A former Houston Astros executive seems to take a jab at the Los Angeles Dodgers for their heavy spending to acquire talent.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are linked to a star on their bitter rival Houston Astros as experts try and solve their long-term infielder holes.
The Cubs acquired right-handed relief pitcher Ryan Pressly in a trade with the Houston Astros on Sunday, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports. Pressly has waived his no-trade clause to approve the deal, and the Astros have agreed to pay a portion of Pressly’s $14M salary for 2025.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have already added Blake Snell and Rōki Sasaki this winter but could make one more splash before opening day.
The Houston Astros appear to have re-entered the chat. It once seemed like a foregone conclusion that longtime Astros star Alex Bregman would leave in free agency. But in recent days, the door appears to have re-opened,
The race to sign Alex Bregman is heating up, with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Boston Red Sox, and Houston Astros all vying for his signature. Astros owne
World Series, Jose Altuve and the Houston Astros took down Cody Bellinger and the Los Angeles Dodgers to win it all.
The Cubs are finalizing a trade to acquire reliever Ryan Pressly from the Astros, sources told ESPN on Sunday.
Sen. Josh Becker wants to close a loophole that puts the state at risk of losing millions in revenue because of the Dodgers’ deferrals
Ryan Pressly waived his no-trade clause and approved a deal that will move the All-Star reliever from the Houston Astros to the Chicago Cubs, a source briefed on his decision told The Athletic on Sunday.
Pressly will waive his no-trade clause to facilitate the move, and Houston will send money to help cover his $14 million salary, the sources said.
For much of the MLB offseason, the Boston Red Sox, Chicago Cubs and Detroit Tigers have been among the favorites to land star free agent third baseman Alex Bregman.In recent days, it’s been reported that the two-time All-Star has started to “re-engage in talks” with the team he’s spent his entire nine-year MLB career with