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It is clear Donald J. Trump will be a remarkable second-term president. His courage and endurance over the last nine years have already made him an historic figure – even before he made the greatest comeback in American political history on Nov. 5.

The four years he spent out of office gave President-elect Trump time to think through how much he wanted to change the establishment. He was also able to consider what steps he could take to remove the dictatorial elements in the American system.

I thought his second term would start on his inauguration on Jan. 20, 2025. That is the date he will become President de jure, the Latin term for something being in the law.

However, it never occurred to me that President Trump’s fame, energy, and drive – and President Joe Biden’s collapse – would lead to a totally new model. The actuality is that President Trump has become the de facto President. De facto in Latin means ‘in reality or as a matter of fact.’

When French President Emmanuel Macron greeted President Trump with the full honors of state during his recent trip to Paris, it was clear that the mantle of American power had shifted decisively to President Trump.

When President Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and President Macron to discuss Ukraine, it was clear where the center of world power resided.

The images of President Trump and Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni were a powerful contrast to Meloni’s recent meeting with President Biden, in which she had to go find him and lead him back to a group photo. Furthermore, Meloni is a conservative populist. She is solving illegal immigration and creating economic growth, in a manner similar to President Trump.

The fact is President Trump is the de facto President. He is the practical leader of the United States even before his inauguration. He is negotiating with leaders and sending signals about massive domestic and foreign policy changes. He is essentially eliminating President Biden and Vice President Harris from the public stage by the sheer scale and energy of his activities. 

Part of his de facto presidency comes from him being an effective leader compared to the ineffective leaders in the current White House.

 

Politico captured the startling change in a Dec. 9 piece headlined, ‘Biden shrinks from view ahead of Trump’s return to Washington.’

According to the outlet:

‘Joe Biden is president of the United States for 42 more days. But within the Democratic Party, on Capitol Hill — and even within his own administration — it feels like he left the Oval Office weeks ago.

‘Biden has effectively disappeared from the radar in the wake of the Democrats’ bruising electoral loss…. ‘He’s been so cavalier and selfish about how he approaches the final weeks of the job,’ said a former White House official.

‘‘There is no leadership coming from the White House,’ one Democrat close to senior lawmakers stated bluntly. ‘There is a total vacuum.’

The American people agree that the torch has been passed from a liberal Democrat to President-elect Trump. A recent Rasmussen Reports poll showed that 55 percent of likely U.S. voters believe the election is a mandate to enact the policies on which President Trump campaigned. About one third (32 percent) disagree, but another 13 percent are not certain whether the election was a mandate.

With a 55% to 33% lead, President Trump can continue to push forward. If his energy and strategies work out, the 13%  will probably join the pro-agenda side to give him a 2:1 advantage.

The importance of this change cannot be overstated.

Traditionally, presidential inaugurations occurred on March 4. 

President-elect Abraham Lincoln had to wait four months to take office. During that time, lame duck President James Buchanan allowed the slave-owning secessionists enormous leeway to break apart the Union. The country was much worse off when Lincoln was finally sworn in than it was when he was elected.

Similarly, President-elect Franklin Delano Roosevelt refused to work with President Herbert Hoover between the election and his inauguration on March 4, 1933. The American economy grew substantially weaker during the waiting period.

These two experiences convinced the country to adopt the 20th Amendment, moving the presidential inauguration to Jan. 20 and avoiding six weeks of confusion and potential problems.

Now, in the real-time age of the internet, unending daily challenges, and an absentee White House, we need de facto President Trump more than we need the absentee President de jure.

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Earlier this year, Steve Cohen laid out his principles as the owner of the New York Mets, saying it was a “philanthropic” endeavor, in an interview with CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin.

“I don’t care about the cost side,” Cohen said, adding: “If I can make millions of people happy, how cool is that? I actually do it as a civic responsibility.”

That attitude helps explain how outfielder Juan Soto ended up agreeing to the richest-ever contract in baseball on Sunday, and among the most lucrative signed by any professional athlete in the world. 

The deal for Soto, who’s 26 and from the Dominican Republic, comes to $765 million over 15 years and includes a $75 million signing bonus and has the potential to increase to more than $800 million, according to MLB.com.

