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Designated hitter Brent Rooker and the Oakland Athletics are in agreement on a five-year, $60 million contract extension, sources told ESPN late Monday night, continuing a winter of uncharacteristic spending with a long-term deal for the late-blooming slugger.

Before he joined the A’s in 2023, Rooker had bounced among three teams without finding consistent playing time. The A’s saw Rooker blossom into an All-Star in his first season with them, a 10th-place MVP finisher last year and the receiver of the second-largest extension in franchise history.

The A’s, who will play in Sacramento for the next three seasons before a planned move to Las Vegas after leaving Oakland, already had spent $67 million this winter to sign right-hander Luis Severino and added left-hander Jeffrey Springs in a trade with Tampa Bay. The deals, as well as Rooker’s, continue to push the A’s payroll toward the $100 million range. If they do not spend at least 1½ times the revenue-sharing money they receive, the A’s run the risk of a union grievance.

The deal signals the latest in an attempt to rebuild after years of minuscule payrolls and lackluster results. Though the A’s were a success story of a team that managed to succeed in spite of meager support from ownership, recent seasons with slashed payrolls have yielded awful results and coincided with vitriol toward owner John Fisher as A’s bid the city of Oakland farewell.

Rooker becomes the lone A’s player under contract through their planned Las Vegas debut in 2028. The deal, which was first reported by The Athletic, will pay him $30 million over the first three seasons and includes a sixth-year vesting option for $22 million that can escalate by $10 million. The previous largest extension had gone to star third baseman Eric Chavez, who also held the record for largest contract at $66 million until Severino exceeded it.

The deal buys out a potential three years of free agency for Rooker, who three years ago wasn’t sure how much longer his big league career would remain afloat. After debuting with Minnesota in 2020, Rooker struggled and eventually was traded to San Diego in April 2022. Four months later, the Padres dealt him to Kansas City. Three months later, the Royals designated him for assignment, and the A’s claimed Rooker off waivers.

In his first season with the A’s, Rooker nearly doubled his previous career plate appearances and hit 30 home runs. He was even better last season, hitting .297/.365/.562 with 39 home runs and 112 RBIs.

The A’s surprised teams at the July trade deadline when they declined to discuss Rooker in trade discussions. Rooker was similarly off-limits this winter, as Oakland understood an extension for him would further push their payroll toward the number needed to avoid collective-bargaining issues. Rooker was set to make around $5 million in arbitration, but the contract will count for $12 million because that’s its average annual value.

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Source: Hernandez rejoins Dodgers for 4th time

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Source: Hernandez rejoins Dodgers for 4th time

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Enrique Hernandez, their ever popular super-utility player, have a deal in place, pending a physical, a source told ESPN on Sunday.

Hernández hinted at his return by posting a Dodgers hype video on X.

Hernández, 33, will return to the Dodgers for the fourth time, having been acquired twice via trade and twice via free agent deals.

The Dodgers have long been drawn to Hernández’s versatility and have grown to appreciate how his personality blends within their clubhouse, but it’s his knack for elevating his game in October that attracts them most.

Hernández has a career .238/.308/.405 slash line during the regular season but is at .278/.353/.522 in the postseason. Last fall, when the Dodgers secured their first full-season championship since 1988, Hernández played a major role in several victories, ultimately posting an .808 OPS in 14 games.

On the current Dodgers, who have made a multitude of star-studded additions for a second straight offseason, Hernández will likely spend most of his time at second base or center field, drawing most of his starts against left-handed pitchers.

The Dodgers are soon expected to also bring back Clayton Kershaw, who is coming off knee and foot surgery and isn’t expected to be ready to join the rotation until around June.

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In last year of deal, Cubs’ Hoyer under pressure

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In last year of deal, Cubs' Hoyer under pressure

MESA, Ariz. — Chicago Cubs president Jed Hoyer, who has yet to make a playoff appearance as he enters the final season of his five-year contract, knows that 2025 looms large for the team and his career.

