 games behind the plate in a season and hasn’t even topped 55 as a part-timer the last three seasons.

Prediction: two years, $18 million

48. Kyle Finnegan (34, RP, Tigers)

It should be pretty embarrassing to the Nationals how, mostly just by encouraging him to throw his splitter more often, the Tigers instantly turned Finnegan into a strikeout machine after picking him up at the deadline; he had a 4.38 ERA and a 20% K rate prior to the trade and a 1.50 ERA and a 35% K rate afterwards. That he wasn’t as sharp in October after missing much of September with an adductor strain could cost Finnegan some, but he’ll still do considerably better than if he had finished the season in D.C.

Prediction: one year, $11 million

49. Luke Weaver (32, RP, Yankees)

Following up his breakthrough 2024, Weaver continued to look like one of the league’s best relievers in posting a 1.05 ERA over the first two months. However, upon returning from a hamstring strain in late June, he had a 5.31 ERA the rest of the way, even though he fanned 48 in 39 innings. He then went and allowed five runs while getting one out in three postseason appearances, good for a 135.00 ERA. He was probably tipping his pitches then, and his mid-90s fastball/changeup combo still looks good on the surface, but because of his struggles, he’ll probably need to settle for a one-year deal.

Prediction: one year, $11 million

50. Mike Yastrzemski (35, OF, Giants)

Giants right fielders hit something like .030 after the team regrettably sent Yastrzemski to the Royals at the deadline. Maybe the most consistent player in the league in recent seasons, Yastrzemski has finished between 2.0 and 2.7 WAR every year since 2019 (the one time he was inconsistent was the shortened 2020, when he posted a .968 OPS and actually finished with 2.7 WAR in 54 games). Yaz should be slowing down at this age, but his exit velocity numbers were a little better than usual last season and he posted a career-low 19% strikeout rate. He’s a very easy one-year solution as a platoon corner outfielder.

Prediction: one year, $11 million

51. Zach Eflin (31, SP, Orioles)

Eflin’s strikeout rate collapsed to 16% in 14 starts last season, and he had a 5.93 ERA before undergoing season-ending back surgery. He’s mostly avoided arm woes and is young enough to bounce back, but he’s in line for a one-year deal at this point.

Prediction: one year, $11 million

52. Steven Matz (34, RP, Red Sox)

Matz took to a relief role with surprising gusto last season, posting a 3.44 ERA for the Cardinals and then a 2.08 ERA after a deadline deal sent him to Boston. Assuming he’s content to stay in the pen, a multiyear deal seems like a possibility here. He’d probably be in much less demand if he insists on marketing himself as a starter.

Prediction: two years, $17 million

53. Seranthony Domínguez (31, RP, Blue Jays)

Domínguez just pitched a career-high 62 2/3 innings with his best ERA (3.16) and strikeout rate (30.3%) since his rookie season in 2018. He’s not a perfect eighth- or ninth-inning guy in a contender’s bullpen, but having him around worked out pretty well for the Blue Jays.

Prediction: two years, $16 million

54. Adrian Houser (32, SP, Rays)

Houser appeared to be on his way out of the league a year ago, but he reclaimed the velocity he lost the previous couple of seasons and ended up with a nice 3.31 ERA in 21 starts for the White Sox and Rays. He needs a quality defensive infield behind him, but if the velocity sticks, he’s a useful fifth starter.

Prediction: one year, $10 million

55. Emilio Pagán (34, RP, Reds)

The Reds would have preferred it had Pagán not picked up his $8 million player option a year ago, but it certainly worked out well that he did; he went 32-for-38 saving games and finished with a 2.88 ERA in 66 2/3 innings. Pagán remains an extreme flyball pitcher who would fit better in a bigger ballpark. He might get more money as a setup man for a contender than as a closer for a lesser team.

Prediction: one year, $10 million

56. Cedric Mullins (31, OF, Orioles)

Mullins had respectable numbers for the Orioles last season, but he hit just .182 after joining the Mets, leaving him at .216/.299/.391 overall. His defense in center field has also worsened, and there isn’t much of a case for starting him against lefties at this point. That said, he can still yank a flyball down the right field line, making him interesting for teams that have short porches that way.

Prediction: one year, $10 million

57. Drew Pomeranz (37, RP, Cubs)

Following three seasons in which he never threw a pitch in the majors, Pomeranz resurfaced with the Cubs in late April and went 18 straight appearances without allowing a run and then eight more before giving up his first earned run. He finished with a 2.17 ERA and a 28% strikeout rate and then retired 18 of the 19 batters he faced in the postseason. There’s no guarantee that he’ll stay healthy again, but a large-market team will pay him $10 million and hope for the best.

Prediction: one year, $10 million

58. Anthony Kay (31, SP, Japan)

If he gets some decent offers, Kay, a former first-round pick of the Mets, will probably give MLB another try next year. His cutter seems to have come a long way in the two seasons since he left for Japan, and he finished second in the Central League with a 1.74 ERA while going 9-7 with a 130/41 K/BB in 155 innings for Yokohama last season.

Prediction: two years, $15 million

59. Nick Martinez (35, SP/RP, Reds)

An apparent ability to avoid hard contact helped Martinez post a 3.31 ERA in 35 starts and 117 relief appearances from 2022-24. It didn’t really carry over last season, though, and after becoming the only free agent to accept a $21.05 million qualifying offer, he posted a 4.45 ERA in 26 starts and 14 relief appearances for Cincinnati. He doesn’t have as much mileage on his arm as most 35-year-olds, and he still might have a few more useful years as a swingman. However, if he wants a guaranteed rotation spot, he’ll probably have to sign with a lesser team.

Prediction: one year, $9 million

60. José Alvarado (30, RP, Nationals)

Alvarado’s 80-game PED suspension doesn’t seem to have soured the Phillies on him, and president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski indicated last month than that the lefty would likely return. Whether that means picking up his $9 million option or coming to terms on another multiyear deal is unclear.

Prediction: option exercised

61. Tomoyuki Sugano (36, SP, Orioles)

It was a given that Sugano would struggle to miss bats in MLB -- he hadn’t had even a 20% K rate in Japan since 2021 -- but the hope was he’d finesse his way into being a league average starter anyway. As it turned out, he came up a little short, giving up 33 homers and finishing with an 88 ERA+. If he wants to keep pitching in the U.S., he’ll probably have to take less than the $13 million he earned in his one-year pact with Baltimore.

Prediction: one year, $8 million

62. Michael Soroka (28, SP/RP, Cubs)

Soroka got a surprising $9 million from the Nationals last winter despite finishing 0-10 with a 4.74 ERA for the White Sox in 2024, but it was an intriguing roll of the dice based on the swing-and-miss ability he showed out of the pen. Back in the rotation in D.C., he went 3-8 with a 4.87 ERA in 16 starts, though it came with a nice 87/24 K/BB in 81 1/3 innings. The Cubs acquired him at the deadline, but he went on to miss six weeks with a shoulder strain after his first start and only returned to make five relief appearances. On the whole, he seems like about as good of a bet now as he did a year ago, although it might be better to use him as a full-time reliever. The ability is there for him to start, but keeping him off the IL has proven very difficult.

Prediction: one year, $8 million

63. Danny Jansen (30, C, Brewers)

After signing him to a one-year, $8.5 million contract in free agency, the Rays opted to bail on Jansen last summer, trading him to Milwaukee and acquiring Hunter Feduccia from the Dodgers and Nick Fortes from the Marlins as their new catching duo. Jansen went on to hit .254/.346/.433 as William Contreras’s backup, leaving him with a .215/.321/.399 line overall. He still seems like a viable starter offensively, but the decline in his framing numbers will leave some teams wary.

Prediction: one year, $8 million

64. David Robertson (40, RP, Phillies)

Robertson didn’t find any offers to his liking after an outstanding season with the Rangers in 2024, so he took the first half off before joining the Phillies and posting a 4.08 ERA in 20 appearances. The absence likely played a role in his decline in velocity, though absent the spike he enjoyed the previous three years, his 91.7 mph average on his cutter was still right about where he was at during his prime years. Robertson might choose another midseason return or walk away entirely now, but he still most likely has what it takes to contribute as a setup man for a contender.

Prediction: one year, $8 million

65. Zack Littell (30, SP, Reds)

Littell’s second year as a full-time starter saw only a slight jump in his ERA from 3.63 to 3.81, but the drop in his strikeout rate from 21.5% to 17.1% seems like a big deal. He makes more sense as an innings eater for a rebuilding team than he would for a contender.

Prediction: one year, $8 million

66. Foster Griffin (30, SP, Japan)

Griffin, the Royals’ first-round pick in 2014, is planning to return to MLB after three years in Japan. He missed about half of 2025, but he was terrific in posting a 1.62 ERA in 78 innings for Yomiuri, and he had a 2.57 ERA and a 25% strikeout rate overall in his three seasons. Several teams will give him a look as a potential fourth or fifth starter.

Prediction: two years, $12 million

67. Paul Goldschmidt (38, 1B, Yankees)

Despite finishing out 2025 as a role player starting against lefties, Goldschmidt wants to keep his Hall of Fame career going at age 38. It’s hard to see a contender signing him as a regular after he hit just .247/.289/.329 against righties, but a lesser team might, and if he’s content as a platoon guy, who wouldn’t want to have him around?

Prediction: one year, $7.5 million

68. Germán Márquez (31, SP, Rockies)

Any number of teams would have loved to lure Márquez out of Colorado a few years ago, but after missing most of 2023 and ’24 following Tommy John surgery, he showed little in finishing with a 6.70 ERA and an ugly 14% strikeout rate last season. He might not be hopeless -- his velocity is down just one mph from his peak -- but he’s five years removed from his last quality season.