What’s especially notable about the contract is that none of the money is “deferred” — meaning it must be paid each year that Soto is on the Mets’ active roster. Besides the dollar amount, the lack of deferrals is what makes Soto’s contract even more eye-popping than the $700 million deal signed just last year by Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani: $680 million of Ohtani’s deal will not be paid until after 2034. 

For Soto, it means taking all the money up front. 

“It actually makes little sense why (Soto) would get such a big contract without deferrals,” Nathan Goldman, an associate professor of accounting at North Carolina State University, said in an interview with NBC News.    

Given the hefty combined personal income tax rates — approximately 15% for the wealthiest residents — levied by the city and state of New York, Soto’s ultimate payout will be somewhat diminished. 

Yet Soto retains the potential to earn even more money: According to MLB.com, he can opt out of his contract after his fifth year with the Mets if he believes he can command higher sums on the free market. 

However, the Mets can override that opt-out by increasing his annual salary by $4 million a year, from $51 million to $55 million for the final 10 years. 

And Soto’s contract does not include the amount the Mets and Cohen will have to pay to satisfy Major League Baseball’s luxury tax. Though ostensibly designed to create a more even playing field between large- and small-market teams, deep-pocketed owners like Cohen have not flinched at paying that penalty to acquire the most coveted players. 

The simple answer to unlocking Soto’s contract may simply be Cohen. Despite regularly carrying some of the most expensive contracts in baseball this century — including a $340 million deal signed with shortstop Francisco Lindor in 2022 — the Mets have been thwarted time and time again, including crushing losses in the playoffs and World Series. The team is nearing the 40th anniversary of its last championship.  The outlook seemed to change five years ago, when Cohen, a longtime hedge fund manager, purchased the team for $2.4 billion. Cohen has been an unusually accessible owner, meeting with fans on multiple occasions and often weighing in on social media. 

More importantly: Cohen, worth as much as $21.3 billion according to Forbes, has been among the most profligate owners in baseball since he took the reins of the team. According to data from Spotrac, a website that monitors sports spending, the Mets have held the largest annual payroll since 2023. A separate index from TheScore.com that tracks payrolls versus teams’ approximate revenues shows Cohen may actually be operating the team at a loss.   

Despite the annual ratcheting of payrolls, the winner of the World Series has often been unpredictable. But the baseball gods have been notoriously cruel to the Mets, despite their outsize spending. After crashing out of the first round of the playoffs in 2022 with a roster full of veterans, Cohen blew up the team and traded for prospects while loading up on another set of expensive free agents. 

But that team still only tied for second in the National League East Division this year and barely made the playoffs. While they nevertheless made it to the National League Championship Series, they were ultimately bested by the Los Angeles Dodgers, who went on to win the World Series in October.

Yet over time, payroll does seem to equate to winning — belying the infamous “Moneyball” approach to spending efficiently on under-used players. 

With Soto’s contract, it seems Cohen will not be denied again. According to reports, the New York Yankees, baseball’s long-running big spenders, offered Soto only $5 million less than the Mets. But despite making the World Series this year, the Bronx Bombers have faced roster turmoil in recent years, while continuing to employ a manager, Aaron Boone, now loathed by many fans. 

Ironically, Soto is coming over from the Yankees, where he was traded in December 2023.  

Soto is entering his peak years and continues to draw comparisons to the hitting legends Ted Williams and Barry Bonds. That combination of youth and potential helped clinch the salary record.    

Another key to Soto ending up with such a massive contract was simply timing. He took advantage of a year lacking in other mega free agents and was able to command a premium on the open market. 

It’s possible Soto’s contract will be surpassed in just one year. Analysts say Toronto Blue Jays star Vladimir Guerrero Jr., who finished sixth in MVP voting last season, is expected to command massive numbers when he enters free agency after the 2025 season. 

Even if no one ends up reaching or surpassing Soto’s figure, MLB will continue to lead all professional sports in titanic deals for contracts, for one simple reason: Unlike the NFL and NBA, it doesn’t have a salary cap.

According to Michael Ginnitti, Spotrac’s founder and managing editor, “Baseball’s luxury tax system … allows billionaires to spend billions on their team if they choose.”

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Brett Favre has responded to a video of a confrontation between him and former Jets defensive end Mark Gastineau.

On Tuesday, ESPN shared a video of Gastineau confronting Favre at a card show in 2023.

