Arizona Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick has been consistent about his views on spending money. If there's good reason to spend, he will.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have been ruled out as a fit to reunite with an all-time franchise leader looking for a new contract.
Japanese baseball's single-season home run record-holder Munetaka Murakami was recently seen on social media wearing a Los Angeles Dodgers cap.
The Braves are the car buyer who passes on the new German luxury model and instead purchases a year-old sedan that’s nice but not over the top. The
Impossible. They make everything difficult. Their plan is not easy to follow because it lacks transparency if not talent. When they talk about their starting rotation it sounds like a warning to a health care provider. And their optimism does not track because it is delusional.
Every team in Major League Baseball has the finances to compete in the free agent market for the right player. Exhibit A this week was the Arizona Diamondbacks formally announcing the signing of right-hander Corbin Burnes to a six-year,
Corbin Burnes hit the market this offseason as one of the most wanted and most reliable starters available. Here’s how he landed close to home with the Diamondb
Last season the Diamondbacks led the major leagues in runs scored. Next season they could have one of the National League's top rotations.
For Arizona owner Ken Kendrick, the four-time All-Star and 2021 NL Cy ... The move keeps the Diamondbacks competitive in a loaded NL West that includes the free-spending Los Angeles Dodgers — who won last year's World Series — and the San Diego Padres ...
If a team like the Diamondbacks can shell out big bucks for Corbin Burnes, what's stopping other teams from inking Pete Alonso and Alex Bregman?
The 30-year-old Burnes — who is originally from California — moved to Arizona in 2018 when he played for the Milwaukee Brewers, partially so he could be close to the Brewers’ spring training facility. He and his family liked the area so much they stayed, and it was a big factor in his decision to sign with the Diamondbacks.
After coming in second on some high-profile free agents in the last two offseasons, the Blue Jays have signed switch-hitting outfielder Anthony Santander for five years and $92.5 million. His 44 home runs last year with the Orioles were third-most in the sport.