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The opening week of the 2025 MLB season is upon us — on the heels of a chaos-packed offseason.

Not long after the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrated their 2024 World Series title, they made the first big strike of the offseason, landing a two-time Cy Young winner — and that was just the start for Los Angeles. But the Dodgers weren’t the only ones keeping the hot stove warm in a winter that had a little bit of everything — from a $765 million contract to lure a superstar across New York City boroughs to a pair of aces signing record nine-figure deals. And the offseason drama continued well into spring training, with two top sluggers finally signing after camps opened.

Whether you are just realizing that Alex Bregman left Houston for the Boston Red Sox or the Dodgers signed … well, it felt like just about everyone — or you know all the moves that went down and still aren’t quite sure what to make of them, we’ve got you covered for Opening Day on Thursday.

ESPN baseball experts Jorge Castillo, Bradford Doolittle, Alden Gonzalez and David Schoenfield break down the moves that rocked the offseason, what they mean for the teams that made them — and how they’ll shape the season ahead.


Dodgers gets the offseason rolling — with a sign of what’s ahead

Date of the deal: Nov. 26 — Dodgers sign Snell to $182 million deal

What it means for the Dodgers: The Dodgers began the offseason with one clear target in mind — not Juan Soto, but Blake Snell. They had just won the World Series, but they did so despite an injury-ravaged starting rotation that required them to stage bullpen games on multiple occasions throughout October. They needed some certainty at the top of their pitching staff, and Snell, the two-time Cy Young Award winner they almost signed when his market collapsed last offseason, was seen as an ideal fit.

Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman engaged with Snell’s agent, Scott Boras, at the start of November, and it ultimately took some creativity to come together on a deal that satisfied both parties. They settled on a five-year, $182 million contract that included $66 million in deferred salary but also a $52 million signing bonus.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Snell spent the past two years pitching for the Dodgers’ biggest division rivals, dominating for the San Diego Padres in 2023 and, after an abbreviated spring training, putting together a masterful second half for the San Francisco Giants in 2024. Snell’s presence on the Dodgers, when coupled with another massive move later in the winter, would give them a rotation that is just about as dominant as their lineup — and it would set the tone for another blockbuster offseason.

Dominoes: Boras was coming off a rocky offseason in which four of his biggest clients — Snell, Matt Chapman, Cody Bellinger and Jordan Montgomery — didn’t sign until well into spring training. Boras chalked it up to a bad market replete with unwilling spenders, and Snell’s signing showed that this offseason — another one in which Boras would represent some of the best players available — might be different. It also helped trigger a run of exorbitant starting-pitching contracts over the next three weeks. — Gonzalez


Giants finally get their big-money free agent

Date of the deal: Dec.7 — Adames joins Giants on 7-year deal

What it means for the Giants: The Giants began the offseason with a glaring need at shortstop, and Willy Adames was the best player available at that position. It was really that simple — and the Giants acted as such, chasing Adames aggressively and signing him before the start of baseball’s winter meetings.

The Adames signing represented the first major free agent addition under Buster Posey, the iconic Giants catcher who shockingly stepped in as the new president of baseball operations shortly after the 2024 regular season. Adames landed a seven-year, $182 million contract that set a new franchise record — breaking the $167 million extension Posey himself signed nearly a dozen years earlier.

How it will shape the 2025 season: The Giants had been having a tough time attracting star players to San Francisco. And though Adames isn’t as big a name as Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge or Bryce Harper — stars that recently spurned them to sign elsewhere — his arrival represents a shift in tone for a front office group that, under Posey, wants the Giants to get back to being the type of organization a community will rally around.

Dominoes: The New York Mets, New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox and Toronto Blue Jays had all been linked, to varying degrees, to Adames. He represented a natural pivot if they could not land Juan Soto for those teams. But they needed to wait on Soto first. The Giants knew this. It triggered their aggression. And it eventually prompted the Yankees, Red Sox and Blue Jays to get even more creative than they hoped. — Gonzalez


Soto joins the Mets for $765 million — yes, you heard that right: $765 million

Date of the deal: Dec. 8 — Soto joins Mets on 15-year deal

What it means for the Mets: The Mets’ interest in Juan Soto was a poorly kept secret — pursuing the superstar outfielder was central to their long-term plans since Steve Cohen hired David Stearns to run baseball operations in 2023. Landing him, however, was monumental for the franchise.

First, on the field, Soto is possibly the best hitter in the world. His consistency is unmatched. His floor sits stories above most of his peers’ ceilings. He will mash hitting behind Francisco Lindor in a lineup that should rank among baseball’s best.

But the move was about more than just Soto’s on-field impact. It signaled that the Mets really will be different with Cohen in control. Not only did the Mets sign the most sought-after free agent in over two decades to the richest contract in professional sports history (15 years, $765 million with the potential for the compensation to reach $805 million), they signed him away from the Yankees and beat them for his signature. The Yankees are still the top team in New York. But the Mets are ready to compete for championships and the city’s top spot.

How it will shape the 2025 season: The outlook in Queens changed as soon as Soto signed on the dotted line. A year ago, the Mets were projected as a fringe playoff team before exceeding expectations with a magical summer. Signing Soto meant just reaching the postseason is no longer enough — and that the Mets had more work to do.