Prediction: one year, $7.5 million

69. Willi Castro (28, INF/OF, Cubs)

Castro had a really rough go of it after a deadline deal sent him to the Cubs, hitting .170/.245/.240 in 110 plate appearances, but before that, he hit .250/.335/.398 in 2 1/2 seasons with the Twins. As one of the youngest and most versatile free agents available, he’ll probably get some two-year offers. Still, he might prefer a chance to hit free agency on a higher note next winter.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

70. Starling Marte (37, OF, Mets)

Marte faded into a part-time role in the final season of his four-year, $78 million deal with the Mets, but he showed he’s still a useful bat in hitting .270/.335/.410, and he also finished with his best defensive numbers in a few years. It’s probably the case that the limited role suits him best at age 37 and after the leg problems he’s experienced in recent years, but he can still help a contender.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

71. Josh Bell (33, 1B, Nationals)

Bell probably would have been part of a deadline deal for a fourth straight season in 2025, but no one had much interest in a designated hitter with a .700 OPS. That’s a shame, in retrospect, since Bell posted an .837 OPS over the final two months. He wound up with some of the best exit-velocity numbers of his career and also a 16.5% strikeout rate that was his second lowest ever. Statcast gave him an xBA of .270 and an xSLG of .497 for the full season. It doesn’t mean he’ll do it again, but he seems a little more interesting now than he was the previous couple of offseasons.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

72. Jose Quintana (37, SP, Brewers)

Teams seem to really dislike paying Quintana, who posted a 105 ERA+ in 31 starts for the Mets in 2024 but still had to settle for $4 million from the Brewers over the winter. He went on to miss some time last season, but in his 24 starts, he again had a 105 ERA+. Unfortunately, that did come with the worst peripherals of his career, giving teams an excuse to again not want to pay him much this winter.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

73. Miguel Rojas (37, 2B/SS, Dodgers)

Still an excellent defender as he heads into his late-30s, Rojas has been worth 5.5 bWAR in 217 games for the Dodgers the last two years. He indicated last month that he’s looking to play just one more season, and he’ll probably beat his previous career-high salary of $5 million in the process.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

74. Tyler Kinley (35, RP, Braves)

The Braves knew they were out of the race at the deadline, but they went ahead and picked up Kinley from the Rockies anyway, partly because of his reasonable $5 million option for 2026. He went on to allow just two earned runs in 25 innings for Atlanta, so that option is most likely getting picked up.

Prediction: option exercised

75. Walker Buehler (31, SP, Phillies)

Buehler returned from Tommy John surgery in 2024 averaging 95 mph with his fastball, which was down about 1.5 mph from his peak but almost right where he was in his best season in 2021. If anything, he figured to be a little stronger last season. Instead, he dropped another one mph on the fastball and struck out only 16.5 batters he faced on his way to posting a 5.45 for the Red Sox. He did allow just one run over 13 2/3 innings in three late appearances for the Phillies, but there was nothing there to suggest genuine improvement. A turnaround is hardly impossible, but the stuff has to get better.

Prediction: one year, $7 million

76. Isiah Kiner-Falefa (31, INF, Blue Jays)

It’s kind of amazing to think it was just a year ago that the non-contending Blue Jays sent Kiner-Falefa to the sort-of-contending Pirates at the trade deadline. IKA seemed on his way to a career-year at that point -- he was hitting .292/.338/.420 for the Jays -- but he’s mostly struggled since, hitting .262/.297/.334 with particularly subpar exit velocity numbers last season. He makes more sense as a utilityman for a contender than as a starter on a lesser team.

Prediction: one year, $6.5 million

77. Patrick Corbin (36, SP, Rangers)

Experimenting with a cutter in 2024 didn’t pay immediate dividends for Corbin, but he started throwing the pitch harder last season and was stunningly competent in finishing with a 4.40 ERA in 155 innings. He actually seems like a better bet than most of the other innings eaters at this point.

Prediction: one year, $6.5 million

78. Austin Hays (30, OF, Reds)

The one-year deal Hays signed with the Reds a year ago included a mutual $12 million option for 2026, but the Reds should opt out of that after he missed one-third of the season and finished with a middling 105 OPS+ in 2025. While Hays will likely land another starting job, he’s probably more useful as a platoon guy against left-handers than as a full-timer at this point.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

79. Colin Rea (35, SP, Cubs)

A middle reliever initially after being brought in as rotation insurance, Rea ended up making 27 starts for the Cubs and posting a 3.95 ERA. He also allowed just one run in 7 2/3 innings over three postseason appearances. The Cubs can bring him back for $6 million or buy him out for $750,000. One imagines they’ll choose the former, even if they again don’t plan to pencil him into the rotation.

Prediction: option exercised

80. Max Kepler (33, OF, Phillies)

Kepler’s longstanding BABIP issues went away for two years; he finished at .294 between 2023 and ’24, compared to .239 over the previous five years. They resurfaced with the Phillies, though, as he came in at just .232 on his way to hitting .216/.300/.391 last season. His offensive projections really haven’t changed much, but now that he’s more of an average corner outfielder than a Gold Glove contender cuts into his value.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

81. Michael Kopech (29, RP, Dodgers)

Kopech was a big part of the Dodgers’ bullpen during their 2024 World Series run, but he was limited to 11 innings last season by a shoulder injury early and then knee problems late. He was also often terribly wild while on the mound; between the majors and his Triple-A rehab assignments, he walked 33 of the 122 batters he faced (27%). Still, with his ceiling, he’ll get some offers.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

82. Michael Lorenzen (34, SP, Royals)

Lorenzen’s 4.64 ERA for the Royals was his high mark in four seasons since he retired to starting, but his 21% strikeout rate and 6.4% walk rate were both nice improvements.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

83. Phil Maton (33, RP, Rangers)

Maton was unable to lock down the closer’s role in Texas after being picked up from the Cardinals at the deadline, but he still had a pretty terrific season overall, finishing with a 2.79 ERA and 33% strikeout rate. His career strikeout rate coming into the year was 26%, and he’d been down to 23% in 2024. Still, he doesn’t necessarily need the big strikeout numbers to be effective; of the 385 pitchers to throw 300 innings since 2017 (the year he entered the league), he has the fourth lowest hard-hit rate at 29.8%.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

84. Gregory Soto (31, RP, Mets)

Soto’s left arm is getting a bit less lively, with his velocity having dropped 1.5 mph over the last two years, and he hasn’t posted a sub-4.00 ERA since 2022. Still, his peripherals are fine, and lefties who strike batters out are always in demand.

Prediction: one year, $6 million

85. Hunter Harvey (31, RP, Royals)

Harvey has pitched a total of 185 innings as a major leaguer, but the oft-injured former first-round pick of the Orioles has racked up the six years of service time he needed to qualify for free agency. He had a 3.29 ERA and a 27% strikeout rate in 151 innings from 2022-24 before being held to 10 2/3 innings by shoulder and abdominal injuries last season. He’s a flier for a large-market team that can hope he’s healthy at the right time of year.

Prediction: one year, $5.5 million

86. Tyler Anderson (36, SP, Angels)

Anderson’s three-year, $39 million deal with the Angels concluded with a 4.56 ERA in 2023 and a 4.53 ERA overall. His strikeout rate is dropping and he’s now one of the league’s most extreme flyball pitchers, so he’s probably rotation filler for a non-contender at this point.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

87. Miles Mikolas (37, SP, Cardinals)

Mikolas made 98 starts for the Cardinals while earning $55.75 million the last three years, but those came with a 4.98 ERA. The team that signs him to eat innings at the back of the rotation should be expecting more of the same.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

88. Rhys Hoskins (33, 1B, Brewers)

Hoskins was hitting .242/.340/.428 in 318 plate appearances in July when a bad throw from Joey Ortiz at short led to a collision at first base that left him with a sprained thumb. Once healthy, he was declared obsolete by a Brewers team that had given his at-bats to Andrew Vaughn and Jake Bauers. With just a 102 OPS+ in the two seasons since he returned from a torn ACL, he’s probably not going to get much of a look from contenders.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

89. John Means (32, SP, Guardians)

The Guardians paid for Means’ Tommy John rehab in the hopes that he might be able to contribute at the end of the year and got themselves a $6 million option for 2026 as a bonus. However, while Means did return to the mound in mid-August, his stuff wasn’t quite up to par, and went unpromoted to the majors after posting a 7.97 ERA in five Triple-A starts. His option will likely be declined, but he still might have some upside if he’s stronger this year.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

90. Michael Conforto (33, OF, Dodgers)

The Dodgers looked at Conforto’s exit velocity numbers from his final year with the Giants and decided it was worth paying him $17 million last season. It turned out to be one of their worst calls of the decade, but as ineffective as Conforto was in hitting .199/.305/.333 and playing subpar defense in left field, his exit velocity numbers remained solid; Statcast gave him an xBA of .246 and an xSLG of .428. He probably won’t draw much interest from contenders this time around, but he could bounce back.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

91. Rob Refsnyder (35, OF, Red Sox)

Never able to establish himself in his twenties, Refsnyder turned into the ideal platoon outfielder in Boston, hitting .276/.364/.440 while primarily starting against lefties the last four years. He even had his best exit velocity numbers to date in 2025, finishing with a 52% hard-hit rate and a 12% barrel rate. He’ll probably stay put in Boston, but there should be widespread interest.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

92. Lane Thomas (30, OF, Nationals)

A fine regular for the Nationals in 2023, Thomas has cratered since, hitting .237/.309/.400 in 2024 and then coming in at just .160/.246/.272 in 39 games during a 2025 campaign in which he struggled with plantar fasciitis. If healthy, he can help a team as a platoon corner outfielder against lefties. He’s hit .292/.359/.500 versus southpaws and .220/.287/.383 against righties over the course of his career.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

93. Jordan Montgomery (32, SP, Brewers)

Montgomery’s market wasn’t what he thought it would be after he helped pitch the Rangers to a championship in 2023, so he took a short-term deal that couldn’t have worked out much worse; he had a disastrous first season in Arizona and then underwent Tommy John surgery in March that will probably cost him at least the first month or two of 2026. He still makes for an intriguing stash.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

94. Martín Pérez (34, SP, White Sox)

Pérez missed much of the year with an elbow injury and then also had his shoulder act up at the end of the season, but he was surprisingly effective while on the mound, posting a 3.54 ERA in 10 starts and one relief appearance. Durability hadn’t been much of an issue previously, so another one-year deal in the $5 million range seems appropriate.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

