Toronto Blue Jays won't find money in the banana stand to extend Vladimir Guerrero Jr. A current CBA loophole allows for teams to defer money well into the future as it pertains to contracts with high-priced players. Look no further than Shohei Ohtani ...
Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s potential contract extension with the Toronto Blue Jays before he turns free agent next winter has got many talking.
Toronto Blue Jays star first-baseman Vladimir Guerrero has agreed to stay with the team and avoid arbitration with a $28 million deal.
If the Blue Jays don’t sign Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to a contract extension before he becomes a free agent at the end of this season -- which they conceivably still might -- then we are going to be talk
The saga of Roki Sasaki ended last Friday with the choice of the Los Angeles Dodgers as the team in which he will make his Major League Baseball debut, leaving the other two finali
Earlier this week, we heard that the Toronto Blue Jays are more than $100 million apart in contract negotiations with first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Accor
One ex-major leaguer predicted that current Toronto Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. would join the Los Angeles Angels next offseason.
Astros setup man and former closer Ryan Pressly is one year away from free agency and has been said to be on the trade block this offseason. Teams have "checked in" on his availab
He may have been Plan C or D, but the Toronto Blue Jays finally landed a big-ticket free agent earlier this week when they signed slugger Anthony Santander to a five-year contract worth $92.5 million.
The Blue Jays have whiffed on many top free agents such as Shohei Ohtani, Roki Sasaki and Corbin Burnes. They finally cashed in when they lured Santander to town. Getting Alonso to sign on the dotted line would prove that Toronto is serious about competing in 2025.
Only two players in all of baseball hit more home runs last season than Anthony Santander managed with the Baltimore Orioles: Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge. That, by itself, seems breathtaking enough to make a frigid January morning feel like Florida in the spring.