OAKLAND, Calif. — Los Angeles Angels catcher Max Stassi announced he will miss the entire 2023 season because of a serious family medical issue.
The Angels placed Stassi on the restricted list Sunday after he informed them of his decision. Stassi left the team during spring training to deal with the family medical issue and to recover from a hip injury. He has not played this season.
Stassi told the team he is capable of returning to baseball activities now, but he is choosing not to do so. Putting Stassi on the restricted list means he won’t be paid the remainder of his $7 million salary for this season, a move that likely allows the Angels to get their payroll below the luxury tax threshold.
“Out of respect for Max and his family, the Angels will not have any further comment,” the team said in a statement. “The Angels wish Max and his family all the best.”
The Angels exceeded the luxury tax threshold with a flurry of moves near the trade deadline in an attempt to stay in playoff contention despite extended injury absences for Mike Trout and Anthony Rendon. Los Angeles has struggled after the deadline, with 19 losses in 26 games and an elbow ligament tear for two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani, who won’t pitch again this season.
The Angels abruptly began dismantling their roster earlier this week, placing six veterans on waivers in an effort to avoid the luxury tax. Five of the veterans were claimed, allowing the Halos to get nearly out of tax territory by saving a combined $3,745,834 with the departures of Lucas Giolito, Reynaldo Lopez, Dominic Leone, Hunter Renfroe and Matt Moore.
Stassi, 32, joined the Angels during the 2019 season. He batted .209 with 29 homers and 87 RBIs during parts of four seasons with Los Angeles while providing solid defense.
Stassi is under contract for the 2024 season, scheduled to make $7 million.
The Los Angeles Dodgers opened the 2024 season as favorites to win the World Series and, after defeating the New York Yankees in five games, they indeed celebrated with champagne come October.
According to ESPN BET, the Dodgers are looking very likely to win the World Series again in 2025, opening as +400 favorites to repeat, and now sitting at +300.
The New York Yankees sit at second on the odds board at +800 to win the World Series with the New York Mets (+850) and Atlanta Braves (+900) at third and fourth respectively.
Jack Eichel has been starving. The 4 Nations Face-Off is his sustenance.
The Vegas Golden Knights center said he has waited years for another “best-on-best” hockey tournament for himself and his peers. “The generation of the players that are currently in the NHL haven’t had that opportunity to all play together,” he told ESPN.
The players acknowledge that the 4 Nations Face-Off is more borne out of necessity — a combination of compressed scheduling and the conundrum of Russian participation — than an ideal best-on-best event.
“Obviously it’s not exactly what we want in terms of … we’re missing some great teams. I think of the Germany or Switzerland or the Czechs, so many different teams,” McDavid told ESPN. “But it’s just exciting to have best-on-best again. You know, four great teams. It’ll be a pretty fun competition and a prelude to the Olympics.”
How will the 4 Nations Face-Off play out, starting tonight with Canada vs. Sweden at Bell Centre?
Spoiler warning: It’ll play out exactly like what I’ve written below. Or maybe it won’t. Either way, enjoy 4 Nations!
ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Five years ago, Mookie Betts stood in the middle of a clubhouse here and introduced himself to new Los Angeles Dodgers teammates by basically telling them they needed to master the details in February if they wanted to hoist the trophy in October.
On Tuesday, at the unofficial start of a season in which the Dodgers will face immense expectations, Betts relayed a similar message.
“We can’t keep thinking about being champions again,” Betts said on the day many of the Dodgers’ players underwent their preseason physical exams. “We haven’t even played Game 1. We have to take care of spring training, and then when Game 1 comes, then Game 1 comes. But we can’t keep talking about the World Series.”
It wasn’t long ago that the Dodgers resembled something like a Greek tragedy — continually fielding star-studded rosters and dominating regular seasons, only to absorb massive disappointment in the playoffs. That all changed last fall, when one of the Dodgers’ most injury-ravaged rosters overcame the deep San Diego Padres, dispatched the plucky New York Mets and made quick work of the sloppy New York Yankees to capture the franchise’s first title since 2020 — and its first in a full season since 1988.
The Dodgers’ competitive balance tax payroll for 2025 projects to be in the neighborhood of $385 million, according to Spotrac, about $65 million more than the second-place Mets. Through it all, they’ve become the target of complaints about the state of the sport. Owners have held up the Dodgers’ financial capabilities in their push for a salary cap. Fans have bemoaned their use of deferrals — most notably with Shohei Ohtani, who earmarked $680 million for his retirement — to get deals done. Executives have chastised the Sasaki recruitment process, believing his signing with the Dodgers to be an inevitability.
“People are always going to find something to complain about,” Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said. “We’re just trying to take care of our business and put ourselves in a good spot to make the postseason.”
Major League Baseball has not had a repeat champion since the Yankees won their third in a row in 2000, but the Dodgers have a good chance. Baseball Prospectus’ PECOTA, which runs thousands of simulations to project win totals for the upcoming season, has the Dodgers at 104 victories in 2025, at least 11 more than any other team.
The reasons are obvious. The Dodgers’ rotation — featuring Snell, Sasaki, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow and, eventually, Ohtani and Kershaw — is among the best in the sport at full strength. Their lineup — with Ohtani, Betts, Freddie Freeman, Teoscar Hernandez, Muncy, Will Smith, Conforto and Tommy Edman making up eight spots, possibly in that order — is one of the fiercest in history. And their bullpen, already a strength, has added Scott and Yates to a group featuring Michael Kopech, Blake Treinen, Evan Phillips and Alex Vesia, among others. If dynasties are still possible in an unpredictable sport with an ever-expanding postseason field, the Dodgers seem primed to become one. But it’s not something their players want to publicly embrace.
Their own playoff failures have taught them that.
“The thing about this sport is, it doesn’t matter what kind of roster you have — time after time, teams have shown that you get into the playoffs, anything can happen,” Muncy said. “You look at the Diamondbacks a couple years ago, they made it to the World Series with [84] wins. And technically, they improved last year — they had 89 wins — and they didn’t even make the playoffs.
“It’s one of those things where, all you have to do is get into the postseason and anything can happen in this sport. You can have the best player in the world in this sport, and he can’t always take over like in other sports, where if you have the best player on the court in the NBA, he’s going to take over a game for the most part. It’s not so much that way in baseball. That’s why it’s always a unique challenge trying to get to the World Series.”
And so, Dodgers players spent a lot of their time Tuesday dismissing questions about dynasty-building and chasing the all-time regular-season wins record — 116, set by the 1906 Chicago Cubs and the 2001 Seattle Mariners — and instead talked about the importance of maintaining their edge.
The Dodgers won’t host their first full-squad workout until Saturday, but the majority of their infielders — minus Freeman, who is back in L.A. going through the final stages of rehabilitating his surgically repaired right ankle — have spent the better part of the past two weeks taking ground balls at Camelback Ranch. The same can be said for the majority of their pitchers, who have started their throwing programs early in anticipation of a regular season that will begin March 18 from Japan.
Muncy has taken that as a sign that this team is “hungrier than ever.”
“We didn’t win last year because we were talking about the World Series every day,” Betts said. “I think we won last year because we talked about the task at hand. I think we have to continue to talk about the task at hand and not worry about the end goal. We have an end goal, of course, but you have to take steppingstones to get there and not worry about getting there. We’ll get there when we get there.”