It's been an offseason to forget for the Toronto Blue Jays, who have missed out on nearly every big-name free agent they've targeted.
After missing out on Roki Sasaki, the Blue Jays "remain involved in" the starting pitching market, Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith writes.
The Blue Jays have signed Anthony Santander to a $92.5M deal with $61.75M in deferred payments, using the Dodgers' strategy for tax relief.
The Blue Jays’ five-year, $92.5 million deal with slugger Anthony Santander includes $61.75 million in deferred money, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed Thursday. The deferred money brings the present-day, by player’s union’s calculation, down to $68.6 million.
Just when you think things couldn't get any worse for the Toronto Blue Jays, they hit another new low yesterday. The Blue Jays seemingly started
It's down to the Dodgers, Padres and Blue Jays in the race for 23-year-old Japanese pitching phenom Sasaki. This could be an inflection point for the Toronto franchise.
The Toronto Blue Jays, who have repeatedly struck out on top free agents two offseasons in a row, have been the most heavily rumored suitor of late. The San Francisco Giants, too, have long sought a big bopper and could use a first baseman.
After missing out on Roki Sasaki, the Blue ... the Jays have also been actively considering several starters, including such notable names as Sasaki, Corbin Burnes, Max Fried, Blake Snell ...
The Toronto Blue Jays did everything in their power to land Japanese pitching star Roki Sasaki. They took on an
Free agent outfielder Anthony Santander has signed with the Toronto Blue Jays, reports MLB Network's Jon Paul Morosi. Terms of the contract, pending a physical, have not yet been announced. Anthony Santander and Blue Jays are in agreement pending physical, sources say. @MLBNetwork
After days of hopeful speculation, the Toronto Blue Jays have officially missed out on free agent sensation Roki Sasaki. Sasaki announced on Instagram that he
Step aside New York Yankees, there's a new evil empire in Major League Baseball. The Los Angeles Dodgers have taken the reigns as MLB's most hated team, and for good reason. Twenty-nine fan bases are incredibly jealous of one of the best teams we've seen in recent memory, at least on paper.