
Insider Suggests Yankees Could Steal $120 Million All-Star From Red Sox Soon
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
The New York Yankees went into last offseason with a relatively large hole at third base. However, they did not address the need in free agency or through trade. That could finally change this winter.
Alex Bregman signed a three-year, $120 million deal in the offseason to join the Boston Red Sox. His deal has an opt-out for 2026, and he is playing like he will be able to find a better deal on the open market. He is hitting .304 with 11 home runs. The Athletic's Jim Bowden tabbed the Yankees as a team that could land him on the open market.
"Bregman, who is making $40 million this year and signed for two more years at that rate, will likely opt out of his deal," wrote Bowden. "His free-agent market should be even more robust than last offseason with the Red Sox joined by the (New York) Yankees, (Detroit) Tigers, (Houston) Astros, (Philadelphia) Phillies and even the (Los Angeles) Dodgers; he would be an upgrade for all of them at the hot corner."
BRONX, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 21: New York Yankee general manager Brian Cashman speaks to the media during a press conference at Yankee Stadium on December 21, 2022 in Bronx, New York.
BRONX, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 21: New York Yankee general manager Brian Cashman speaks to the media during a press conference at Yankee Stadium on December 21, 2022 in Bronx, New York.Bregman is a two-time All-Star, but is having one of his best years at the plate. The competition to land him will be stiff after he has shown he can still be an elite offensive player.
He would instantly become one of the Yankees' best players and join Aaron Judge on a team with World Series aspirations every year. His history with the Houston Astros cheating scandal could play a role in him joining the Yankees, but it would be a huge sting for Red Sox fans seeing him join the Yankees.
More MLB: Yankees 'In Play' to Steal Superstar Free Agent After $600 Million Update

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
35 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Red Sox rookies Roman Anthony, Marcelo Mayer will likely take a seat against tough Yankees southpaws this weekend
Yet with the Yankees likely to roll out three consecutive lefthanded starters (Ryan Yarbrough, Carlos Rodón, and Max Fried) for their weekend series at Fenway against the Red Sox, both rookies are likely to sit in deference to righthanded hitters Rob Refsnyder and Romy González for some — perhaps even all — of the games. Advertisement 'We have some good righties here. If we don't play Romy, we don't play Ref against the lefty, is that good for the team?' wondered manager Alex Cora. 'People get frustrated [about sitting the rookies against lefties]. I get frustrated, too, because I get the same question over and over again, but I've been doing it since 2019 like this.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Indeed, Cora has typically used platoons to protect lefthanded hitters such as Rafael Devers, Jarren Duran, and Triston Casas as they acclimated to the big leagues. But why not look at the performance of Mayer and Anthony in the minors and conclude that they're ready to handle both lefties and righties? 'I can drive a car,' analogized assistant hitting coach Dillon Lawson. 'That doesn't mean I can be an Indy racecar driver.' Advertisement The caliber of stuff featured by lefties in Triple A is drastically different than that of big league lefties. Across Triple A, the average left-on-left fastball (combined four-seamer and sinker) entering Wednesday was 91.7 miles per hour, with just 7.5 percent of them exceeding 95. In the big leagues, the average left-on-left fastball this year has hummed across the plate at 93 m.p.h., with 24 percent of the offerings coming in at 95 or hotter. 'Especially if you're a lefty that's 95 or better and can command it enough to execute game plans, every major league team wants that on their staff,' said Lawson. 'So you're not seeing that in Triple A.' Anthony's first big league at-bat against a lefty illuminated the point. In the sixth inning of Monday's game, Rays manager Kevin Cash summoned southpaw Garrett Cleavinger specifically for Anthony. Cleavinger threw Anthony two fastballs: One at 96.4 m.p.h. (first-pitch called strike), one at 96.8 (0-1 chase for a swing and miss). Anthony had seen only one left-on-left pitch in his entire Triple A season that was thrown that hard, a 96.9-m.p.h. fastball from Anthony Gose on April 24. Cleavinger finished the at-bat by freezing Anthony with a sweeper — a middle-middle pitch that was hittable based on location but that Anthony didn't have in his mental database. He took a called third strike. The pitch had 20 inches of horizontal break toward the rookie. In Triple A this year, Anthony saw only four left-on-left sweepers with more than 18 inches of glove-side movement; he swung at none of them (three were balls, one was a called strike). For that matter, Anthony had seen just 15 left-on-left sweepers with at least 15 inches of horizontal break. He swung at three, resulting in one well-struck single, one double-play grounder, and one swing and miss. Advertisement That single at-bat highlighted why it's difficult to look at Triple A left-on-left numbers and assume they'll translate to the big leagues. There's an adjustment that players must experience. 