Dominoes: Soto’s decision opened the offseason’s floodgates — for the four other finalists to land him and several other clubs. The Yankees were forced to turn to Plan B and beyond, prompting a series of moves in December. The Red Sox also spent money elsewhere and the Blue Jays tried to. The Dodgers, the fifth finalist for Soto … well, the Dodgers just kept spending money.

Beyond this winter, though, Soto’s record-setting contract set the market for future high-profile free agents in his age range. The first test case will be Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who is expected to reach free agency next winter at 26 after turning down a $500 million extension offer (with deferrals) from the Blue Jays last month. — Castillo


Yankees respond to losing Soto with a $218 million ace signing

Date of the deal: Dec. 10 — Fried, Yankees reach 8-year, $218 million deal

What it means for the Yankees: The Yankees had money to spend and choices to make once Juan Soto spurned them for the Mets. The most obvious need was replacing Soto’s offensive production, but they opted to bolster their biggest strength for their first move of the post-Soto era by investing heavily in another frontline starter.

After missing out on Blake Snell and not fitting Corbin Burnes’ preference to join a club with spring training in Arizona, the Yankees set their sights on Max Fried. He became the third starter in the past six offseasons that the Yankees have signed to a long-term deal after Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodon.

The signing for eight years and $218 million gave New York arguably the best starting rotation in baseball — a fivesome rounded out by Luis Gil and Clarke Schmidt. The starting rotation lifted the Yankees to the American League East title in 2024. They determined it would make for the best strategy moving forward for 2025 and beyond.

How it will shape the 2025 season: The starting rotation became more formidable with a two-time All-Star with a 3.07 career ERA across eight seasons. And the move proved even more crucial for 2025 than initially believed when Cole’s elbow started barking again. Losing Cole for the entire season means Fried will begin 2025 as the club’s No. 1 starter. Fried has dealt with forearm injuries the past two seasons. Staying healthy will be imperative for a rotation also without Gil for at least three months to start the season.

Dominoes: The Yankees beat out their rival Red Sox for Fried’s services, prompting Boston to turn to another ace in the trade market the very next day and leaving Burnes as the only ace-level starter left on the free agent market. But Fried doesn’t hit, and the Yankees needed to improve the lineup. They addressed that before the end of the month. — Castillo


Red Sox get an ace of their own in blockbuster trade with White Sox

Date of the deal: Dec. 11 — Boston lands Garrett Crochet for prospects

What it means for the Red Sox: The Red Sox haven’t really had an ace since Chris Sale blew out his elbow back in 2019, but after losing out on Snell and Fried, they used their prospect depth to acquire Garrett Crochet, coming off a big season for the White Sox.

The Boston rotation was pretty solid in 2024, ranking seventh in the majors in ERA, although it was just middle of the pack in innings (16th) and strikeout rate (15th). In his first season starting, Crochet made 32 starts and pitched 146 innings (the White Sox limited his innings the final two months) — and, most impressively, topped all pitchers with at least 100 innings with a 35.1% strikeout rate.

Crochet was the most in-demand non-free agent of the offseason — he’s under control for two more seasons and will make just $3.8 million in 2025 — and it cost them a heavy price in Kyle Teel and Braden Montgomery, their first-round picks in 2023 and 2024, plus two other prospects.

How it will shape the 2025 season: With Rafael Devers, 2024 breakout star Jarren Duran, last year’s impressive rookies Wilyer Abreu and Ceddanne Rafaela, and an exciting group of prospects ready to help in outfielder Roman Anthony (ESPN’s No. 2 overall prospect), shortstop Marcelo Mayer (No. 4) and second baseman Kristian Campbell (No. 26), it was time for the Red Sox to make a push to return to the postseason for the first time since 2021. Maybe it’s a year early for all this talent to coalesce into a World Series contender, but Crochet improves those odds.

Dominoes: One key factor is that Crochet’s low salary allowed the Red Sox to make a couple of other moves. First, they would sign Walker Buehler for even more rotation depth. But an even bigger move would come right as spring training kicked off. — Schoenfield


Yankees continue their pitching push with trade for star closer

Date of the deal: Dec. 13 — Yankees acquire star closer Williams from Brewers

What it means for the Yankees: Clay Holmes was demoted from the closer role in September, so it wasn’t a surprise that the Yankees decided to let him walk in free agency. The thinking was the Yankees could hand the role to Luke Weaver, who sparkled closing games in September and October. But the Yankees aimed higher, acquiring Devin Williams, perhaps the best closer in baseball, from the Milwaukee Brewers for Nestor Cortes and Caleb Durbin.

The 2020 National League Rookie of the Year, Williams is a two-time NL Reliever of the Year and a two-time All-Star. He owns a 1.83 career ERA and 68 career saves behind a screwball-changeup fusion known as The Airbender. He’s a clear upgrade. But he’s also under team control for just one more season, marking the second consecutive winter that the Yankees traded for a star one year from free agency.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Williams’ inclusion moved Weaver back to a multi-inning setup role after his breakout 2024 season — his first as a reliever. Fernando Cruz, acquired in a trade with the Cincinnati Reds for Jose Trevino later in the month, has the fourth-highest strikeout rate among relievers with at least 130 innings thrown since he debuted in 2022. With them in the back end, the Yankees’ bullpen should improve upon its 12th-ranked strikeout rate from last season.