95. Pierce Johnson (34, RP, Braves)

Johnson gave the Braves a 3.36 ERA over 115 1/3 innings in return for their $14 million investment two years ago. Now the team can keep him around for a third year at another $7 million or buy him out for $250,000. With the decline in his strikeout rate (33% in 2022-23, 28% in 2025, 25% in 2025), the guess here is that he wouldn’t command quite that much on the open market.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

96. Luis Rengifo (29, INF/OF, Angels)

While getting his most playing time to date, Rengifo came in at just .238/.287/.335 in 541 plate appearances for the Angels last season. If some team buys into his improved metrics at second base, maybe he’ll land a starting job. He’d previously graded out as below average everywhere he played.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

97. Chris Paddack (30, SP, Tigers)

With his formerly excellent changeup betraying him, Paddack has mustered just a 5.22 ERA and an 18% strikeout rate the last two years. He’d be more interesting in the pen than in the rotation at this point, and if he’s willing to market himself as a reliever, it’d probably help his payday.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

98. Tommy Kahnle (36, RP, Tigers)

Kahnle’s big ERA spike in 2025 was partly the product of a three-appearance run in July in which he gave up nine runs while getting three outs. He had a 2.84 ERA before that and a 3.75 ERA afterwards. Still, his changeup velocity has dropped about three mph these last three years, suggesting the end is coming soon.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

99. Kirby Yates (39, RP, Dodgers)

Yates followed up a brilliant season in Texas with a year in which he served three stints on the IL and amassed a 5.23 ERA in 41 1/3 innings for the Dodgers. He might choose to hang up his spikes at age 39, but the 29% strikeout rate this year says he remains a possibility to help a contender.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

100. José Leclerc (32, RP, Athletics)

Leclerc was limited to just 10 appearances in April after signing a one-year, $10 million deal with the A’s last offseason. A lat strain put him on the injured list, and when his rehab failed to progress, he underwent surgery in July. As he returns to free agency, he’ll need to remind teams that he had a 3.36 ERA and a 29% strikeout rate from 2022-24.

Prediction: one year, $5 million

▶ Best of the Rest

$4 million-$4.5 million: Christian Vázquez, Paul Sewald, Miguel Andujar, Griffin Canning, Mitch Garver, Amed Rosario, Dylan Moore, Kiké Hernández, Yoán Moncada, Andrew McCutchen, Aaron Civale, Shawn Armstrong, Jonathan Loáisiga, Danny Coulombe, Wandy Peralta, Taylor Rogers, Caleb Thielbar, Justin Wilson, Jon Gray

$3 million-$3.5 million: Hoby Milner, Gary Sánchez, Andrew Heaney, James McCann, Ty France, Marcus Stroman, José Urquidy, Liam Hendriks, Adam Frazier, Jorge Mateo, Tommy Pham, Jesse Winker, Randal Grichuk, Jakob Junis, Scott Barlow, Luis García, Ryne Stanek, Andrew Chafin, Caleb Ferguson, Tim Hill, Sean Newcomb

Giants ace Logan Webb wins first NL Gold Glove; Patrick Bailey nabs second award

Giants ace Logan Webb wins first NL Gold Glove; Patrick Bailey nabs second award originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Logan Webb has had to sit on the news. He found out late last month that he won his first Gold Glove Award, but he wasn’t supposed to spread that around, so the texts would have to wait. Now, they can fly.

One of Webb’s close friends is Brandon Crawford, a four-time Gold Glove Award winner, and one of his best friends on this current roster is five-time winner Matt Chapman. Webb’s catcher, Patrick Bailey, won his second straight Gold Glove on Sunday. 

“I’m just going to tell those guys, if I can win it, anybody can win it,” Webb joked. 

The staff ace capped an outstanding all-around season on Sunday by winning the NL Gold Glove Award for pitchers, beating Matthew Boyd of the Chicago Cubs and David Peterson of the New York Mets.

Bailey became the first Giants catcher to win two Gold Gloves, and he has a strong case to win the Platinum Glove, given to the best defender overall in each league.

While Bailey was the frontrunner all year, Webb’s inclusion on the finalist list might have surprised some. He emerged as the winner because he made huge strides in holding runners and did a good job of fielding the many, many grounders that came his way as a sinkerballer. He also noted that he didn’t have notable costly errors, which in past years have ticked him off.

For the 28-year-old, this is a long time coming. He has worked for years to find fixes against baserunners, and in 2025, it all clicked. But this was also not a day he totally saw coming. 

“Honestly, I just wanted to get better at playing defense,” Webb said. “I feel like the last couple of years I finished in the bottom five in holding runners and some of the defensive stats that they have. I wanted to get better at it. I didn’t necessarily think it would result in a Gold Glove, but I always thought maybe I could do it.

“I feel like I get a lot of groundballs hit to me and a lot of getovers (to first base). I just had to fix some of the other stuff. It’s a really cool accomplishment and I’m super excited about it.”

The glaring weakness in previous years was holding runners, and at times, that led to games that embarrassed Webb. He has mentioned multiple times over the past year how upset he was to allow four stolen bases in a loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in 2024. One of them went to opposing catcher Pedro Pages, who has eight total stolen bases in the minors and majors. 

Webb credited former manager Bob Melvin and coaches Matt Williams, Mark Hallberg, J.P. Martinez and Garvin Alston for helping him find adjustments this spring. He worked on mixing up his times and looks in live bullpen sessions and Cactus League games, and from the start of the season it was clear that he had found solutions. 

After allowing 21 stolen bases last year, he saw just nine this season, and his increased emphasis on holding runners allowed Bailey to throw out seven of the 16 runners who attempted to steal against the battery. Webb was a negative in Net Bases Prevented in each of the previous five seasons but was at plus-five in 2025, ranking among the league leaders. He also led NL pitchers in Defensive Runs Saved and committed just one error in 207 innings. 

“It’s a huge part of baseball and a huge part of what the Giants try to do,” Webb said of his defense. “I think that’s why we have so many around here. It’s cool to be a part of that.”

Webb and Bailey became the first battery to win Gold Gloves since St. Louis’ Adam Wainwright and Yadier Molina in 2013. The right-hander also joined Rick Reuschel as the only Giants pitchers to win one, and this latest win might mean a bit more; Reuschel spent most of that 1987 season with the Pittsburgh Pirates. 

Bailey got bragging rights on his boss, Buster Posey, and every other catcher in franchise history. He also became the first National League catcher to go back-to-back since Molina won eight straight between 2008 and 2015. 

The voting on this one might have been just as easy as it was in Molina’s prime years. Bailey easily led all big leaguers in Fielding Run Value and he lapped the field in Catcher Framing Runs. At 19 Defensive Runs Saved, he was nearly twice as valuable in that metric as the next-best catcher in the National League. 

“His defense is amazing and I feel like he just keeps getting better,” Webb said. “It’s fun to watch him do his work every day. He works hard at his craft.”

Webb said the first time he ever threw to Bailey was when they were paired up in minor league camp after Webb drove over to get some innings in one spring. Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz, then the Giants’ catching coach, told Webb that he would like the young catcher. 

Years later, they’re both key players for a franchise that hopes much better days are ahead. Webb would like to win a Cy Young Award one day and add to the trophy case, but he said his main goal is simply to pitch in the postseason again. If the Giants get there in 2026, Webb might want to record the broadcast. He smiled when talking about some of what comes with winning a Gold Glove.

“Now, when people watch the game, I get that Gold Glove (icon) next to my name when they show the defensive positioning,” Webb said.

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2025 MLB Free Agency Guide: Top players, key dates, qualifying offers, how it works

While it’s true that the MLB season ends with the World Series, the wheels never actually stop spinning. That’s because free agency and the MLB Hot Stove essentially starts right away. And with that, so does the jockeying for position among those teams who view themselves as contenders for 2026.

Below is everything you need to know about MLB free agency, including important dates to know, the qualifying offer system, and the top names available in this year’s class.

Don’t forget: Check out the Rotoworld player news feed for all the latest news, rumors, and transactions as MLB’s Hot Stove gets underway!

Kyle Tucker
Stars like Alex Bregman, Pete Alonso, and Cody Bellinger join headliners Kyle Tucker, Dylan Cease, and Bo Bichette in a 2025–26 MLB free agent class loaded with impact bats and arms.

When does MLB free agency begin?

MLB free agency begins a day after the World Series concludes. Teams are free to negotiate with players right away, but players are not permitted to sign a contract with a new team until five days after the World Series concludes.

Who are the top expected MLB free agents this offseason?

Read Matthew Pouliot's full Top 100 breakdown here, but below are some of the top expected names:

  • Kyle Tucker, OF (2025 team: Cubs)
  • Kyle Schwarber, DH (2025 team: Phillies)
  • *Pete Alonso, 1B (2025 team: Mets)
  • Framber Valdez, LHP (2025 team: Astros)
  • Bo Bichette, SS (2025 team: Blue Jays)
  • Ranger Suárez, LHP (2025 team: Phillies)
  • Dylan Cease, RHP (2025 team: Padres)
  • *Cody Bellinger, OF/1B (2025 team: Yankees)
  • *Alex Bregman, 3B (2025 team: Red Sox)
  • *Edwin Díaz, RP (2025 team: Mets)

When are option decisions due?

Option decisions — whether it's a mutual, player, or club option — are all to be decided within five days of the World Series concluding. Pete Alonso, Alex Bregman, Cody Bellinger, Edwin Díaz are noted with "stars" above, as they all have the ability to exercise their player options and hit free agency. Alonso, Bregman, and Bellinger are all reportedly set to opt out, while Díaz is a strong possibility to do so, as well.

What is a qualifying offer?

MLB teams have the ability to make a one-year qualifying offer to their impending free agents. Teams have until five days after the conclusion of the World Series to make such offers. Should those players decline and sign with another team, their previous team would receive draft pick compensation. The qualifying offer is determined by the average of the top 125 MLB contracts for a given year. This year’s qualifying offer is $22.025 million, which is an increase of 4.6 percent compared to last year’s $21.05 million figure.

Who is eligible for a qualifying offer?