'That's why they're here. That's why they're not in the minor leagues,' said Anthony. 'You come to learn from it and realize, 'OK, this isn't the same guy you're facing in Double A or Triple A three times a week,' so now we've got to adjust.' The Sox want to give Anthony and Mayer opportunities to learn by facing elite lefties. But right now, the growth opportunities are secondary to trying to win games. And with both Gonzalez (.353/.421/.529 against lefties entering Wednesday) and Refsnyder (.279/.400/.558) demolishing lefties, the Sox won't shy from employing righthanded hitters who give them the best chance of success against lefties in critical situations. Cora has discussed the topic with Anthony and Mayer when turning to the two righthanded veterans as pinch hitters. The rookies, in turn, said the conversation is unnecessary. 'Ref's our guy. Ref's the guy against lefties. [Hitting against lefties] is Ref's bread and butter. So as soon as [Cora] told me [Refsnyder would pinch hit for Anthony against a lefty on Monday], I was excited to cheer him on,' said Anthony. '[Cora] didn't really have to explain much to me. I know that that's the goal, to get Ref up and try to help the team win. Ref obviously has more experience than I do, especially with big league pitching in general, but [especially] with big league lefties.' Advertisement 'Romy's a hell of a player, so whenever a tough lefty comes in and [Cora] switches me for Romy, I'm really confident that he's going to get the job done,' said Mayer (1 for 7 with three strikeouts against lefties). 'I trust every single person in this lineup, on this team, to help the team win.' Eventually, if Anthony and Mayer are what the Red Sox expect them to be, their opportunities against lefties will come — just as they eventually did for Devers, Duran, and Casas. There will be learning moments in the big leagues that will allow them to adjust to the level of competition — something they'd shown the ability to do in the minors. 'Every level, there's growing pains and learning experiences,' said Mayer. 'And I think just getting at-bats and learning every single day, you get better and you figure it out.' Alex Speier can be reached at


Newsweek
40 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Dodgers Former All-Star Could Be 'Out the Door' After Shohei Ohtani Update
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. The Los Angeles Dodgers spent a lot of money to shore up their biggest weakness from last season and, so far, it hasn't really helped. The Dodgers' pitching staff limped its way to a World Series championship amid high-profile injuries to the likes of Tyler Glasnow and Clayton Kershaw and proceeded to sign Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki and several veteran relievers to ensure they would stay healthier this year. Instead, they have more than a dozen pitchers on the injured list and are as desperate as ever for two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani to make it back to the mound. Luckily for LA, Ohtani is making some strong progress toward that return. In the latest update, manager Dave Roberts indicated there's now at least some chance he could take the bump before the All-Star break. But that return might mean the team has to move on from one of their other arms. And FanSided's Zach Pressnell believes that could be 2022 All-Star Tony Gonsolin. LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 15: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on in the dugout in the first inning during a game against the Athletics at Dodger Stadium on May 15,... LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 15: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on in the dugout in the first inning during a game against the Athletics at Dodger Stadium on May 15, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by) More Sloter/Getty "With Ohtani returning, Gonsolin (who's currently on the injured list) could be on the hot seat," Pressnell wrote. "The Dodgers may try to shift him to the bullpen, but there's also a chance Los Angeles could use him in a trade if its pitching rotation can get healthy. Returning Ohtani is step one to getting fully healthy. It could also be step one to sending Gonsolin out the door this season." The Dodgers placed Gonsolin on the injured list earlier this month but have indicated he shouldn't need season-ending surgery. Still, it's hard to say what kind of trade return he might bring as he's struggled on the mound even when healthy this season. Gonsolin has a 5.00 ERA in seven starts so far. That performance has made him perhaps the least effective pitcher within the Dodgers' star-studded rotation and it could mean he is the first hurler sent packing if the team needs to make room on the roster. More MLB: Red Sox Rafael Devers Breaks Silence on Top Prospect Replacement


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
The case for the WNBA extending its season into NFL territory