Dominoes: Williams knew a trade was coming. He was just surprised that it was to the Yankees and not the Dodgers, who were in pursuit of the right-hander. Instead, the Yankees outbid Los Angeles, leaving the Dodgers to continue their search for bullpen help. They ultimately settled on signing the best reliever on the free agent market and a 2024 All-Star, continuing their offseason shopping spree. — Castillo


Cubs get their star hitter in blockbuster between contenders

Date of the deal: Dec. 13 — Cubs get Tucker from Astros

What it means for the Cubs: The Cubs needed to improve their power profile while servicing an apparent need to avoid long-term entanglements. In acquiring Kyle Tucker in advance of his walk year, they accomplish both. Chicago leveraged a moment of abundance at third base in its system to land Tucker, one of the game’s most potent left-handed sluggers and well-rounded outfielders. Tucker is an upgrade over soon-to-be-dealt Cody Bellinger, but when the latter was traded to the Yankees, it rendered the addition of Tucker more marginal than it had to be. That will be especially true if (when?) the Cubs don’t pony up to retain Tucker for the long term.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Chicago traded a serviceable starting third baseman (Isaac Paredes) and a rapidly rising third base prospect (Cam Smith) to snag Tucker. The outgoing package was made possible by the presence of another hot corner prospect — Matt Shaw — who opened the season as the regular at the position. Thus, the move needs two things to happen to achieve its short-term aim: Tucker to stay healthy, and Shaw to justify the Cubs’ faith.

Dominoes: The Tucker trade will be pushing over dominoes for some time. Bellinger’s departure was the start, which also led to low-level rumbling in Chicago over the Cubs’ often-thrifty ways. Those rumbles grew louder when the Cubs were suitors for Alex Bregman, only to fall short. However, that failed pursuit kept the path clear for Shaw, who earned the third-base job during spring training. Those rumbles may turn into a full-blown uproar if the Cubs disappoint and Tucker signs elsewhere after the season — or is dealt at the trade deadline. — Doolittle


Cubs follow Tucker deal by sending a former MVP to the Yankees

Date of the deal: Dec. 17 — Cubs trade Bellinger to Yankees

What it means for the Yankees: With Juan Soto now with the Mets and Anthony Rizzo a free agent, the Yankees had holes to fill in the outfield and first base. Why not solve one of those with Cody Bellinger, the 2019 NL MVP who can play both positions?

With Kyle Tucker in right, Pete Crow-Armstrong ready to take over in center and the less expensive Michael Busch at first base, the Cubs wanted to dump Bellinger’s $27.5 million salary. The Yankees were the perfect fit. They later signed Paul Goldschmidt to play first, so Bellinger will end up as the regular center fielder with Aaron Judge moving back to right field.

How it will shape the 2025 season: The Yankees knew they couldn’t replace Soto with one player, so they’re hoping they can replace his production with multiple players. Bellinger has never come close to his 2019 numbers since injuring his shoulder in the 2020 World Series, but he’s coming off back-to-back solid seasons with the Cubs (139 OPS+ in 2023, 111 in 2024 when he hit .266/.325/.426 with 18 home runs). He has morphed into a more contact-oriented hitter these days, but his pull-heavy approach could work well at Yankee Stadium. Goldschmidt, meanwhile, will try to rebound at age 37 from his worst offensive season (.245/.302/.414, 22 home runs).

Dominoes: With Bellinger and Goldschmidt, the Yankees were no longer a viable landing spot for Pete Alonso, eliminating a key bidder for the slugger’s services. Scott Boras had lost his leverage. And the Cubs? In subtracting Bellinger’s salary, perhaps they had room for another free agent with Alex Bregman looking like a potential fit. — Schoenfield


A $200 million ace joins … the Diamondbacks!?

Date of the deal: Dec. 28 — Arizona, Burnes finalize six-year deal

What it means for the Diamondbacks: As much as anything, Arizona’s second straight offseason investment in its starting rotation declares that even as the Diamondbacks share a division with baseball’s newest Evil Empire, the Snakes aren’t conceding anything to the high-dollar Dodgers.

After splurging for Jordan Montgomery and Eduardo Rodriguez last year, it would have been easy for Arizona to stand pat with its rotation depth chart, hoping for Montgomery to bounce back and E-Rod to be healthy. Instead, the addition of Corbin Burnes gives Arizona a rotation big three in Burnes, Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly that can match anyone. It also makes the Diamondbacks a pickle to match up against in any October series — even one against the Dodgers.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Gallen and Kelly are healthy this spring after missing time in 2024, and if they can stay that way, this stat might be highly relevant: Those two and Burnes, between them, have averaged 176 innings over the past three years, and that number jumps to 189 if you remove Kelly’s 13-start 2024 campaign.

The addition of Burnes pushed everyone else down a slot, giving the Diamondbacks superior rotation depth, which in turn should help cover them against a lack of numbers in the middle and front of the bullpen. (The back is in good shape.) The defense behind the starters should incent the hurlers to be pitch efficient, as will an athletic, potent lineup.