In the video, Gastineau expresses his frustration that the former Green Bay Packers quarterback ‘took a dive’ during the 2001 regular-season finale against the New York Giants that gave defensive end Michael Strahan the single-season sack record. Strahan’s sack on the play was what allowed him to surpass the 22-sack mark Gastineau had set in 1984.

‘I’m gonna get my sack back,’ the former Jets defender says in the video. ‘I’m gonna get my sack back, dude.’

Brett Favre responds to Mark Gastineau’s confrontation

Favre responded to the video with a thread on social media website X several hours later.

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To begin the thread, the Hall of Fame quarterback provided context for his slide in that game back during the 2001 season against Strahan and the Giants. Later in the thread, he went on to say he understands how his split decision in that game adversely affected Gastineau’s legacy, including the way that it diminishes ‘his (Gastineau’s) value at card shows.’

Favre then lamented that the confrontation, which he believed should have remained a private moment, was recorded and posted publicly. He finished his thread complimenting Gastineau’s career and making a case that the former ‘Sack King’ deserves to be in the Hall of Fame.

Here’s the full thread:

ESPN’s video of the confrontation was part of the sports media giant’s marketing effort for a new feature in its ’30 for 30′ documentary series.

The feature is titled ‘The New York Sack Exchange’ – after the nickname given to the dominant Jets defensive front that included Gastineau – and is set to release on Friday.

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Ahead of the streaming platform’s first NFL doubleheader on Christmas Day Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Kansas City Chiefs (1 p.m. ET), followed by Baltimore Ravens vs. Houston Texans (4:30 p.m. ET) Netflix announced an extensive, star-studded lineup that features analysts from many networks.

The more the merrier, right?

Ian Eagle (CBS) will kick things off as the play-by-play announcer for the first matchup between the Steelers and Chiefs at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh. He will be accompanied in the booth by analysts Nate Burleson (CBS) and J.J. Watt (CBS) and on the sidelines by Melanie Collins (CBS) and Stacey Dales (NFL Network).

Eagle will then pass things off to his son, play-by-play announcer Noah Eagle (NBC Sports), for the Texans’ matchup against the Ravens at NRG Stadium in Houston. Greg Olsen (FOX Sports) will serve as the analyst alongside Eagle, while Jamie Erdahl (NFL Network) and Steve Wyche (NFL Network) will be on the sidelines.

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Ian Eagle, 55, and Noah Eagle, 28, will become the first father-and-son broadcasting duo to call games on the same network. But there’s more family ties on Netflix’s Christmas Day broadcast.

Watt will provide commentary for the Steelers-Chiefs matchup, which features Watt’s younger brother, Steelers linebacker T.J. Watt. Twin brothers Devin McCourty (NBC) and Jason McCourty (CBS) will host a pregame show in Pittsburgh for Netflix with Laura Rutledge (ESPN).

Netflix’s Christmas Day coverage is rounded out by Kay Adams (Up & Adams), Mina Kimes (ESPN), Manti Te’o (NFL Network), Drew Brees and Robert Griffin III, who will all host a pregame show based out of Los Angeles throughout the day. Comedians Bert Kreischer and Nate Bargatze will join as a tailgate correspondent and special guest, respectively. NFL insider Ian Rapoport (NFL Network) and rules analyst Gene Steratore (CBS) will also be on standby.

Netflix has another gift up its sleeve for all viewers. The streaming platform tapped Grammy award-winning artist Beyonce to perform during halftime of the Texans-Ravens game in Houston, her hometown.

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In the next eight months, so much will change in the run-up to Major League Baseball’s 2025 draft. Yet one variable finally cemented: The Washington Nationals will have the No. 1 pick.

The Nationals emerged as the winner of Tuesday’s draft lottery held at the winter meetings and can choose from thousands of amateur ballplayers lighting up the high school, collegiate and showcase diamonds. The Los Angeles Angels will pick second.

And for now, it would be a mild upset if the Nationals did not draft Oklahoma prep star Ethan Holliday.

He remains the consensus No. 1 prospect and would follow in the footsteps of older brother Jackson, chosen first overall by the Baltimore Orioles in 2022 and now an infielder at the big league level.

Still, an entire season remains. Evaluations will change, prospects will gain helium and others will lose ground. For now, however, with a draft order set, here’s a look at 18 top prospects and the draft order in the wake of the lottery:

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Top MLB draft prospects 2025

1. (Nationals) Ethan Holliday, INF, Stillwater (Oklahoma) HS: Might not be long until he shakes the tags of both Matt’s son and Jackson’s brother.