The case for the WNBA extending its season into NFL territory What we're all watching this summer is technically the longest WNBA season ever. All 13 teams across the league will play 44 games over 118 days, from May 16 to September 11. When it's all said and done, this will be the most games ever played in a WNBA season. As a fan, I'm thankful on one hand. The more WNBA the better. On the other, this new schedule already seems to be posing a problem for players around the league, and the season isn't even quite a month old yet. Players expressed their concerns about the schedule in an article from Front Office Sports' Annie Costabile. The crux of it is this: The WNBA's schedule has increased the number of games played over four years, from 32 in 2021 to 44 in 2025. While the league has added more games, it hasn't added the requisite amount of time in between these games for proper rest and recovery for its players. That packed schedule has resulted in stints where players are playing four games in six nights or, like in the Phoenix Mercury's case, nine games in 18 days. That's grueling and, really, unnecessary. That packed schedule is only going to get worse. The WNBA is adding two more teams next season, in the Toronto Tempo and the Portland expansion team. We're probably looking at another few games added to the schedule with those two teams coming. If that happens, an expansion on the season is desperately needed. The only argument against the expansion is that the WNBA will be encroaching deep into NFL territory, which is something essentially every league is afraid of these days. The NFL is a ratings monster. Go up against a football game — especially during primetime — and your audience is probably going to get cannibalized. It could also run up against the NBA, which could be a source of internal strife among the two organizations. MLB will also be playing the World Series around this time. However, I'd argue that these are not things the WNBA should be concerned with at this point. As far as TV ratings go, the WNBA should be confident enough at this point to believe it can hold its own against any other league it might run up against. And, yes, that includes the NFL. The W's most popular players are drawing nearly 3 million viewers to regular-season games at this point. You could argue that's a bit anomalous because it's Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese and people will watch every time they play. But when games are being played that late in the season in September and October, we're either talking about late regular-season matchups that have significance for playoff seeding or we're talking about playoffs outright. People will be drawn to these games. But, honestly, the ratings conversation doesn't even really matter here. We've said it once before and we'll say it again: The WNBA has already signed the biggest TV deal in the league's history. That deal is locked in for the next decade. Ratings no longer matter in conversations about this league. They won't until it's time to lock in the next deal, and once we arrive there, the league will likely be light years ahead of where it is today. In the end, ratings shouldn't take precedence over player health. We're only a few weeks into the season and we've already seen so many players suffer from soft tissue injuries that you can't help but feel like they could've been avoided if not for so much wear and tear on the talent. If extending the WNBA's calendar out another month or so can alleviate some of that, then so be it. The league should do it, no matter what the NFL, NBA, or anyone else thinks. Bennedict Mathurin becomes Michael Jordan The Indiana Pacers are two wins away from winning an NBA championship and pulling off one of the biggest upsets in the league's history and it's all thanks to Bennedict Mathurin, who was the hero of Game 3 for Indy. The dude scored 27 points in 22 minutes, which is bonkers. But it gets even more bonkers when you see the conversation he just entered. Mathurin is only 22 years old. Here's the list of dudes who've scored at least 25 points in the NBA Finals at 22 or younger: There are a bunch of Hall of Famers on that list and then there's Mathurin, who is still charting his course. I have no idea where things go from here for the Pacers' forward, but that's a pretty good list to be on. Byron Buxton to the moon I don't even know what to say about Byron Buxton's 479-foot homer against the Rangers. The Twins' broadcast team didn't, either. All they could do was laugh. Here's Cory Woodroof on the moonshot: "It's one of the longest home runs of the 2025 MLB season, and it's one that left the Twins television broadcast in stitches over just how dominant it really was. I mean, he sent that baseball into another time zone. You don't often see an MLB player hammer a homer like this, but Buxton slammed this baseball in stride. You know you've done well when all your team's broadcast team can do is laugh at how great of a home run it was." Look at this thing. It truly is comical. Insane. Quick hits: A new consensus mock ... The Knicks get rejected again ... and more — Here's Bryan Kalbrosky with a new consensus NBA mock draft for you. Can't believe it's almost draft season. — The Knicks really need to go find a head coach who doesn't already have a team, man. Charles Curtis has more on their latest rejections. — Our Meg Hall had a nice chat with Sha'Carri Richardson! Y'all know you need to click this one. — A dentist is playing in the US Open. No, seriously. Charles Curtis has five facts you need to know about him. — Charles Barkley roasted the Knicks' coaching search. Absolutely love this. — Here's Robert Zeglinski on Kyle Shanahan being annoyed with how fans overreact to NFL practices. This is brilliant. That's a wrap, folks. Thanks for reading. Peace. -Sykes ✌️ This is For The Win's daily newsletter, The Morning Win. Did a friend recommend or forward this to you? If so, subscribe here.