Dominoes: For Arizona, the Burnes signing places the need to find a taker for Montgomery at the top of the to-do list, as he simply makes too much money to be just a rotation depth guy. The larger dominoes were felt elsewhere in the pitching market, as teams aching for Burnes’ ace production were left wanting. That begins with Burnes’ old team, Baltimore, who would likely rate as a solid favorite in the AL East had Burnes returned. But the Blue Jays, Giants and others were also left to look elsewhere for an impact addition. — Doolittle


Much-anticipated Sasaki sweepstakes has a Hollywood ending

Date of the deal: Jan. 17 — Japanese ace Sasaki says he’s joining Dodgers

What it means for the Dodgers: In some ways, the Dodgers had been building up to this moment — all the way back to the mid-1990s, when Hideo Nomo blazed a path for Japanese pitchers to the United States and turned a generation of children in his home country into Dodger fans. In the ensuing years, as Ichiro Suzuki, Hideki Matsui, Yu Darvish and others starred elsewhere, the Dodgers’ influence in Japan began to fade. Then Shohei Ohtani signed with them on Dec. 11, 2023. Then Yoshinobu Yamamoto joined him weeks later. Then, powered in part by those two, the Dodgers won the World Series.

By the time Sasaki was posted in December of 2024, the Dodgers had once again established themselves as the predominant major league team of Japan. So much so that Sasaki chose them, too, even though their starting rotation was already quite full. He chose them mostly because he believed they gave him the best chance to develop, but the presence of Yamamoto and Ohtani, and the fact that the Dodgers carried such massive influence in his country, certainly helped.

How it will shape the 2025 season: In a span of 13 months, the Dodgers added Tyler Glasnow, Yamamoto, Snell and Sasaki to their rotation. To that group you can add Ohtani, who is expected to return as a two-way player this season. And Clayton Kershaw, who is on track to join the rotation around June. And a host of promising arms, including Dustin May. Add in their star-studded lineup, and what they would later add to their bullpen, and the Dodgers have put together one of the most talented rosters in baseball history.

Dominoes: The San Diego Padres and the Toronto Blue Jays emerged as the other two finalists for Sasaki, and his decision was a massive blow to both. To the Blue Jays, it meant coming up just short on another premier player after failed pursuits of Ohtani, Soto and Burnes, among others. The Padres had a hole in their rotation and were continuing to operate on a tight budget. In some ways, they had built their entire offseason around the prospect of landing Sasaki. Him choosing their biggest rival prompted them to instead sign Nick Pivetta. — Gonzalez


The Dodgers add top free agent reliever — and become baseball’s new Evil Empire?

Date of the deal: Jan. 19 — Dodgers land Scott for $72 million

What it means for the Dodgers: Landing Snell and Sasaki apparently wasn’t enough for one offseason: The Dodgers then decided to upgrade an already strong bullpen, signing Tanner Scott, arguably the top lefty reliever in the game over the past two seasons, to a four-year, $72 million contract.

Call it a baseball version of adding Kevin Durant to the Warriors: It seemed like piling on at this point (and especially so when the Dodgers then signed Kirby Yates, who held batters to a .113 average last season, the lowest ever for a pitcher with at least 50 innings).

It also seemed like the final exclamation point on the past two seasons: The Dodgers are officially baseball’s Evil Empire. Heck, after this signing, even Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner said it is “difficult” for other teams to keep up with the Dodgers. Yes, that’s a bit like Darth Vader complaining about Voldemort. Welcome to baseball in 2025.

How it will shape the 2025 season: The Dodgers have always had good bullpens — fourth in ERA in 2024, third in 2023, second in 2022 and 2021 — but with Scott and Yates added to Blake Treinen, Evan Phillips, Alex Vesia, Michael Kopech, Anthony Banda and others, the pen appears deeper and better than ever. It makes it even easier for Dave Roberts to limit innings for his stellar rotation with the hope of keeping those starters healthy for October.

Dominoes: This was more about who didn’t land Scott. The Cubs were reportedly runners-up in the bidding with a four-year, $66 million offer, and a few days after the Scott signing they traded for former Astros closer Ryan Pressly. The Blue Jays pivoted and signed Max Scherzer instead. The Orioles signed Andrew Kittredge when they realized they weren’t going to land Scott. — Schoenfield


After monthslong standoff, a Mets icon returns to Queens

Date of the deal: Feb. 5 — Alonso, Mets agree to 2-year deal

What it means for the Mets: The Mets might have won the offseason by signing Juan Soto, but Pete Alonso’s free agency hung over Queens for the rest of the winter. Alonso, on paper, made sense for the 2025 Mets. He was a right-handed power bat to protect Soto. He was an adored homegrown player. But the 30-year-old first baseman wanted more than the Mets were willing to offer and the negotiations turned unusually public — and ugly — when owner Steve Cohen expressed his frustration during a fan event in January. A breakup seemed possible. The Mets signaled they were ready to move on. Alonso talked with other teams in search of a long-term contract. But, after a face-to-face meeting with Cohen and David Stearns in Tampa, the two sides agreed on a two-year, $54 million contract with an opt-out after this season the week before pitchers and catchers reported for spring training.

The reunion elevated the Mets to one of the best lineups in baseball, featuring a 1 through 5 of Francisco Lindor, Soto, Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Mark Vientos that should wreak havoc on pitchers when healthy.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Signing Soto was significant, but more was needed to compete in a loaded National League East.

The Phillies, the defending division champs, have one of the best rotations in baseball to complement a veteran, battle-tested, star-studded lineup. The Braves, the division champs the previous six seasons, should rebound from a nightmare, injury-riddled season in which they still managed to reach the postseason as a wild card.