2. (Angels) Jace Laviolette, OF, Texas A&M: The consensus top collegiate prospect, Laviolette has hit 50 homers in two seasons at A&M, with a significant improvement in walk and strikeout rates as a sophomore.

3. (Mariners) Seth Hernandez, RHP, Corona (California) HS: The first of several prospects from the powerhouse prep program, Hernandez is a Vanderbilt commit whose fastball has been clocked in the upper 90s. Posted a 0.64 ERA and batted .354 as a junior, but future is on the mound.

4. (Rockies) Tyler Bremner, RHP, UC Santa Barbara: He lacks Hernandez’s larger, projectable frame but is well-accomplished at the collegiate level, posting a 2.54 ERA for Shane Bieber’s alma mater and juicing his fastball into the mid-90s.

5. (Cardinals) Jamie Arnold, LHP, Florida State: He and Bremner are interchangeable No. 1 collegiate arms, according to Baseball America and MLB Pipeline, as he struck out 159 as a Seminoles sophomore.

6. (Pirates) Kayson Cunningham, SS, Johnson (Texas) HS: Committed to Texas, Cunningham is a hit machine in a small (5-foot-9) package, perhaps increasing his likelihood he sticks at shortstop relative to larger prospects.

7. (Marlins) Xavier Neyens, 3B, Mount Vernon (Washington) HS: A 6-foot-4 beast who throws 94 mph on the mound but will be a power-hitting corner infielder professionally. Has Oregon State commitment.

8. (Blue Jays) Eli Willits, SS, Fort Cobb-Broxton (Oklahoma) HS: If the Hollidays are the First Family of Sooner State baseball, the Willitses aren’t far behind. Son of former big leaguer and current Oklahoma associate head coach Reggie Willits, Eli is predictably a Sooner commit but not expected to make it to campus; he reclassified for the 2025 draft class and thus will be the youngest top prospect on draft day.

9. (Reds) Cam Cannarella, OF, Clemson: Won ACC freshman of the year honors but was dogged by a labrum injury almost all of last season, so a big junior year would help solidify his stock. Not a huge power guy but can hold down center field.

10. (White Sox) Kruz Schoolcraft, LHP/1B, Sunset (Oregon) HS: A 6-foot-8 specimen who will take legitimate two-way options into his final year of high school; like Willits, he reclassified to graduate in ’25. Touches 97 mph from the mound.

11. (Athletics) Billy Carlson, SS/RHP, Corona (California) HS: The next of the Corona Kids, Carlson is a Tennessee commit and an excellent all-around athlete who can also hit the mid-90s on the mound.

12. (Rangers) Marek Houston, SS, Wake Forest: Need a Demon Deacon on here almost as a matter of course. Houston is a fine defensive shortstop who could see his stock rise with a big junior year at the plate.

13. (Giants) Aiva Arquette, SS, Oregon State: A transfer from Washington, Arquette joins the Beavers off a sophomore season in which he posted a .959 OPS. A 6-foot-4 presence in the middle infield.

14. (Rays) Sean Gamble, SS/OF, IMG Academy (Florida): A Vanderbilt commit whose future position remains uncertain – but will certainly be in the middle of the diamond. Exit velocity has been measured as high as 108 mph.

15. (Red Sox) Tre Phelps, 3B/OF, Georgia: His physical tools combined with the challenge and exposure an SEC schedule provides makes Phelps a strong candidate to climb draft boards. He hit 12 home runs and produced a 1.140 OPS in his first year as a Bulldog.

16. (Twins) Ethan Petry, 1B/OF, South Carolina: Another massive (6-foot-4) corner infielder, Petry has hit 44 home runs in two seasons with the Gamecocks and added 11 more in a Cape Cod League MVP turn.

17. (Cubs) Brady Ebel, SS, Corona (California) HS: The last of the Corona Kids, Ebel, son of Dodgers third base coach Dino Ebel, is a 6-foot-3 LSU commit who’s still just 16 yet possesses the baseball IQ one might expect of a player growing up in his environment.  

18. (Diamondbacks) Trent Caraway, 3B, Oregon State: Another player whose 2024 injury (broken thumb) sets him up to rebuild significant value in ’25. Has just 72 career collegiate plate appearances, though he got 116 more during a strong Cape Cod League showing.