  • Impending free agents who have been on the same team since Opening Day
  • Impending free agents who have never received a qualifying offer before

For example, Pete Alonso received a qualifying offer last year, so the Mets can’t do one again this offseason. However, it is a different situation for Kyle Tucker, who has not received one before. Like Alonso, Alex Bregman and Cody Bellinger also received qualifying offers last winter.

Eugenio Suárez, Shane Bieber, and Josh Naylor were traded during the season, so they cannot receive a qualifying offer.

Which players received qualifying offers last year?

Juan Soto, Corbin Burnes, Alex Bregman, Max Fried, Willy Adames, Pete Alonso, Anthony Santander, Teoscar Hernandez, Nick Pivetta, Christian Walker, Sean Manaea, Luis Severino, Nick Martinez

What is the deadline to accept a qualifying offer?

Players have until November 18 at 4 p.m. ET to decide whether to accept their qualifying offer.

What happens when a player declines a qualifying offer?

If a player declines a qualifying offer and signs a contract with a new team before the next year’s MLB Draft (in July), their previous team would receive draft pick compensation based on their payroll and revenue-sharing situations.

  • Teams who pay the Competitive Balance Tax (the league’s highest-spenders) receive a compensation pick after the fourth round. 
  • Revenue sharing recipients would receive a compensatory pick after the first round (and before Competitive Balance Round A) if their former player signs with another team for more than $50 million guaranteed. They would receive a compensatory pick between Competitive Balance Round B and the start of the third round if their former player signs for less than $50 million guaranteed. 
  • Teams who don’t fall into the categories above will receive a compensation pick after Competitive Balance Round B regardless of the value of the contract. 

How often does a player accept a qualifying offer?

It has been a rare occurrence. Of the 114 occasions that a player has been extended a qualifying offer since the system went into place in 2012, only 14 of them have accepted. Nick Martinez (Reds) was the only player to accept last offseason.

What happens if a team signs a qualifying offer free agent?

Any team who signs a player who rejected a qualifying offer will surrender a draft pick as well as international bonus pool money depending on their payroll situation.

First-round picks are protected, though a team’s first pick can be pushed back based on overall competitive balance tax spending.

  • Teams who pay the Competitive Balance Tax will lose their second- and fifth-highest picks in addition to surrendering $1 million from their international bonus pool.
  • Revenue sharing recipients will surrender their third-highest pick.
  • Teams who don’t fall into the categories above will lose their second-highest pick in addition to surrendering $500,000 from their international bonus pool.

Can teams sign multiple qualifying offer free agents?

Yes, but this would result in a team surrendering additional draft picks and international bonus pool money.

For example, teams who pay the Competitive Balance Tax would also give up their third- and sixth-highest picks. Teams who receive revenue sharing would surrender their fourth-highest pick. Teams who don’t fall into those categories would give up their third-highest pick.

Father and son catch both historic home runs in Game 7 of the World Series

Father and son catch both historic home runs in Game 7 of the World Series originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

When the night began at Rogers Centre, John Bains thought he’d be watching history — not holding it.

The 61-year-old from Brampton, Ontario, has been bleeding Blue Jays blue since 1977, when baseball first took root north of the border. He’s seen the highs, the heartbreaks, and the near-misses. But nothing — absolutely nothing — could have prepared him for what happened on that fateful Saturday night during Game 7 of the 2025 World Series. 

In the top of the ninth, with one out and the Dodgers clinging to their last breath, Miguel Rojas stepped into the box. Bains, and the other 44,713 Blue Jays fans in attendance believed the were seconds away from watching history unfold, and a 32-year World Series drought snapped.

The air inside the dome hung thick with tension — like a held breath refusing to exhale. Rojas connected on a hanging slider by All-Star closer Jeff Hoffman, and a sharp crack cut through the silence. The ball soared toward left field — a white comet tracing destiny’s line.

Bains didn’t flinch. He tracked it the whole way, arms extended, heart racing, he reached over the railing. Thwack. The ball landed squarely in his glove. Pandemonium erupted, but for John, it was surreal stillness — a frozen frame in baseball eternity.

Cameras caught Bains throwing the home run ball back onto the field as the stunned crowd went silent as the sheeted dead. But in reality, Bains had a trick up his sleeve.

“I had a feeling I might have to pull the switch,” Bains told Darren Rovell, laughing about the decoy baseball he’d tucked in his pocket, just in case. Moments later, he tossed the ordinary ball back onto the field — a magician’s sleight of hand to keep a piece of history.

For any other fan, catching one of the most important home run balls in baseball history might be fortunate enough. A ball like that, if sold at auction, could change anyone’s life forever. 

But fate wasn’t finished.

Two innings later, in the 11th, Dodgers catcher Will Smith sent a towering drive arcing toward the same section — the same row — the same family. The ball bounced off the Blue Jays bullpen ground and into the waiting arms of John’s son, Matthew, who fumbled it on the bounce, the ball caroming off hands and seats before finding its way back to him.

The stadium fell quiet as Smith rounded the bases. The Dodgers poured out of the dugout. And in the stands, a stunned father and son stared down at their hands — each holding a piece of baseball immortality.

“I mean, what are the odds?” Bains said, shaking his head.

For a man who’s caught his fair share of postseason souvenirs — Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the ALDS, Ernie Clement in the same series — this was otherworldly. Two game-changing home runs, caught by the same family, in the same game, from opposing sides of fate.

Mixed emotions? Of course. The Blue Jays’ dream season had dissolved in real time. Yet even amid heartbreak, there was a strange beauty in it — a father and son sharing the most improbable moment of their lives, forever bound by two baseballs that changed everything.

And an immigrant family whose lives and lineage just changed forever.

Bains said that he’s going to keep the balls for now, MLB does not authenticate baseballs that leave the field of play, unless they are specially marked. But that doesn’t stop an auction house from authenticating the baseballs and selling them to the highest bidder on the open market. 

Bains joked that he’d consider offers before that happens — “$1 million for the Rojas ball, $1.5 million for the Smith ball” — but deep down, he knows the true value isn’t monetary, but the memories he just shared with his son. It’s something eternal, something only baseball can conjure: legacy, luck, and the cosmic symmetry of a game that never stops surprising.

And somewhere in Toronto, as the nearby Rogers Centre sits empty, two baseballs now rest side by side inside the Bains household— reminders that sometimes, the universe has the strangest sense of humor.

Blue Jays reflect on cruel Game 7 loss to Dodgers: ‘I cost everybody a World Series’

George Springer’s Blue Jays had victory in their grasp in Game 7. Photograph: Patrick Smith/Getty Images

The Toronto Blue Jays have reflected on their agonizing loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7 of the World Series.

The Blue Jays looked set to win their first World Series since 1993 when they entered the ninth inning with a 4-3 lead. But with one out, and Toronto’s Jeff Hoffman facing the Dodgers’ No 9 hitter, Miguel Rojas, the reliever threw a hanging slider which Rojas launched for the tying home run. Will Smith then hit the winning home run in the 11th inning off Shane Bieber, the first time the Dodgers had led all night.

Related: LA Dodgers retain World Series after thrilling Game 7 win over Toronto Blue Jays

“It sucks,” Hoffman said after the 5-4 defeat. “Supposed to end differently. Was just one pitch. I cost everybody here a World Series ring. It feels pretty shitty.”

Bieber had his own regrets. “Hung a slider to a great guy who hits sliders well,” Bieber said. “He was looking for it. I didn’t execute. This one stings. It’s going to sting for a while. This game is not for the faint of heart.”

The Blue Jays had plenty of chances to win their first title in 32 years. They had led the best-of-seven series 3-2 before losing the final two games in their own stadium. They also had the bases loaded in the ninth inning on Saturday night but could not find the decisive hit. Ernie Clement, who set an MLB record with 30 hits this postseason, said he was in tears for an hour after the game. He added he did not blame any of his teammates, despite the team holding a 3-0 lead after the third inning.

“We gave it everything we had,” Clement said. “When you fall short but you can say you left it all out there, there’s something to be proud of there. I would go to war with Jeff Hoffman every day of the week. I want him on the mound. I want Bieber on the mound. Ninety-nine times out of 100 those guys get the job done. Obviously, it just wasn’t our night.”

However, future hall of famer Max Scherzer, Toronto’s starting pitcher for Game 7, reflected on how far the team had come after finishing last in the AL East in 2024.

“I’m 41 years old and I never thought I could love baseball this much,” Scherzer said as he wiped away tears. “My love for the game was so strong because of their love for the game. That loss is so tough because you’re so close to everybody. This team had that closeness, had that camaraderie. We had that passion not only for the game but for each other.”

Dodgers Win World Series on the Back of Series MVP Yamamoto

TORONTO — The Los Angeles Dodgers rolled out Shohei Ohtani one more time to start Game 7 of the World Series against the Toronto Blue Jays—and it almost cost them the title.

When the situation seemed most dire at Rogers Centre on Saturday night, Los Angeles leaned on Ohtani’s compatriot Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who returned to the mound in extra innings with no rest after winning Game 6 and finished up the comeback victory. Will Smith’s 11th-inning homer was the deciding factor in the Dodgers’ 5-4 win over the Blue Jays.

But there’s no denying the impact Ohtani and Yamamoto had on the series. The two Japanese players, who signed contracts worth a total of $1.025 billion as free agents last year, have now led the Dodgers to back-to-back World Series titles for any Major League Baseball team since the Yankees won three straight from 1998 to 2000.

“It’s all about heart,” Mark Walter, the club’s owner, said about Yamamoto, in particular. “He doesn’t want to lose. I think that’s the story of the whole team. You know, he basically won three games for us. That’s unheard of.”

Yamamoto, who was named World Series MVP, finished the playoffs 5-1 with a 1.45 ERA. He threw 96 pitches over six innings to win his Game 6 start on Friday night, and he followed that up with 2 2/3 innings of scoreless relief on 34 more pitches Saturday. He also pitched a complete game in Game 2, becoming the first pitcher since Randy Johnson in 2001 to earn three wins in a World Series.