Alonso, who is 27 home runs shy of becoming the franchise’s all-time leader, gives the Mets a lineup to compete with those contenders. The starting rotation, however, might be another matter.

Dominoes: If Alonso’s season goes as both sides hope, the first baseman will opt out of his contract and become a free agent again in search of a long-term deal next winter. But this past winter suggests finding one could be difficult.

Alonso, who will be the highest-paid first baseman in the majors this season with a $30 million salary, is one of baseball’s top sluggers. His 226 home runs are the second-most in the sport since his debut in 2019. But the long-term contract he expected — one similar to, or even better than, the seven-year, $158 million extension he declined in 2023 — never materialized. Teams have seemingly decided slugging first baseman on the wrong side of 30 without much value on defense and on the basepaths aren’t worth that much. Alonso hopes that will change after a strong 2025 season.

The Mets, meanwhile, are expected to pursue Vladimir Guerrero Jr. next winter to replace Alonso if he reaches free agency and Alonso indeed opts out. — Castillo


Blue Jays get their big-name free agent in Soto, Ohtani, RokiAnthony Santander

Date of the deal: Jan. 20 — Toronto, Santander reach $92 million deal

What it means for the Blue Jays: Over the past couple of years, the Blue Jays have been frequent headliners in the rumor mills around the top acquisition targets in the marketplace. Time after time, Toronto fell short in these pursuits. Then they inked Santander to a five-year, $92.5 million deal that also cost Toronto a compensatory draft pick because Santander had been saddled with a qualifying offer by his old team, Baltimore.

For the Blue Jays, it at least proves that they can still get someone to take their money, and if Toronto hadn’t been featured so prominently in the other quests, the addition of Santander wouldn’t feel so much like settling. Santander isn’t a perfect player, but he’s a legit, middle-of-the-order power hitter threat who has averaged 35 homers over the last three years. The Blue Jays didn’t get everything they wanted this winter but in Santander, they did land a bona fide threat to slot behind Vladimir Guerrero Jr. in the batting order.

How it will shape the 2025 season: With Guerrero’s future in Toronto in doubt, there’s a lot riding on the Blue Jays’ short-term fortunes. After leaning a little too far over to the defensive side when picking their ancillary position players the past few seasons, Santander will help turn the scoreboard and perhaps unlock Guerrero’s game even more. If so, it can only help the case Toronto will continue to make in attempting to keep Vlady for the long haul.

Dominoes: The relatively late date of Santander’s signing bolstered the Blue Jays’ offseason work considerably and still left them time to add more, which resulted in, among other things, the signing of Max Scherzer to the rotation. It also left other teams looking for a big outfield bat out in the cold, with the Royals, Angels, Red Sox and Tigers reportedly among them. –– Doolittle


Braves finally get in on the offseason fun

Date of the deal: Jan. 23 — Atlanta, Profar agree to 3-year deal

What it means for the Braves: The offseason had been distinctly silent for the Braves until Profar agreed to a three-year, $42 million deal in the latter part of January. If Profar, coming off an age-31 season that was easily the best of his career, can retain most of last season’s gains, he fills the one concerning spot in the potent Atlanta lineup. He would do so at salary level (a $14 million-per-season luxury tax number) that, for now, apparently keeps the Braves under the tax line, and even with a bit of room to make in-season adds.

How it will shape the 2025 season: When Ronald Acuna Jr. returns (soon) to regular duty, the Braves will have a fully stocked, powerhouse regular lineup and a quality bench. Profar not only completes the puzzle but will help bridge whatever gap remains between now and Acuna’s first game.

That said, Profar’s yearly OPS+ figures, beginning in 2018, are: 107, 91, 114, 83, 109, 81, 134. After signing Profar for three seasons, the Braves need him to break that pattern. If he can, the Braves’ lineup should have no holes.

Dominoes: Profar turned out to be the one multiyear free agent the Braves signed this winter. Every signing since has been a recognizable veteran on a minor league deal and spring training invite. For Atlanta, Profar was the lone domino.

The timing of his signing with Atlanta might prove to be painful for Profar’s old team in San Diego. The Padres never really filled the void opened by Profar’s departure. At the time he joined Atlanta, the Padres had not added a free agent on a big league deal, but they later added five. If the purse strings had been loosened just a little sooner, might Profar have been retained? — Doolittle


The offseason’s final star free agent lands in Boston

Date of the deal: Feb. 12 — Bregman signs with Red Sox

What it means for the Red Sox: The Red Sox have had three straight non-winning seasons — the first time that’s happened since 1992-94. In signing Alex Bregman to a three-year, $120 million deal (with player opt-outs after 2025 and 2026), the Red Sox get a winning player to help reverse that trend, a former MVP runner-up who has averaged 4.5 WAR the past three seasons. They also get a hitter who has dominated at Fenway Park in his career, hitting .375/.490/.750 with seven home runs in 21 games.

They also created some internal strife, with Rafael Devers initially saying he would not be open to moving from third base to DH. Bregman, who won a Gold Glove in 2024, said he’d be willing to move to second base. A month later, Devers changed his stance and told reporters, “I’m good to do whatever they want me to do.”