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President Biden and key Democrats are now opposing a once bipartisan bill that would have authorized 63 new permanent district judgeships now that President-elect Donald Trump would be the one to fill 21 of those slots once he takes office.

The Senate in August passed the ‘Judicial Understaffing Delays Getting Emergencies Solved Act’ or the ‘JUDGES Act of 2024,’ which staggers the 63 new permanent judgeships the president may choose over the next 10 years. Citing how courts are burdened by heavy caseloads, the bill says the president shall appoint 11 of those permanent judgeships in 2025 and 11 more in 2027. The president would tap another 10 judges in 2029, 11 in 2031, 10 in 2033 and 10 more in 2035, the bill says. 

Democrats are decrying how the bill did not come to a vote in the House before the election – when control of the next presidency, and therefore which party would choose those next 21 judges, still hung in the balance. 

The White House released a statement on Tuesday saying Biden would now veto the bill if it came to his desk. 

‘While judicial staffing is important to the rule of law, S. 4199 is unnecessary to the efficient and effective administration of justice,’ the White House said. ‘The bill would create new judgeships in states where Senators have sought to hold open existing judicial vacancies. Those efforts to hold open vacancies suggest that concerns about judicial economy and caseload are not the true motivating force behind passage of this bill now.’ 

‘In addition, neither the House nor the Senate fully explored how the work of senior status judges and magistrate judges affects the need for new judgeships,’ the White House continued. ‘Further, the Senate passed this bill in August, but the House refused to take it up until after the election. Hastily adding judges with just a few weeks left in the 118th Congress would fail to resolve key questions in the legislation, especially regarding how the judges are allocated.’ 

During a House Rules Committee hearing on Monday, Rep. Chip Roy, R-N.C., and House Judiciary Committee chair Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, made the argument that a significant number of districts in states, regardless of their political make-up, have sounded the alarm about staffing shortages worsening the backlogs of cases. However, despite the significant need, they argued, the appointment process has become politicized.

‘We need the number of judges,’ Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., the ranking member on the House Judiciary Committee, admitted. ‘However, President Trump has shown, he bragged that by his three appointments, he overturned Roe v. Wade. He said he was going to do it. He did it. So don’t tell me it’s not political.’ 

‘Under this legislation, we all promised to give the next three unknown presidents a certain number of judges,’ Nadler said. ‘Because no one can tell the future we were all at an equal disadvantage, but for this deal to work, the bill had to be passed before Election Day.’

The bill text cites how as of March 31, 2023, there were 686,797 pending cases in the district courts across the country, with an average of 491 weighted case filings per judgeship over a 12-month period.

Shortly before the White House released its statement signaling Biden would veto the bill, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., gave a speech noting how the JUDGES Act passed the Senate by unanimous consent in August.

The bipartisan support, McConnell argued, proved ‘that the right to a speedy trial still enjoys overwhelming popularity.’ 

‘I was particularly encouraged by the vocal endorsement of our friend, the Democratic leader, who recognized the measure as, quote, ‘very responsible, bipartisan and prudent bill that would lead to a better functioning judiciary.’ Soon, we expect the House to take up and pass the JUDGES Act with similar overwhelming support,’ McConnell said. ‘And normally, we could rest assured that such popular action would be signed into law without further ado. But maybe not this time.’ 

‘Last week, the White House seemed to suggest, through anonymous comment that President Biden has concerns with the bill. I, for one, would be curious to hear the president’s rationale. It’s hard to imagine a justification for blocking the JUDGES Act that doesn’t smack of naked partisanship,’ McConnell, who did lead the GOP effort to block former President Obama’s appointment of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court, said. ‘It’s almost inconceivable that a lame duck president would consider vetoing such an obviously prudential step for any reason other than selfish spite.’

‘Litigants across America deserve their day in court,’ he said. ‘They deserve to know the federal judiciary has the bandwidth to carefully and thoroughly consider their cases. The president, former chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, is well equipped to appreciate this fact, and I hope he acts accordingly.’ 

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The Biden administration has renewed a controversial sanctions waiver that will allow Iran access to some $10 billion in payments from Iraq – an action that came just two days after President-elect Trump emerged victorious on Election Day.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken again extended the waiver for humanitarian trade, which permits Iran to access accounts in Iraq and Oman. However, Republican critics have said that allowing the Iranian regime access to these funds frees up money Iran can use to support terrorism in the Middle East or advance its nuclear program.