“In today’s game, [Yamamoto] really showed that he’s the No. 1 pitcher in the world,” Ohtani said.

Ohtani’s own performance in Game 7 lasted 51 pitches and ended when Bo Bichette hit a three-run homer in the third inning. It was too much to ask Ohtani to start on three days of rest with the Dodgers short starting pitching. Ohtani was shaky right from the start, allowing base runners in every one of his three innings.

“I was just so honored to be able to start this game, and unfortunately I didn’t do too well, so I regret that,” Ohtani said.

Ohtani started Game 4 at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday, allowing four runs on six hits as he worked into the seventh inning of the 6-2 loss. That game came a day after Ohtani set a record by reaching base nine consecutive times on two homers, two doubles and five walks, four of them intentional.

It begged the question whether Ohtani had the stamina to pitch a day after he was on base so many times in a Game 3 the Dodgers won in 18 innings on a walk-off Freddie Freeman home run. Roberts noted after the Game 4 loss that Ohtani appeared mortal.

The same question came up when he was handed the Game 7 start.

“Shohei has the weight of the world on him,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “He’s the face of baseball. He’s going to be the MVP of the National League. It’s really special what he’s done. He’s just a great person and a great competitor.”

Yamamoto was a different story. After Friday night’s 3-1 win, Roberts said all pitching hands would be on deck for the finale, sans Yamamoto. But the right-hander arrived at the ballpark on Saturday and told the manager he was available.

“I know I would be pitching two days in a row, but all my teammates were playing a number of games in a row,” Yamamoto said. “I told him I’d be there if he needed me to close this series.”

And that’s what happened.

“What Yoshi did tonight is unprecedented,” Roberts said. “There’s a mental component to it. There’s a flawless delivery. And there’s an unwavering will.”

After Ohtani faltered, the game was the Blue Jays’ to lose, but the Dodgers kept pecking away. Down 4-2 in the seventh, Max Muncy homered, and in the top of the ninth, the unlikely Miguel Rojas, who wasn’t in the lineup until Game 6, tied it with a homer on one out against Jays closer Jeff Hoffman. That sent the game spinning into the bottom of the ninth locked at 4-4.

Blake Snell opened the ninth for the Dodgers, but with an out and runners on first and second, the bullpen door swung open, and Yamamoto entered the game. He immediately hit Alejandro Kirk with a pitch, loading the bases.

The situation for the Dodgers appeared dire, and the Blue Jays seemed on the verge of winning their first World Series title in 32 years. But Daulton Varsho tapped a ball to Rojas at second who converted a force at the plate. And centerfielder Andy Pages, a defensive replacement who had just entered the game for Tommy Edman, roamed wildly into left center to grab a fly ball hit by Ernie Clement.

That threat was over, but extra innings brought plenty more. The deciding factor came in the top of the 11th, as Smith homered with two outs off Game 4 starter Shane Bieber to give the Dodgers the lead.

In the bottom of the inning, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. led with a scorch of a double into the left field corner and was moved over to third on a sacrifice bunt. Addison Barger walked, and Roberts moved the infield in for a possible play at the plate and Kirk at bat. On an 0-2 pitch, Roberts moved the infield back to double play depth. With that, Kirk smacked a grounder to shortstop Mookie Betts who stepped on second base, throwing to Freeman at first for the final two outs.

And that’s the way one of the greatest World Series in recent history ended.

“There was so many pressure points on how that game could have flipped, and we just kept fighting,” Roberts said. “I could go on and on about the great plays and performances. I’m still trying to unpack it all. This is one of the greatest games I’ve ever been a part of.”

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Guerrero hits 6th postseason homer and Blue Jays beat Mariners 6-2 to force Game 7 of ALCS

TORONTO — Look dad, Game 7!

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit his sixth home run this postseason, rookie Trey Yesavage struck out seven in 5 2/3 innings and the Toronto Blue Jays pushed the American League Championship Series to the limit by beating the sloppy Seattle Mariners 6-2 on Sunday night.

The AL pennant will be decided Monday night in Toronto, the second Game 7 in Blue Jays history. Toronto lost to Kansas City in the 1985 ALCS.

“Got to enjoy it, man. This is what we sign up for,” Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. “It’s special and unique, but you have to look at it as a game.”

For one famous baseball family, it will also be a first. Guerrero’s father, Hall of Fame outfielder Vladimir Guerrero, never played in a postseason Game 7 during his 16-year career.

“My dad was telling me, Game 7 is give it all you have,” the Toronto slugger said.

Seattle, the only big league team without a pennant, will play a Game 7 for the first time. The winner faces the NL champion Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series beginning Friday.

“Win or go home,” Mariners center fielder Julio Rodríguez said. “We’re going to lay everything out there.”

Addison Barger homered and drove in three early runs for the Blue Jays, who turned three double plays behind Yesavage — two of them to escape bases-loaded jams.

That made Toronto the first team to induce consecutive bases-loaded, inning-ending double plays in a postseason game, and only the fourth team to turn two in a single postseason game.

“I knew my defense had my back,” Yesavage said.

Toronto also took advantage of Seattle’s season-high three errors. By comparison, the Blue Jays have made four errors in 10 playoff games.

“Balls just kind of in and out of the glove there that put a couple extra guys on base,” Mariners manager Dan Wilson said. “Unfortunately, it led to a couple runs.”

Guerrero’s sixth career postseason homer — all this year — tied him with José Bautista and Joe Carter for the most in Blue Jays history.

“This is what you look for from one of the elite players in the game,” Schneider said.

Bautista threw out the ceremonial first pitch before the game.

Toronto had lost its previous four games when facing postseason elimination. That streak stretched to Game 5 of the 2016 ALCS against Cleveland and included wild-card round losses to Tampa Bay in 2020, Seattle in 2022 and Minnesota in 2023.

Guerrero’s leadoff homer in the fifth made it 5-0 and chased Mariners starter Logan Gilbert. The right-hander allowed four earned runs and seven hits in four-plus innings.

“I thought he had a good fastball, especially early,” Wilson said. “His split was good at times. This is a tough lineup and they did what they had to do to get the ball in play.”

Yesavage took a shutout into the sixth. He was charged with two runs and six hits, five of them singles. Five of his strikeouts came on his split-finger fastball, as did both double-play grounders with the bases loaded.

“I just believed in myself. I know my stuff plays at this level,” Yesavage said. “I know the defense behind me is going to play at the best of their abilities, and getting three double plays in back-to-back-to-back innings was huge.”

The 22-year-old Yesavage threw a season-high 31 splitters. He got 10 whiffs on splitters and five more on sliders.

“He brings the energy,” Guerrero said. “He’s young. He wants to win so bad.”

Three of Yesavage’s six major league starts have come in the playoffs. He’s won twice this postseason after winning one of three outings during the regular season.

Louis Varland got four outs and Jeff Hoffman struck out four over two hitless innings to end it.

The Mariners used two walks and a single to load the bases against Yesavage in the third but were denied when slugger Cal Raleigh grounded into a 3-6-1 double play started by Guerrero and completed by Yesavage covering first base. Raleigh’s first-pitch grounder came off his bat at 101 mph.

“Underappreciated, I think, is how Vlad can play really deep because of his arm,” Schneider said. “In that situation, too, you need some wiggle room for a guy that hits the ball really hard.”

Raleigh finished 0 for 4 with three strikeouts.

Seattle came up empty again after another bases-loaded opportunity in the fourth when J.P. Crawford grounded into a 4-6-3 double play.

The Mariners broke through and chased Yesavage in the sixth. Josh Naylor’s solo shot was his third home run of the playoffs. Yesavage exited after Randy Arozarena’s base hit, and Eugenio Suárez greeted Varland with a bloop RBI single.

Toronto took advantage of fielding errors by Rodríguez in center field and Suárez at third base to score twice in the second, when Barger and Isiah Kiner-Falefa had RBI singles.

Ernie Clement hit a two-out triple off the left-field wall in the third and scored when Barger homered, his second of the postseason.

George Springer started at designated hitter for the Blue Jays and went 0 for 4 with a walk. Springer exited in the seventh inning of Friday’s Game 5 loss in Seattle after he was hit on the right kneecap by a 95.6 mph pitch from Bryan Woo.

Guerrero was hit by a pitch from Seattle reliever Matt Brash in the seventh. Guerrero moved to second on Alejandro Kirk’s single and was advancing on a wild pitch when he scored on Raleigh’s throwing error.

Up next

Toronto is expected to start RHP Shane Bieber on Monday night. Bieber allowed two runs and four hits over six innings in Game 3, a 13-4 win for the Blue Jays. He struck out eight and walked one as he bounced back from a poor outing against the Yankees in the Division Series.

RHP George Kirby will start for Seattle. He allowed eight runs and eight hits, including three homers, over four innings in Game 3.

Mets prospects Nick Morabito, Chris Suero carrying strong minor league seasons into Arizona Fall League

The Mets may already be in offseason mode, but two of their young talents have been able to carry their strong minor league seasons into the early days of the Arizona Fall League.

Nick Morabito and Chris Suero have been two of the top performers thus far for the Scottsdale Scorpions. 

Morabito slotted right back into the leadoff spot for the squad on Sunday night and he made an immediate impact, starting the bottom of the first with a second pitch single up the middle.

The speedster would steal both second and third, and scored the games opening run on a throwing error.

He would reach base twice during the 12-run bottom of the second, drawing a walk and scoring on an RBI double, then lining his second single of the game right back up the middle when his turn came back around. 

The game was called early after the ballpark was evacuated for a fire alarm going off, so Morabito finished the night 2-for-4 to bring his average to a stellar .391 through six AFL games. 

He also has a double, triple, six stolen bases (in seven attempts), and a 1.039 OPS to this point. 

The 22-year-old has established himself as one of the up-and-coming outfield prospects in the system, hitting .273 with an incredible 49 stolen bases (60 attempts) and a .348 on-base percentage in Binghamton this year.

Suero received the night off on Sunday, but he’s been swinging a good bat early in the Fall League, as well. 

The Bronx-native has kept his power-stroke going, hitting a double and two homers over his first five games. He also has two steals and continues to show his versatility, seeing time at all three of his positions (C, 1B, LF).  