Maybe Devers settles in at DH. Maybe Bregman ends up sliding back and forth. Maybe second-base prospect Kristian Campbell goes down to Triple-A and plays more outfield. No matter what, manager Alex Cora will have his work cut out keeping Devers happy and figuring out how and when to integrate all the young players into the lineup.

How it will shape the 2025 season: Bregman is coming off a .315 OBP, his worst since his rookie season, and 51 points below his career average. It remains to be seen whether he’s a major addition to the lineup or merely a solid contributor.

The Red Sox were third in the AL in runs in 2024, but if Bregman’s bat plays as hoped at Fenway and some of the young hitters improve, this team could lead the league in runs — and that could mean their first AL East title since the World Series championship season in 2018.

Dominoes: The Tigers and Cubs were other potential landing spots for Bregman, and both have intriguing rookie third basemen — Jace Jung in Detroit and Matt Shaw in Chicago. Shaw is the better prospect of the two (No. 23 overall, according to ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel), although has just 35 games above Double-A. Jung got some big league time in 2024, hitting .241/.362/.304 in 94 plate appearances after hitting .257/.377/.454 in Triple-A, but got sent down last week, so it looks like Detroit will open with a Zach McKinstry/Andy Ibanez platoon.

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October or bust? Inside Juan Soto’s roller-coaster first season as a Met

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October or bust? Inside Juan Soto's roller-coaster first season as a Met

THE NEW YORK METS reached a milestone when they completed their final homestand of the 2025 season last weekend: 3,182,057 fans had passed through the turnstiles, setting a single-season attendance record at Citi Field.

But the homestand, as far as it mattered in the standings, was a horror show. Battling to hold on to the final wild-card playoff spot in the National League, the Mets lost two of three to the Texas Rangers, took two of three from the playoff-bound San Diego Padres, then lost control of their postseason destiny after inexplicably dropping two of three games in a slapdash performance against the lowly Washington Nationals.

The sellout crowd at Sunday’s loss, in turn, serenaded the Mets with boos.

It was also rough at times for Juan Soto. Against the Nationals, the organization that first signed and developed him, he delivered two multihit games, a tying ninth-inning single, a home run, and two steals. But he also made his first error of the season, a costly mistake that allowed a run to score in Friday’s extra-inning loss, and was caught stealing in Sunday’s one-run defeat. It felt fitting in what has been a topsy-turvy first season as a Met for the highest-paid free agent in baseball history.

While spirited fans — encouraged by the progress under owner Steve Cohen’s watch, and fresh off the high of the team’s captivating 2024 run to the NL Championship Series — filled the ballpark eager to watch a World Series contender, the club with the second-most expensive roster in the majors went from holding the best record in baseball in mid-June to floundering so badly for three-plus months that a historic collapse from the postseason picture is very conceivable with five road games left.

Individually, Soto emerged from a sluggish start by his standards, which drew relentless scrutiny, to register one of the best seasons in his new franchise’s history, an MVP-level output that has helped keep the Mets’ postseason dreams afloat. But their roller-coaster ride of a season will now require a spectacular finish, reminiscent of last season, when they clinched a playoff berth and won a wild-card series on the same three-city trip. Returning to Citi Field in October will also almost certainly require a trip to Los Angeles to face the defending champion Dodgers in a three-game wild-card series.

Soto, the Mets’ $765 million man, will be front and center.

After his turbulent introduction to Queens, Soto lately has looked as if he’s finally feeling at home as he plays for his fourth team in four seasons. But ask him, and that’s not quite the case — at least not yet.

“It’s a little better,” Soto said in Spanish last week.

So, when will it feel like home?

“Soon,” Soto said. “Soon.”

What if the free-falling Mets stun the baseball world and win the World Series?

“Maybe,” Soto said. “Maybe.”


AFTER HELPING LEAD the New York Yankees to the World Series in his lone season in the Bronx, Soto joined the Mets this year relieved to finally find a permanent home. But the beginning of his potential 15-year stay across town was rocky.

“It was a little uncomfortable at the beginning,” Soto said. “It was difficult.”

Early in the season, Soto did not produce the kind of results fans had expected. He batted .224 with a .745 OPS in his first 55 games. The numbers were uglier in 57 plate appearances with runners in scoring position: a slash line of .130/.228/.239 that defied his stout underlying numbers. His body language was examined from every angle. External noise blared on the airwaves as he acknowledged not feeling comfortable upon arriving with outsized expectations.

“It’s honestly insane and really disrespectful with how people were kind of talking and treating him earlier in the year,” Mets first baseman Pete Alonso said.

Then, as the calendar flipped to June, Soto shuffled into form.

Soto has slashed .291/.426/.611 in 100 games since May 30, when he snapped an 0-for-17 skid with two hits. His 1.036 OPS over the span ranks third in the majors behind A’s rookie sensation Nick Kurtz and former Yankees teammate Aaron Judge. His 34 home runs are third. His .426 on-base percentage is second. His 81 walks is tied with Judge atop the field.

“He doesn’t throw away at-bats,” Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor said. “There aren’t at-bats that are lost with him. You feel like all the at-bats are big, that each one is an important at-bat. He’s done a spectacular job all year.”