‘On November 7th, the department did renew Iraq’s electricity waiver for the 23rd time since 2018. It was done so for an additional 120 days,’ State Department spokesman Vedant Patel confirmed last week. 

‘We remain committed to reducing Iran’s malign influence in the region. Our viewpoint is that a stable, sovereign and secure Iraq is critical to these efforts,’ he added, pointing out that this sanctions waiver began in 2018 during the first Trump administration. 

Congress has passed several sanctions targeting Iran that give the president authority to temporarily suspend, or ‘waive’ the sanctions if the president determines doing so is in the interests of U.S. national security. 

The waiver is set to expire after Trump takes office in January. It is unclear whether the Trump administration would again extend the sanctions relief. The Trump transition team did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, argued Tuesday that the sanctions waiver allows Iran to fund proxy terror groups that have attacked U.S. forces in the Middle East.

‘The House voted to eliminate these waiver authorities — twice. But the Biden administration is still waiving the sanctions, putting more money in the Iranian regime’s pockets to fund its terrorist proxies and nuclear weapons program,’ McCaul posted on X. 

‘The U.S. should not be subsidizing Iran’s malign activities.’ 

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DALLAS — The New York Yankees, wasting no time shrugging off the disappointment of Juan Soto’s defection, went shopping again, agreeing with left-handed starter Max Fried to an eight-year, $218 million contract, a person with direct knowledge of the contract told USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal won’t become official until Fried passes his physical.

The deal, which includes no deferrals or opt-outs, is the richest contract ever given to a left-handed pitcher, and the fourth-largest among all pitchers in history.

The Yankees, who were left at the altar Sunday when Soto rejected their 16-year, $760 million contract and instead took $5 million more and a year less from the Mets, acted like they weren’t that all broken-hearted.

They knew they had plenty of holes to fill and if they had signed Soto, they would have had no financial flexibility to fill their other needs.

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Now, they have one of the best lefties in baseball to go with ace Gerrit Cole, and have plenty of money left to find a third baseman, center fielder, first baseman and a reliever or too.

The Yankees, according to one official, have expressed interest in potentially trading for St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Nolan Arenado, center fielder Cody Bellinger of the Chicago Cubs, and pursuing free agent first baseman Christian Walker and reliever Tanner Scott.

And they still will have plenty of money left that wasn’t used to Soto.

“Look, it’s not going to stop us from hopefully going to put together another great team,’ Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Tuesday morning. “There’s different ways of doing it. We don’t even know which way that is this winter. You don’t know how it’s going to unfold, what free agents come into the mix, who you match up with, who you maybe match up with in a trade. That’s the fun part about now and trying to make good evaluations and good decisions ultimately to put us in a good spot moving forward.’

That pain of losing Soto was certainly eased with the signing of Fried, 30, a two-time All-Star with a 2.81 ERA the past five years in Atlanta. The Yankees beat out the Boston Red Sox and Toronto Blue Jays in the bidding for Fried.

“Our expectation is to still go out and build and put together a great team to go compete for a championship again next year,’’ Boone said. “That doesn’t stop.’’

They certainly took a huge first step in doing just that while vying for their first World Series title since 2009.

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DALLAS — The Texas Rangers, who bowed out of the free agent market last winter with the uncertainty of their TV contract, jumped right back in Tuesday by bringing back starter Nathan Eovaldi on a three-year, $75 million contract.

The Rangers, who were aggressively pursuing Max Fried before he signed an eight-year, $218 million contract with the New York Yankees, immediately pivoted to Eovaldi.

And, according to a high-ranking Rangers executive, they still plan to pursue one more starter and two relievers.

Their rotation now consists of Jacob deGrom, Eovaldi, Jon Gray, Tyler Mahle and Cody Bradford with Kumar Rocker and Jack Leiter knocking on the door.

Eovaldi, 34, who is 24-13 with a 3.72 ERA, including 298 strikeouts in 314 ⅔ innings in 54 starts the past two seasons with the Rangers, was able to parlay the hot pitching market into the three-year deal.

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“Good starting pitching is expensive,” Rangers GM Chris Young told Dallas reporters Monday. ‘The reality of it is, it never goes down. It’s just the state of starting pitching today.’

Eovaldi, a Texas native, is beloved by the organization after helping lead them to the 2023 World Series title by going 5-0 with 2.95 ERA over six starts in the postseason.