Like Morabito, Suero enjoyed a bit of a breakout campaign this year, reaching Double-A at just 21 years old.  

He finished with 16 homers, 35 stolen bases, 68 RBI, and a .379 OBP between Binghamton and Brooklyn. 

The two are ranked back-to-back (15th and 16th) on Joe DeMayo's midseason Top-30 list

Shohei Ohtani and the 10 greatest performances in MLB postseason history

In tossing six scoreless innings and hitting about 1,430 feet of home runs, Shohei Ohtani put up probably the most unique performance in postseason history Friday in NLCS Game 5 against the Brewers. It was perhaps the most spectacular athletic performance ever to take place on a baseball field. Maybe even any sort of field. But was it the greatest individual performance in major league postseason history?

That's a difficult question, one that many would argue hinges on context. Obviously, starring in Game 4 of the NLCS with a 3-0 series lead isn't the same as Game 7 of World Series.

But what is it up against? Here's a rundown of perhaps the top 10 single-game performances in MLB postseason history.

MLB: Washington Nationals at Atlanta Braves
Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani at the top? Our early 2026 Top 300 rankings highlight key fantasy storylines heading into the MLB offseason.

Best Individual MLB Postseason Performances

Honorable Mention

1963 World Series Game 1: Sandy Koufax fans 15 Yankees

Koufax threw two shutouts in the 1965 World Series, including one in Game 7 to finish off the Twins. Still, perhaps even more impressive was his two-game set in a sweep of the Yankees in the 1963 World Series. Koufax outdueled Whitey Ford twice in 5-2 and 2-1 victories, and his 15 strikeouts in Game 1 set a postseason record that has only since been exceeded twice, including once by...

Honorable Mention

1968 World Series Game 1: Bob Gibson’s 17-K shutout

Fairly or not, Gibson’s Game 7 loss keeps the Game 1 performance out of the top 10 here. Prior to that, he outdueled 1968 AL Cy Young winner Denny McLain twice in 4-0 and 10-1 complete-game victories. Unfortunately for the Cardinals, McLain came back out and won Game 6 and Mickey Lolich, working on two days’ rest after winning Game 5, got the better of Gibson as the Tigers won Game 7 by a 4-1 score.

Honorable Mention

2022 ALDS Game 1: Yordan Alvarez walks it off in ninth

In all of postseason history, two individual performances have amounted to at least a 1.0 Win Probability Added, which is a measure of how each event in a game changed win expectancy (a first-inning homer might increase a team's chances of winning from 50 to 60 percent, which would be a 0.1 win expectancy, while Kirk Gibson's famous walkoff homer in the 1988 World Series was worth 0.87). The first of those was pulled off by Babe Ruth the pitcher, who allowed one run over 14 innings to win Game 2 of the 1916 World Series for the Red Sox. The second was by Alvarez, who had already driven in two runs against the Mariners when he hit a three-run homer off Paul Sewald with two outs in the bottom of the ninth to give the Astros a 7-5 win. That changed the Astros' win expectancy from nine percent to 100. But, of course, it was Game 1 of the ALDS.

Honorable Mention

2010 NLDS Game 1: Roy Halladay’s no-hitter in postseason debut

The Blue Jays never reached the playoffs in Halladay’s 12 seasons in Toronto, so the 33-year-old, who was about to win his second Cy Young Award in his first season with the Phillies, was making his postseason debut when he faced the Reds to start the 2010 NLDS. What followed was his second no-hitter of the year (the first was also a perfect game), as he allowed just a single walk to the Reds.

10) 1921 World Series Game 8: Art Nehf shuts out Yankees

Yes, Game 8, as this was the fourth and final World Series to use a best-of-nine format. The New York Giants’ starter, Nehf, was matched up with Waite Hoyt for the third time after losing Game 2 by a 3-0 score and game 5 by a 3-1 margin. This time, Nehf got the better of the future Hall of Famer in a 1-0 game, ending the series with the Giants winning 5-3. It helped a bit that Babe Ruth was limited to a pinch-hitting appearance by a bad knee.

9) 1999 ALDS Game 5: Troy O’Leary & Pedro Martinez finish off Cleveland

Pick either. After losing the first two games of the best-of-five series, the Red Sox stormed back to take Games 3 and 4 by 9-3 and 23-7 margins. Game 5 was setting up as another shootout, with Cleveland leading 8-7 after three in spite of O’Leary’s grand slam in the third. That’s when Martinez, who had been forced to leave Game 1 with a shoulder problem, took over. He pitched six hitless innings with eight strikeouts, and O’Leary hit a second homer, a three-run shot, to break an 8-8 tie in the seventh. The seven RBI from O’Leary is still tied for the postseason record.

8) 1967 World Series Game 7: Bob Gibson goes distance, homers in win

Gibson didn't really need to homer off Boston's Jim Lonborg, who was also going for third win of the World Series, to pull off the Game 7 victory here, but it was the cherry on top. Gibson won Games 1, 4 and 7 in the series, allowing a total of three runs in his three complete games.

7) 1977 World Series Game 6: Reggie Jackson hits three home runs

With the Yankees trying to close out the Dodgers, the newly coined “Mr. October” made sure the nickname would stick, homering on all three of his swings in an 8-4 win. Jackson walked in his first plate appearance and scored on a homer from Chris Chambliss. He then homered in the fourth, fifth and eighth, plating a total of five runs in the 8-4 victory.

6) 1956 World Series Game 5: Don Larsen’s perfect game

Larsen had allowed nine runs -- five earned -- over 5 2/3 innings in two career postseason appearances for the Yankees when he suddenly turned in one of the most famous performances of all-time in the 1956 World Series, pitching a perfect game in a 2-0 win over the Dodgers. Facing a lineup loaded with five future Hall of Famers, he struck out seven while going 27 up and 27 down. It was the only ever postseason no-hitter until Halladay’s in the 2010 NLCS.

5) 1962 World Series Game 7: Ralph Terry downs Giants in Game 7

Mickey Mantle versus Willie Mays turned out to be a dud, as both superstars struggled in the second and final World Series matchup (both were rookies when the Yankees and Giants previously met in 1951). Terry, in his one and only All-Star campaign, turned out to be the difference maker. After taking a tough 2-0 loss in Game 2, he went the distance in a 5-3 victory in Game 5 and then hurled a shutout in Game 7, with Willie McCovey lining out to second baseman Bill Richardson to end a 1-0 game.

4) 2011 World Series Game 6: David Freese ties it, wins it against Rangers

A rather anonymous regular until this point, Freese had already put together a whopper of a postseason by the time the Cardinals-Rangers World Series got to Game 6. He went 0-for-3 with a walk in his first four plate appearances that night, but he had a two-run triple over Nelson Cruz’s head to tie game in the ninth and then a walkoff homer in the bottom of the 11th to send the series to Game 7. He had a two-run double in that one, too, as the Cardinals won the championship. In all, he hit .397 with five homers, eight doubles and 21 RBI in 18 postseason games.

3) 2025 NLCS Game 4: Shohei Ohtani homers three times, strikes out 10

Could anyone else do what Ohtani did in finishing off the Brewers? No, not a chance. He hit a ball out of Dodger Stadium and touched 100 mph on the radar gun twice, throwing the 11 hardest pitches of the game. Ohtani’s three-homer game was the 13th in postseason history, and he struck out 10 over six scoreless innings in the 5-1 victory. Ranking his performance on a list like this just comes down to how much one wants to weigh leverage. If Ohtani had been mediocre with a 3-0 series lead in the NLCS, the Dodgers still might have won the game and almost certainly would have won the series. That’s not the case with most of these other candidates.

2) 2014 World Series Game 7: Madison Bumgarner closes out stellar series

About the closest anyone has ever come to winning a World Series by himself, Bumgarner entered Game 7 against the Royals having already pitched seven innings of one-run ball in Game 1 and a complete-game shutout in Game 5. Going into Game 7, it was figured that he might have one or two innings in him on two-days rest, but he took the ball to begin the fifth for the Giants and never gave it up, throwing five scoreless innings to finish off a 3-2 victory.

1) 1991 World Series Game 7: Jack Morris outlasts John Smoltz in 1-0 win

The performance that made him a Hall of Famer. Morris, in his lone year with the Twins, won Game 1 against the Braves and then took a no-decision in his first matchup with Smoltz in Game 4, which Atlanta went on to win. Game 7 saw both pitchers work on three days’ rest, and Smoltz was incredible for 7 1/3 innings in the scoreless duel. Morris, meanwhile, kept plugging along, throwing 10 scoreless innings before Gene Larkin singled in Dan Gladden to give the Twins the title. No one since has pitched more than nine innings in a postseason game.

Shohei Ohtani highlighted in film tracing history of Japanese and American baseball

Shohei Ohtani celebrates with his teammates after Japan defeated the U.S. in the WBC
Japanese pitcher Shohei Ohtani (16) celebrates with his teammates after striking out American Mike Trout to win the World Baseball Classic on March 21, 2023, in Miami. (Wilfredo Lee / Associated Press)

In the opening moments of a new film called “Diamond Diplomacy,”Shohei Ohtani holds the ball and Mike Trout holds a bat. These are the dramatic final moments of the 2023 World Baseball Classic.

The film puts those moments on pause to share the long and complex relationship between the United States and Japan through the prism of baseball, and through the stories of four Japanese players — Ohtani included — and their journeys to the major leagues.

Baseball has been a national pastime in both nations for more than a century. A Japanese publishing magnate sponsored a 1934 barnstorming tour led by Babe Ruth. Under former owners Walter and Peter O’Malley, the Dodgers were at the forefront of tours to Japan and elsewhere.

In 1946, however, amid the aftermath of World War II, the United States government funded a tour by the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League. Director Yuriko Gamo Romer features archival footage from that tour prominently in her film.

Read more:As Shohei Ohtani takes center stage, remembering baseball at Manzanar prison camp

“I thought it was remarkable,” she said, “that the U.S. government decided, ‘Oh, we should send a baseball team to Japan to help repair relations and for goodwill.’ ”

On the home front, Romer shows how Ruth barnstormed Central California in 1927, a decade and a half before the U.S. government forced citizens of Japanese ancestry into internment camps there. Teams and leagues sprouted within the camps, an arrangement described by one player as “baseball behind barbed wire.”