After nearly a decade and a half in Chicago’s front office, after working under former team executive Theo Epstein, and with a new-look roster, Hoyer knows the expectations.

“Does it feel different than it has in the past?” Hoyer asked Sunday during the Cubs’ first day of spring training. “A little bit. I’ve been here for 14 years and sort of generally in my career, I haven’t had much uncertainty. And so I think with uncertainty does come a level of anxiety. I think that would be a lie to say that it doesn’t.”

Hoyer was tasked with rebuilding the team after its championship core from the past decade got stale. It has been a slow progression as the organization hasn’t signed any top free agents over the past few winters.

Instead, the Cubs have built through the draft while signing selected free agents such as Dansby Swanson and Seiya Suzuki. This past winter, they showed more aggression in the trade market, dealing three players for former Astros right fielder Kyle Tucker, who might be with the team for only one season. It displayed an urgency around the organization for the first time in several years.

“Wins are going to be in a premium in the National League, in particular this year,” Hoyer said. “And so I think we’re in a competitive window. I think we’ve gotten better each year. I think we’re at a place where we have a chance to be really good and trying to really maximize our resources within our budget to make sure that we could do that.”

Could that budget include free agent third baseman Alex Bregman? He could push the team over the 90-win total after back-to-back 83-win seasons — and the team has an opening at that position. Hoyer was noncommittal about adding before the Cubs open the season against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Japan next month. But the team has a recent history of a late spring signing when it brought back Cody Bellinger in February last year.

“I think offseasons have drifted later, whether it’s waiver claims, trades, free agent signings,” Hoyer said. “Things happen a little bit later now, but I think given that it’s Feb. 9, I think we’re focused on the guys that are here.”

Those guys in camp will likely determine whether Hoyer gets a contract extension. A playoff appearance would get him one — if he isn’t signed before then. But an underachieving season could also seal his fate. Hoyer didn’t shy away from that conversation.

“Has it caused some introspection along the way?” Hoyer asked. “I think that’s fair to say, but … we have a great front office, we have an incredible manager and a great coaching staff. I think we put together a really good team.

“I think every arrow is sort of pointing up on this organization right now. So, I just think there’s a lot more opportunity for me and for [GM] Carter [Hawkins] than there is risk, and I’m super proud of what we built with a lot of really good people. So that’s kind of how I look at it.”

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Twilley, WR for undefeated Dolphins, dies at 81

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Twilley, WR for undefeated Dolphins, dies at 81

Two-time Super Bowl champion Howard Twilley, a member of the Miami Dolphins‘ undefeated 1972 team, has died at 81.

The National Football Foundation announced that Twilley died Wednesday but did not provide a cause of death.

Before landing in Miami, the wide receiver played at Tulsa. In 1965, he was a unanimous All-American and the Heisman Trophy runner-up after averaging 13.4 receptions per game, which the NFF said remains an FBS record.

“Howard Twilley was one of the greatest receivers in college football history with an uncanny ability to get open and change the course of a game,” NFF chairman Archie Manning said in a statement. “He simply redefined what it meant to be a dominant receiver, and his performance at Tulsa during the 1965 season remains one of the greatest in our sport’s history.”

Both the AFL’s Dolphins and NFL’s Minnesota Vikings selected him in the late rounds of their 1966 drafts, and he wound up in Miami.

He spent 11 seasons with the Dolphins, winning back-to-back Super Bowl championships after the 1972 and 1973 seasons. In 120 career games (82 starts), he caught 212 passes for 3,064 yards and 23 touchdowns.

Twilley started all three playoff games in 1972, making four receptions for 61 yards and a touchdown.

“We are deeply saddened by the passing of Howard Twilley, a founding player for the Dolphins in 1966,” the Dolphins said in a statement. “His touchdown in Super Bowl VII helped the Dolphins cap the NFL’s only perfect season and his contributions to the organization will be forever remembered.”

Post-retirement, Twilley owned a chain of sporting goods stores and worked for an investment firm.

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