While the Rangers’ TV contract situation still is uncertain, owner Ray Davis has given his front office approval to raise the payroll – but keep it under the $241 million tax threshold.

“We are proceeding as though we can operate in a normal fashion,’ Young said, “that will allow us to complete the roster that we think is capable of competing for the division and hopefully a world championship.’

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Rocky Colavito, the wildly popular and powerful slugger for the Detroit Tigers in the early 1960s, died on Tuesday at age 91 in Bernville, Pennsylvania, after a long illness.

During his four years with the Tigers as the cleanup hitter, Colavito slugged 139 home runs and knocked in 430 runs, averaging 35 homers and 107 RBIs a season.

In 1961, the best year of his 14-year career, Colavito belted 45 homers and drove in 140 runs.

The Tigers that season, loaded with Colavito, Norm Cash, (that season’s batting champ at .361), Al Kaline and a solid pitching staff (led by Jim Bunning and Frank Lary), battled the New York Yankees for the pennant all year until the Bronx Bombers pulled away in early September.

Colavito arrived in Detroit just two days before the start of the 1960 season in one of baseball’s most noted and shocking trades, as the Tigers dealt 1959 batting champ (and fan favorite) Harvey Kuenn to Cleveland for Colavito, who had tied for the 1959 home run title after hitting four consecutive homers in Baltimore and gracing the cover of Time magazine.

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The trade of hitting stars was a stunner for all involved, especially Colavito, as he recounted in 2020:

“We were playing in Memphis for our last exhibition game and I was standing on first base when Joe Gordon (manager) walked out of the dugout and told me, ‘Rocky, that is the last time you’ll bat for Cleveland. You’ve been traded to Detroit for Harvey Kuenn.’ He said ‘good luck’ and I said ‘same to you’ and that’s all I ever said to him. I was taken out of the game, and I told my teammates who were shocked and disappointed like me. I had to fly that night with my now ex-teammates to Cleveland for the opener with my new team, which was a little awkward.

‘To this day I don’t understand it, nor do the Cleveland fans who still send me letters about it. ”

After one year with Cleveland, Kuenn was traded to the San Francisco Giants. He finished his career with that franchise in 1966 with a .303 lifetime batting average, but that was far from matching the production of Rocco Domenico Colavito.

A fan favorite in Detroit

It didn’t take long for Detroit fans to appreciate the slugger, who was born in the Bronx in New York on Aug. 10, 1933 and would go on to become the biggest home run threat for the organization since Hank Greenberg two decades earlier.

Youngsters on sandlots throughout metro Detroit routinely imitated Colavito’s on-deck and batter’s box rituals.

The slugger would hold his bat with both hands over his head and pull it down behind his back. Stepping into the batter’s box, he pulled up his flannel sleeves to help free his shoulders, and often did the sign of the cross before slowly pointing his bat at the pitcher three times.

“My on-deck routine was simply a stretching exercise that helped release tension, and my pointing the bat was really a timing device where I was kind of saying ‘Put the pitch right there,’ because as a power hitter, you are looking for a ball to drive,” Colavito said in a 2010 interview. “I can’t tell you how many times people have come up to me and said that when they were kids they would imitate me.”

Although he sometimes displayed a fiery temper while arguing with umpires, and was ejected after angrily jumping into the Yankee Stadium stands behind the Tigers’ dugout in 1961 in response to a fan harassing his wife and father, Colavito is also remembered by his thoughtfulness towards admiring fans and teammates.   

When a ballgame was over, win or lose, Colavito was famous for signing autographs for fans.

“As a kid I would try to get autographs outside of Yankee Stadium and I remembered not only how bad I felt when a player wouldn’t sign for me, but also the time I didn’t want to wash my hair after Charlie Keller patted me on the head,” he said. “I would tell the kids to line up in a straight line, not to take cuts or push, say ‘please and thank you’ and then I would sign for all of them.” 

A well-traveled slugger

Colavito’s time in Detroit lasted just four seasons, as he was traded after the 1963 season.

To the shock of Tigers fans, Detroit sent Colavito, pitcher Bob Anderson and $50,000 to the Kansas City Athletics for infielder Jerry Lumpe and pitchers Dave Wickersham and Ed Rakow.