The film also relates how, even after World War II ended, Japanese Americans were often unwelcome in their old neighborhoods, and Japanese baseball leagues sprung up like the Negro Leagues.

In 1964, the San Francisco Giants made pitcher Masanori Murakami the first Japanese player in Major League Baseball, but he yielded to pressure to return to his homeland two years later.

San Francisco Giants pitcher Masanori Murakami is shown in uniform leaning over and looking across a field 1964.
San Francisco Giants pitcher Masanori Murakami, shown on the a pro baseball field in 1964, was the first Japanese athlete to play in Major League Baseball. (Associated Press)

In 1995, when pitcher Hideo Nomo signed with the Dodgers, he had to retire from Japanese baseball to do so. (The film contains footage of legendary Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda teaching Nomo to say, “I bleed Dodger blue.”)

Now, star Japanese players regularly join the majors. In that 2023 WBC, as the film shows at its end, Ohtani left his first big imprint on the international game by striking out Trout to deliver victory to Japan over the United States.

On Friday, Ohtani powered the Dodgers into the World Series with perhaps the greatest game by any player in major league history.

In previous generations, author Robert Whiting says in the film, hardly any American could name a prominent Japanese figure, in baseball or otherwise. Today, Ohtani’s jersey is baseball’s best seller, and he is a cultural icon on and off the field, here and in Japan.

Fans cheer as Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani hits his third home run during Game 4 of the NLCS.
Fans cheer as Dodgers pitcher Shohei Ohtani hits his third home run during Game 4 of the NLCS against the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday at Dodger Stadium. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

“Suddenly, a Japanese face is the face of Major League Baseball in the United States,” Romer said. “People here can buy bottles of cold Japanese tea that have Shohei’s face on it.

“I know people who don’t care about baseball one iota and they’re like, 'oh, yeah, I know who that is.'”

“Diamond Diplomacy” will show on Tuesday at 5 p.m. at the Newport Beach Film Festival. For more information, visit newportbeachfilmfest.com.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Former Yankees catcher Jesús Montero dies at 35

Former Yankees catcher Jesús Montero has died at the age of 35.

According to reports from Venezuela, Montero was critically injured earlier this month when his motorcycle was hit by a truck. 

The Yankees released a statement regarding Montero on Sunday afternoon:

 

Originally signed by the Yankees as an international free agent in 2006, Montero developed into one of the top prospects in all of baseball. He made his major league debut on September 1, 2011 against Boston and went on to play 18 games for the Yankees the rest of the season, posting a .996 OPS with four home runs and 12 RBI.

Montero was traded to the Seattle Mariners along with Hector Noesi in January 2012 in a deal that brought Michael Pineda and Jose Campos to New York. 

He played 226 career games in the majors with 28 home runs and 104 RBI.

Former Yankees prospect Jesus Montero dies at 35, team announces

Former Yankees prospect Jesus Montero dies at 35, team announces originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The New York Yankees announced Sunday that former top prospect Jesús Montero has died at the age of 35 years old.

“The Yankees are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Jesús Montero,” read a post on the team’s official X account. “We send our sincerest condolences to his family & loved ones.”

The former catcher’s motorcycle reportedly crashed into a truck on Oct. 4 and he had been hospitalized ever since in critical condition. He was unable to recover from multiple injuries, authorities said.

“We join the baseball community in mourning the passing of former Major League player Jesús Montero,” Major League Baseball posted on social media Sunday.

The Venezuela native, a power-hitting catcher in the minors, was ranked one of the sport’s top-10 prospects by Baseball America for three consecutive years from 2010 to 2012.  

Montero was the No. 1 prospect in the Yankees’ organization when he made his major-league debut in 2011 at 21-years-old. He played in 18 games for the Yankees that season, hitting .328 with four homers and 12 RBIs.

The following January, Montero was traded to the Seattle Mariners in a package for starting pitcher Michael Pineda. In his first season with the Mariners, he hit .260 with 15 home runs and 62 RBIs in 135 games. Over the next three seasons, he played in a combined 73 games, making his final MLB appearance in 2015.

He was waived by the Mariners the following offseason and spent stints in the minor league systems of the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles.

In the Venezuelan Winter League, he played six seasons with the Navegantes del Magallanes, Cardenales de Lara, and Águilas del Zulia. He retired at age 31 after the 2020-2021 season.

“Venezuelan baseball sadly bids farewell to Jesús Montero … leaving behind a legacy of effort and passion for the game,” the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League said in a statement posted Sunday on X. “Today, baseball mourns his passing. But it also remembers him with gratitude: for every home run that thrilled the fans, for every day in which he proudly defended his country’s colors, and for every young person who saw in him an example that dreams can be achieved.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Letters to Sports: Super Shohei and Dodgers back where they belong

Los Angeles, CA October 17, 2025 - Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) holds the MVP trophy after the Dodgers won game four of the National League Championship Series, NLCS, to sweep the Milwaukee Brewers at Dodger Stadium on Friday, October, 17, 2025. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
Two-way star Shohei Ohtani displays trhe NLCS MVP trophy as teammates and fans cheer after they swept Milwaukee on Friday night at Dodger Stadium. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Wow, what a week in sports. USC defeats Michigan, a Dodger pitches a complete game for the first time in the postseason since 2004 and they sweep the Brewers to go to the World Series for the second consecutive year after being 0-6 against Milwaukee during the regular season. Perhaps Michael Conforto will be added to the roster and win MVP in the World Series.

Jeff Hershow
Woodland Hills


While basically sleepwalking through the first three games of the NLCS, Shohei Ohtani saves his best for last. He goes “Hollywood” and produces the single greatest performance in MLB history as the final curtain comes down on the Milwaukee Brewers and extends the Dodgers' magical journey to repeat as World Series champions.

Stay tuned for the sequel!

Rick Solomon
Lake Balboa


It’s a bird, it’s a plane … no, it’s superhuman Shohei! He pitches a shutout, strikes out 10, and hits three tape-measure home runs. Wow!

Marty Zweben
Palos Verdes Estates


In the history of Major League Baseball, has there ever been a player like Shohei Ohtani? I don't think so. Shohei is the best ever. Enough said.

Chris Sorce
Fountain Valley


Now that the Dodgers have effortlessly powered their way back into the World Series, it’s quite obvious that $400 million actually does buy what it used to!

Jack Wolf
Westwood


At last, the second coming of the Dodgers has happened. We've been waiting for it and hoping for it, and now it's here. Great offense, great defense and superb pitching. Our new chant should be "all the way L.A., all the way."

Cheryl Creek
Anaheim


Statistically speaking, there is a case to be made in comparing the postseason accomplishments of Sandy Koufax and Blake Snell. From a historical perspective, there is no comparison.

Koufax is a legendary lifetime Dodger who pitched until he physically was no longer able to do so. Snell famously refused to take the ball in his last Giants start to save himself for a free agency money windfall.

Bill Waxman
Simi Valley


Stop the presses! The world is still spinning on its axis! Holy Toledo, Dave Roberts finally figured out a starting pitcher's arm doesn't fall off after 100 pitches. Too bad he didn't come to that revelation during Blake Snell's Game 1 performance, but better late than never as the saying goes.

Ken Blake
Brea

Money men

For many of us (back here in the Heartland), Sal Frelick’s miraculous play in Game 1 represents the “never give up” spirit of the Brewers. You can have all the money in world, but it cannot buy that type of magic. And if the Dodgers do defeat the Brewers, then MLB must ask themselves whether or not limitless money should be allowed to kill that type of team spirit.

If the Dodgers do indeed roll on, then for another minute we will be awestruck by the relentless, money-fueled, dancing Dodger machine. However after a few more moments of watching the smug glow from Hollywood, many of us (back here in the heartland) will just be turning it off!

Ken Kraus
Georgetown, Texas

Quality stuff

I just finished reading the in-depth piece on Roki Sasaki by Jack Harris and all I can say is WOW! I get sports news from many sources but Los Angeles Times beats everything else, no contest. Learning about all the behind-the-scenes machinations that brought Sasaki from an injured, defeated rookie to the postseason MVP and Dodgers' season savior was fascinating and gives me a deeper appreciation for the struggles he faces. Keep up the great work: Dodgers, Sasaki, and L.A. Times!!!

Cheryl Norris
Simi Valley

End of the line?

Very disappointing to read about the athletic director at UCLA unaware of what true leadership is, and how best to apply it, in support of a team not giving up and willing to fight the remainder of this season.

Coaches are being terminated due to mismanagement of teams, so why not the Bruins' AD?

J.R. Flores
Cypress

Time to punt

Coach Sean McVay's lack of urgency with the Rams' kicking game is beyond frustrating. The kicker and the special teams coach should have been fired after the Eagles game. Instead these problems, which have lingered since last season, are still here. The Rams need to have a kicking game they can depend on for points. With a good chance to make the playoffs, the time to make a change is now.

Mike Gamboa
Buena Park


The Los Angeles Times welcomes expressions of all views. Letters should be brief and become the property of The Times. They may be edited and republished in any format. Each must include a valid mailing address and telephone number. Pseudonyms will not be used.

Email: sports@latimes.com

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Scouts and execs on complications in Mets' potential trade for Tigers' Tarik Skubal

It’s complicated. 

That’s one of two consensus opinions I found in speaking with six scouts/executives from different teams about the Tarik Skubaltrade speculation that has become the talk of the baseball industry over the last 48 hours. 

At least it was the talk before Shohei Ohtani’s sublime performance late Friday night, but in a way, the stories are connected, especially for a team like the Mets, who need someone like Skubal to have a chance at competing with the Los Angeles Dodgers for baseball supremacy in 2026 and beyond. 

More on that to come. For now, the larger point, as the scout/execs point out, is that the Detroit Tigers are in a very difficult position. They would be risking the wrath of their championship-starved fan base if they trade Skubal, arguably the best pitcher in baseball, after reaching the postseason the last two years, yet they’d almost certainly lose him to free agency a year from now if they choose not to trade him. 