Last week, Soto became the second player to record three straight 100-RBI seasons, all with a different team, since RBIs became an official statistic in 1920, according to ESPN Research. He is six RBIs shy of tying his career high of 110 and has already established two other prominent career marks. One, belting 42 home runs to eclipse his total with the Yankees last season, was on the bingo card. The other, stealing 36 bases to record the first 40/30 season in Mets history, was not.

The base Soto swiped for his 30th steal this season, a feat he reached at Citizens Bank Park earlier this month, sat at his locker during the final homestand. The keepsake represented a constant desire to defy doubters. Soto never stole more than 12 bases in a season before 2025, but he reported to spring training with an unexpected goal.

“He asked me if I think he could steal 30 bases,” Mets first base coach Antoan Richardson said. “And I told him no. I said you’re slow. But I said you get on base enough so you might have an opportunity to do it.”

Richardson is not wrong. Soto is slow relative to his big league peers; his average sprint speed this season ranks 503rd among 572 players across the majors. But Soto was resolute. He wanted to steal more bases. So Richardson worked with Soto on acceleration and on reading pitchers, eventually giving Soto the confidence to let loose on the basepaths. In 42 games through May 12, Soto stole two bases on two attempts. He’s 34-for-38 since May 13.

“A lot of people think that I can only hit,” Soto said. “I think I can do a lot more than hitting.”

Soto’s progress as a base stealer was met with a steep defensive regression. Soto has stated his top goal — even above winning an MVP award — is a Gold Glove, but the metrics indicate he has been one of the worst right fielders in the majors this season. His minus-11 outs above average rank 24th and his minus-7 defensive runs save sit 20th among the 26 players with at least 500 innings logged at the position, though he wasn’t charged with an error this season until Saturday. The deficiency surfaced to bite the Mets on Tuesday when Soto misplayed a fly ball at the warning track at Wrigley Field that should’ve ended the first inning, but instead plated two runs for the Chicago Cubs.

“It wasn’t the best year for my defense,” Soto acknowledged last week.

Soto’s bat has largely compensated for the flaw when the Mets needed the production most: He’s batting .346 with a 1.127 OPS, seven home runs and 10 steals on 13 attempts in September.

“He’s an amazing hitter,” Mets left fielder Brandon Nimmo said. “He’s very professional. He has been the whole season, even down in spring training, so you’re just seeing exactly who he is.”

Mets co-hitting coach Jeremy Barnes explained Soto made a mechanical adjustment about a month ago seeking to stay through the ball better and not push himself back toward the catcher. Barnes said that has allowed Soto to lift the ball more with authority and avoid hitting ground balls. That, combined with his unyielding confidence and innate plate discipline, has generated perhaps Soto’s best month as a Met, even as the team’s results have disappointed.

“There was an at-bat in Detroit [earlier this month] where he basically told the guy to be careful throwing that pitch,” Barnes recalled. “And he threw the pitch again and then he hit a home run. He’s incredible. His IQ is through the roof.”


SOTO POINTED TO one teammate who helped ease his transition the most: Starling Marte — a Met whose future with the franchise was in doubt after the team signed Soto.

Marte was the club’s primary right fielder the past three seasons. With Soto snatched from the Yankees to play right field, trade rumors swirled.

But the Mets kept Marte as their designated hitter against left-handed pitchers, a role that eventually expanded as he produced and others landed on the injured list. Along the way, he became Soto’s clubhouse confidant. The two, separated in age by 10 years, had crossed paths over their time in the majors and back home in the Dominican Republic, setting the foundation for a close relationship. As teammates, Marte found an elite talent who was willing to take constructive criticism — and give hitting advice he has incorporated into his own approach.

“Sometimes guys get bothered because you tell them things directly,” Marte said in Spanish. “But he is someone that you talk to who doesn’t get bothered and takes it well and thanks you. At first he didn’t feel very comfortable since he was new and only knew two or three guys here. He knew me so I focused more on making sure he felt that sazón Latino when you come to a new team, which is always together, always joking. So that’s what I tried to do and I’ve seen that he’s looser.”

Ryne Stanek, a nine-year veteran reliever on his fifth major league club, has been stationed next to Soto in the home clubhouse this season, a peculiarity since relievers, often the most anonymous group on a ballclub, are typically clustered together. He has noticed a slow metamorphosis in his locker neighbor.

“He’s definitely opened up more as the season’s gone on because you can tell he’s gotten more comfortable,” Stanek said. “I think a little bit of the pressure has not worn off, but he’s kind of like adiós. The pressure is out of mind. He just goes about his business in such a manner that he seems to me like the outside pressure, the noise, he’s over it. He’s just out there playing ball, having fun. It’s been cool to see him get to the position where he’s just out there having a good time.”

Evidence of a looser Soto surfaced last Tuesday when he showed up to Citi Field, after Monday’s off day, with a new look, sporting braids for the first time in his life. Mets rookie infielder Ronny Mauricio, a fellow Dominican, suggested the change and connected him with his Dominican hairstylist.

The Mets won that night, beating the Padres to open a series they would take from the contending club. The vibes were high.

But that was temporary. They were in the tank again when the Mets boarded a plane to Chicago on Sunday night knowing that they’ll need their best trip of the season to have a chance to play another game at home.

It was the latest in a season of maddening inconsistencies and underachievement. The team that took the eventual champion Dodgers to Game 6 of the NLCS and added the game’s highest-priced player somehow backtracked. The team that had the sport’s best record on June 13 somehow has the fifth worst since. But as the team stumbled, and the outside noise amplified, Soto never wavered.