The Tigers claimed the trade was made because rookie Willie Horton was ready to take over in left field. Yet a major factor was that the 29-year-old and Jim Campbell, in his first year as Detroit’s general manager, had a bitter contract dispute that lasted into 1963’s spring training.

Following one year with the A’s, for whom he hit 34 homers with 102 RBIs, Colavito was traded to Cleveland, the city that had adopted him and the place he never wanted to leave.

In 1965, his first year back in Cleveland, Colavito led the Amercian League in games played (162), RBIs (108) and walks (93) and became the first outfielder in American League history to finish a season with a perfect 1.000 fielding percentage. Meanwhile, attendance at Municipal Stadium increased by nearly 300,000 fans.

“Our collective hearts ache at the passing of Rocky,” Cleveland VP Bob DiBiasio said in a release. “Rocky was a generational hero, one of the most popular players in franchise history. … We send our most sincere condolences to the entire Colavito family, as well as his many teammates and other organizations impacted by his passing.”

In July 1967, Colavito was traded to the Chicago White Sox before wrapping up his career in 1968 with the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees. He finished his MLB career with a .266 batting average, 374 home runs and 1,159 RBIs. In addition to nine All-Star nods — four with the Tigers (two apiece in 1961-62), one with the A’s and four with Cleveland — he had four top-10 finishes in AL MVP voting (including an eighth-place finish in ’61 with the Tigers) and a second-place finish in AL Rookie of the Year voting in 1956.

His time in the field

Colavito had a very strong arm and originally wanted to pitch and play outfield.

His last hurrah occurred on Aug. 25, 1968, when he took the mound in relief during the first game of a doubleheader against the Tigers at Yankee Stadium, nearly 10 years to the day when he pitched against Detroit in his only other mound appearance.

Colavito pitched 2⅓ innings of one-hit ball while becoming the last non-pitcher to earn a win on the mound until Colorado’s Brent Mayne matched the feat in 2000. Playing right field in the nightcap, Colavito slammed a home run off Mickey Lolich to help the Yankees sweep the weekend series. (For his MLB career, Colavito pitched 5⅔ innings, allowing no earned runs and one hit.)

At the time of his retirement, Colavito’s 371 AL homers placed him third on the AL’s all-time list among right-handed hitters, behind Jimmie Foxx and Harmon Killebrew. From 1956-66, he was one of the game’s most consistent power hitters, as he became the fifth player with an 11-year span featuring at least 20 homers in every season. During that run, he averaged 32 homers and 99 RBIs a year.

Following his playing career, Colavito served as a color analyst on Cleveland TV broadcasts, served as a coach with Cleveland and the Kansas City Royals, operated a mushroom farm and was a sales executive for a temporary staffing company. In retirement, he particularly enjoyed hunting at his 90-acre deer camp near his home.

Horton, a Detroit native who eventually replaced him in left field, fondly recalled his first encounter with Colavito.

“When I was in junior high, a buddy and me were stopped by security at Briggs Stadium after we tried to sneak into the ballpark,” Horton said. “Rocky had just walked off Cleveland’s bus and saw what happened. He took us over to the Tigers’ clubhouse manager, John Hand, and asked him if he would give us a job in the locker room and sure enough, we got it. From that day on, Rocky was my hero. I would imitate his batting stance in a mirror, pointing my bat like he did, trying to get his stroke. When I joined the Tigers, he took me under his wing and helped me become a major leaguer. He also told me that I would one day take over from him in left field. I will never forget what he did for me.”

Another teammate had a warm memory of Colavito on a cold night in Baltimore.

After right-hander Denny McLain was called up to the Tigers in September 1963, Colavito gave him his warmup jacket. As McLain remembered, Colavito said, “You need this more than me.”

Even though Horton and McLain were only teammates with Colavito for just one month in 1963, both traveled to Cleveland in 2021 and joined hundreds of fans to be with him on his 88th birthday when a statue of Colavito was unveiled in the city’s Little Italy neighborhood.

When asked in the 2010 interview how he would like to be remembered, Colavito’s voice cracked.

“People might think I would say it would be hitting 45 homers with 140 RBIs in one season, or some BS like that, but I hope people will say that, ‘Rocky was a hell of a nice guy and a good human being.’ ”

Colavito is survived by his wife of 70 years, Carmen, sons Rocky Jr. and Stephen, daughter Marisa, five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Funeral arrangements are pending.

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