“That’s why it’s hard to predict which way this thing will go,” said an executive from a mid-market NL team. “In a vacuum, it’s a no-brainer, unfortunately, considering Skubal is a (Scott) Boras guy and all that. You make the best trade you can and move on. But in the real world, that’s a tough sell when you haven’t won in 40 years.”

It’s 41 years, actually, since the Tigers won the World Series in 1984. And there is another layer to their conundrum. 

For years, the late Mike Ilitch, the Tigers’ owner, operated with one of the higher payrolls in baseball while trying to win another title, spending big in free agency and once locking up Justin Verlander to a seven-year, $180 million extension that at the time was the highest in the game. But Ilitch died in 2017 and his son, Christopher, has run a more budget-conscious operation since taking over. 

“It’s kind of like Hal (Steinbrenner) taking over after George died,” said one midwest-based scout. “The fans there long for the days when they felt like Mike Ilitch would spend whatever it took to try to win. The son is not very popular as it is. Trading Skubal would make him persona non grata in Detroit.”

In short, this isn’t Garrett Crochet, who was traded for prospects last winter by the rebuilding Chicago White Sox, or even Corbin Burnes, traded by the small-market Milwaukee Brewers from a team that had enough pitching depth to continue winning. 

Skubal is far more essential than that to the Tigers and the city of Detroit. 

Oct 5, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal (29) pitches against the Seattle Mariners in the seventh inning during game two of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at T-Mobile Park
Oct 5, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal (29) pitches against the Seattle Mariners in the seventh inning during game two of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at T-Mobile Park / Steven Bisig-Imagn Images

Still, the same scouts and execs don’t rule out a trade. For it to happen, however, it would take a more attractive package than either Crochet or Burnes brought back. 

Which leads to the second consensus opinion that emerged from my various conversations: That is, no team is more motivated or well-positioned than the Mets to make such a trade happen. 

“I’d make them the favorite to get Skubal, no question, if the Tigers decide to trade him,” said an NL scout. “They have the pieces to get it done and they obviously have the need. Steve Cohen apologized to the fans for missing the postseason -- what does that tell you? He’s going to want to make big-splash moves to change the narrative.”

To that point, SNY’s Andy Martino reported Friday the Mets are expected to be “involved” if Skubal is made available, and willing to “shake up their current position-player group” if it means acquiring a top pitcher. 

So the question on the Mets’ end would be just how far they’re willing to go for a player they could lose to free agency after one season. 

“Steve Cohen changes that equation,” said one team exec. “His money takes significant risk out of losing the player. And when you look at the Mets, as badly as they played down the stretch, they’re still talented enough that a pitcher like Skubal could be the difference-maker that gives them a chance to compete with the Dodgers and win it all next year. 

“But I’d still expect them to draw a line somewhere as to how much they’d be willing to give up, knowing they could sign Skubal in a year without giving up assets.”

So what would it take? The scouts/execs all made the point that this has to be more than trading prospects, as the Tigers, even without Skubal, would go into next season trying to win, with the core of a team that had the best record in baseball until a September collapse.

“They would want players who could help them win next season, plus prospects too,” said a team exec. “They’re going to ask for (Nolan) McLean. He’s a guy you can sell to your fans as a rising star who can be another Skubal. You get him with some other pieces and maybe your fans can live with it.

“But if I’m the Mets, McLean is the one untouchable. The ceiling is too high and you have him under control for six years. Other than that, it’s finding the right combination of players on your major league roster and top prospects.”

Sep 18, 2025; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal (29) pitches in the sixth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Comerica Park.
Sep 18, 2025; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal (29) pitches in the sixth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Comerica Park. / Rick Osentoski - Imagn Images

Scouts identified catcher Francisco Alvarez, third baseman Brett Baty, and lefty starter David Peterson as possibilities the Tigers would want off the major league roster. 

One suggested Clay Holmes as well. 

The prospects in demand, other than McLean, figure to be pitchers Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong, infielder Jett Williams, first baseman Ryan Clifford, and outfielder Carson Benge

“It has to be some combination of those players,” said a scout. 

Two players sparked much debate among the scouts/execs: Alvarez and Benge. 

“Other than pitching, Alvarez could be the key,” one exec said. “It depends how the Tigers’ scouts evaluate him. He showed some growth after the Mets sent him to Triple-A, but is he still a 30-home run guy as he was projected to be when he came up? As a catcher, that would make him a difference-maker and something to help justify the trade from a PR standpoint.

“If you’re the Mets, you have to make the same evaluation. Is it worth giving up a catcher who’s still young (Alvarez turns 24 in November)? I’d have a hard time doing that, on top of what else you’d have to put in the deal.”

Then there is Benge, the minor leaguer who could be the long-term answer to filling the Mets’ hole in center field. Scouts love him for his athleticism and advanced approach at the plate.

“He has a chance to be a .300 hitter with power who can play center field,” one scout said. “How many of those guys are there in the game these days? If I’m the Mets, I’m doing everything I can to keep him. 

“You know you’re going to have to give up pitching, probably either Tong or Sproat, plus Peterson. And you can live with giving up Jett Williams. But Benge could be special offensively and he fills a big need for the Mets.”

The bottom line is the scouts/execs believe the two teams could find enough common ground on a trade package to make it work if the Tigers become committed to making a deal. But only two of the six people I spoke to think the chances of it happening are more than 50-50. 

The other four think it’s far more likely the Tigers will listen but ultimately decide that Skubal is worth more, even for one more season, than what the Mets or anyone else is offering. 

“I just don’t think they’d want to deal with the uproar it would cause among their fans,” one exec said. “That’s a very real factor, especially when you haven’t won a championship in so long and the public perception is that Skubal gives them a chance next year.

“But I’ll say this: if the Mets are willing to go the extra mile, in terms of what they’d give up, they could make it awfully tempting for the Tigers to ignore all the outside noise and decide, let’s do it.”

Stay or Go: Should Yankees re-sign Trent Grisham?

When the Yankees made the Juan Soto deal a couple of offseasons ago, Trent Grisham was seen as a throw-in. 

His first season in pinstripes saw Grisham appear in just 76 games and was used primarily as a late-game defensive replacement. Fast forward to 2025 and Grisham became a revelation for the Yankees.

The 28-year-old had a career season and helped stabilize the Yankees outfield, playing center alongside Cody Bellinger and Aaron Judge. But with the unceremonious end to the Yankees' season, Grisham will be testing the market as a free agent. 

With Bellinger testing free agency, and Judge being the only constant, the Yankees' outfield could be in flux, but should they take a chance and bring back Grisham?

Aug 30, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring against the Chicago White Sox during the 11th inning at Rate Field.
Aug 30, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring against the Chicago White Sox during the 11th inning at Rate Field. / Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

Why Yankees should re-sign Trent Grisham

As presently constituted, the Yankees will have Judge play right field and potentially a bunch of kids manning the outfield. Jasson Dominguez will likely get another crack at becoming an everyday player, but what about the third outfield spot? The Yankees need stability as a win-now team, and they can't possibly trot out two kids every game, and New York could do worse than bringing back Grisham.

Again, Grisham had his best offensive season in 2025. His 34 homers are twice as many as his previous career high (2022 with the Padres) and his 74 RBI are 12 more than his previous high in 2021. It wasn't just his homers and RBI. Grisham set career marks in slugging (.464), hits (116), walks (82) and OPS (.811).

Grisham was also extremely clutch for the Yankees. According to FanGraphs, he hit .308 with seven home runs and 1.259 OPS in high-leverage situations, including five blasts with two outs and runners in scoring position. 

And the former two-time Gold Glover is still very good in CF, despite his seemingly lackadaisical approach. 

Grisham will also be a more affordable option than Bellinger or other free agent outfielders like Kyle Tucker, so there is a spot for Grisham if the Yankees are in need of a veteran outfielder.

New York Yankees outfielder Trent Grisham (12) during a game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium.
New York Yankees outfielder Trent Grisham (12) during a game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. / John Jones-Imagn Images

Why Yankees should not re-sign Trent Grisham

Let's face it. Do you expect Grisham to come close to his offensive production moving forward?

It's very likely that 2025 Grisham is an outlier. His offensive numbers, especially his power, were way higher than in previous seasons. Here's a breakdown of his numbers in his last five seasons:

  • 2021: .242/.327/.413, .740 OPS, 15 HR (132 games)
  • 2022: .184/.284/.341, .626 OPS, 17 HR (152 games)
  • 2023: .198/.315/.352, .666 OPS, 13 HR (153 games)
  • 2024: .190/.290/.385, .675 OPS, 9 HR (76 games)
  • 2025: .235/.348/.464, .811 OPS, 34 HR (143 games)

Ok, if you want to roll the dice on Grisham, he picked a great time to have a career year. There could be a team out there that will believe the 2025 production and pay Grisham close to what he wants. What that number looks like is not clear, but at just 28 years old, Grisham could be looking for a long deal, or at least one with multiple options in it. 

The Yankees can extend the qualifying offer to Grisham, which would cost the team $22.02 million in 2026 and could make other teams balk at offering him a nice contract if they don't want to give up a draft pick to sign him. Could Grisham get a deal worth more than that qualifying offer? Perhaps, but the real question is, should the Yankees even extend that offer? 

The Yankees could use that money toward bringing back Bellinger or even swinging for Tucker. 

Jul 19, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) drives in a run on a fielder’s choice against the Atlanta Braves in the sixth inning at Truist Park.
Jul 19, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) drives in a run on a fielder’s choice against the Atlanta Braves in the sixth inning at Truist Park. / Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Verdict

The one reason the Yankees should re-sign Grisham is if they believe the offensive production he delivered in 2025 is legit. But I have a hard time believing it is, and I don't think they do either. 

Now, should they extend the qualifying offer? Probably not. If Grisham can get a lucrative deal elsewhere, God bless him, but if the Yankees want to try and bring him back, make him a solid offer, but not one that would exceed what his QO would have been, and only after other options are off the table.