Are the New York Yankees, who have long been MLB’s financial powerhouse, now playing “third fiddle” when it comes to spending money on players? The very concept seems strange, but that was the judgement of one of baseball’s most knowledgeable “insider” journalists,
The New York Yankees have done well to rebuild their roster after the departure of free-agent superstar Juan Soto. But before they bolster their roster further
“We're assuming that by the end of camp, the Yankees will have found a taker for Marcus Stroman, whose $18 million salary is too expensive for a sixth starter (or long man in the bullpen), assuming the rest of the rotation stays healthy," Joyce wrote. This is the smart take.
With spring training quickly approaching, the New York Yankees could finally move a major contract off the books.
The New York Yankees signed Marcus Stroman in the 2023-24 off-season to a deal they are currently regretting. They needed rotation help and swung and missed with better, more reliable alternatives; virtually forcing them to sign Stroman to a two-year,
A trade pitch has the New York Yankees dealing starting pitcher Marcus Stroman to a rival AL team for another starting pitcher.
A Marcus Stroman trade proposal, Aaron Boone takes a shot at a former Dodgers pitcher and Derek Jeter sounds off on the Yankees' offseason so far.
The Yankees are walking a financial tightrope, sitting slightly above the fourth luxury tax threshold at $301 million. Their plan to get under that number is
The New York Yankees lost out on the biggest free agent in baseball history but still added this offseason. They don’t have Juan Soto anymore but Max Fried, Cody Bellinger, and Devin Williams highlight their additions.
The New York Yankees may not be done making moves yet. There's still just about two weeks until Spring Training.
Marcus Stroman represented the Yankees’ biggest free-agent signing of the month. This January came and went without the club signing anyone to a major league contract, and while part of that is because of a slower-moving free-agent market for the areas the Yankees need to address,