“The consistency of the personality, his preparation, he never panicked,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of Soto’s recent play in high-stakes games. “The impact that he has there with the boys, that, for me, is what makes him who he is. Special guy, special player.”

Now only one question remains: Can he help salvage his first season in orange and blue?

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Guardians’ Fry has facial fractures, out 6-8 weeks

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Guardians' Fry has facial fractures, out 6-8 weeks

Guardians designated hitter David Fry sustained a broken nose and facial fractures after he was hit in the face by a pitch from Tarik Skubal in the sixth inning of Cleveland’s 5-2 win over the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday, a victory that deadlocked the American League Central race.

The Guardians said in a statement Wednesday that Fry is expected to fully recover over the next six to eight weeks. That timeline would prevent Fry from returning for a potential Guardians postseason run.

Fry will not need to undergo surgery, the team said, adding that he has been discharged from the Cleveland Clinic.

“He is doing OK. He’s in good spirits,” manager Stephen Vogt said by phone Wednesday morning after visiting Fry in the hospital. “He’s upright. He’s alert.”

Fry squared around to try to bunt a 99 mph fastball from Skubal, and the foul tip struck him in the nose and mouth area. As Fry collapsed in the batter’s box and immediately grabbed his bloodied face, a visibly shaken Skubal threw off his glove and cap as Vogt and trainers rushed onto the field.

Fry lay in the dirt for several minutes before being slowly helped to his feet. He gave a thumbs-up as he sat up and was driven off in a cart.

“It was straight to the face,” Vogt said, describing the impact on Fry that shook everyone inside Progressive Field. “We’re all thinking about David and his family right now. Obviously, we’re glad he is OK, but obviously it’s a really scary moment.”

Skubal, the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner, paced around the infield as Fry was being assisted. After the game, Skubal, who allowed two hits through the first five innings, said seeing Fry in distress was difficult.

“Really tough,” the left-hander said. “I’ve already reached out to him. I’m sure his phone is blowing up. I just want to make sure he’s all right. Obviously, he seemed like he was OK coming off the field, and hopefully it stays that way.

“I know sometimes with those things that can change. So hopefully he’s all right. I look forward to hopefully at some point tonight or [Wednesday] morning getting a text from him and making sure he’s all good because there’s things that are bigger than the game, and the health of him is more important than a baseball game.”

Skubal, as well as several Guardians teammates, visited Fry in the hospital Tuesday night, Vogt said.

Fry, an All-Star in 2024, underwent offseason elbow surgery and didn’t join the team until late May.

“Definitely really scary,” left fielder Steven Kwan said. “For David to even try something like that [bunt], that’s just who he is. Selfless kind of guy, and especially in a position like that, he’s a tough guy. Thankfully he had some humor when he came up, but you don’t want to see a guy that’s been with you pretty much the whole year [get hurt].

“Obviously energy-wise, just who he is as a teammate, he’s meant so much to us as a team. It’s really scary, but thankfully he had some humor coming off the field, so hopefully we get some good news.”

Fry was placed on the 10-day injured list Wednesday, with the Guardians recalling outfielder Johnathan Rodriguez from Triple-A Columbus.

Following the incident, Skubal threw a wild pitch to George Valera, who replaced Fry, allowing Cleveland to score. Skubal also had an error when he inexplicably tried to make a blind throw to first between his legs and was called for a balk in the sixth inning as the Guardians rallied for three runs to take a 3-2 lead without hitting a ball out of the infield.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Sources: Nats tap Red Sox exec to lead operations

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Sources: Nats tap Red Sox exec to lead operations

The Washington Nationals are finalizing a deal to name Paul Toboni their new head of baseball operations, sources told ESPN, tabbing the Boston Red Sox assistant general manager to turn around a team barreling toward its fifth last-place finish in six seasons.

Toboni, 35, is widely regarded as one of the best young executives in baseball after rising from intern to key decision-maker in Boston’s front office.

Though Toboni’s background is in scouting — he moved from intern to area scout, then ascended to assistant scouting director and scouting director — he took on a larger portfolio as vice president of scouting and player development before being named assistant GM for Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow.

The Nationals fired GM Mike Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez in July, six years after their surprise run to a World Series title. Rizzo was replaced on an interim basis by assistant GM Mike DeBartolo, who was in the mix for the permanent job along with Arizona assistant GM Amiel Sawdaye and Cleveland assistant GM Matt Forman.

Toboni, who played collegiate ball at Cal, will inherit a team that at 64-94 is struggling to keep pace in a competitive National League East division that features financial leviathans in Philadelphia and New York as well as a solid Atlanta Braves core and an ascendant Miami Marlins team. The Nationals have a handful of talented young players — chief among them outfielder James Wood, shortstop CJ Abrams and left-hander MacKenzie Gore — but the team’s middling farm system doesn’t foretell a quick turnaround.

The drastic improvement of Boston’s farm system came under Toboni, who was in charge of the draft when they selected outfielder Roman Anthony, shortstop Marcelo Mayer, infielder Kristian Campbell, left-handers Payton Tolle and Connelly Early as well as the prospects sent to the Chicago White Sox in a trade for ace Garrett Crochet.

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