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DALLAS — The St. Louis Cardinals have informed third baseman Nolan Arenado that they will do everything possible to trade him this winter, and have even granted permission to his agent to help facilitate a deal.

Arenado wants to be traded to a contender – with the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers his personal first choice – but is willing to waive his no-trade clause for “more teams than you would think,’ agent Joel Wolfe said.

“He would strongly consider it if it’s the right place to go,’ Wolfe said, “but he’s not going to go just anywhere. We hope something good happens, but he’s not going to approve and move his family and go play somewhere that would be (a lateral move).

“He’s in a good place with the Cardinals. He’s not going to go just to go.’

Wolfe has directly spoken to several teams who have shown varying interest in Arenado, including the Boston Red Sox, San Diego Padres, Philadelphia Phillies and Houston Astros. The Dodgers, however, plan to have Max Muncy remain their starting third baseman.

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Arenado, who lives in Southern California and also spends time in Phoenix in the offseason, twice passed on opt-out clause to remain with the Cardinals.

But now the Cardinals say they are going into a soft rebuild while cutting payroll.

His preference?

“A team that he thinks is going to win now and consistently for the remainder of his career,’ Wolfe said. “He wants a team that has the throttle down. I’m not saying the Cardinals don’t. That he believes he can jump right in and they’re going to win right now.

“The Cardinals are changing direction.’

Arenado, 33, still has three years remaining in his contract worth $74 million with the Colorado Rockies, his former team, responsible for $5 million.

Arenado, a 10-time Gold Glove winner, hit .271 with 16 homers and 71 RBI, his lowest totals since 2014 with a career-low .394 slugging percentage. He has spent time this winter in agility training, Wolfe said, along with martial arts.

“He’s always trying to get an edge,’ Wolfe said. “He wants to have an MVP-caliber season next year. He’s never content.

The Cardinals acquired Arenado from the Rockies before the 2021 season. He was a three-time All-Star, two-time Gold Glove winner and finished third in the NL MVP voting in 2022, but the Cardinals never won a postseason series with him.

Now, Arenado will be given the opportunity to win his first World Series before the end of his career.

“We both remain optimistic that both parties will remain happy somehow,’ Cardinals president John Mozeliak told St. Louis reporters. “He’s not demanding a trade or telling me that I have to do it, but in the best interests of both sides, I’d like to try and find him a place.’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

DALLAS — The hottest free agent in baseball was traveling Tuesday, getting ready to land in California, and start meeting next week with teams clamoring for his services.

He has never played a day in the major leagues and has only pitched in an MLB ballpark during the World Baseball Classic, but there’s not a GM or team who isn’t willing to spend every dollar they’re permitted to offer to order to sign him.

The name is Rōki Sasaki.

He’s the greatest 23-year-old pitcher on the planet, with a 100-mph fastball, devastating slider and split-fingered pitch. He was officially posted Tuesday, agent Joel Wolfe announced, providing teams a 45-day window to sign him.

Sasaki has teams drooling, going 29-15 with a 2.10 ERA in four years with the Chiba Lotte Marines, with 505 strikeouts in 394 ⅔ innings.

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He’ll also be quite the bargain since he’s under the age of 25 with less than six years’ experience. He must sign as an international amateur and can only receive money from a team’s international bonus pool, ranging from $5.1 million to $7.5 million.

No team is permitted to talk about a long-term contract or even promise a spot on the 40-man roster.

This is why money, Wolfe says, will be no factor.

“Given the gap in the bonus pool amounts is so negligible, my advice to him is don’t make a decision based on that,’ Wolfe said, “because the long-term arc of your career is where you’re going to earn your money.’

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Sasaki plans to meet with teams over the next two weeks before returning home to Japan, setting up in a central location during the first round of meetings.

“Teams have already begun sending presentations both in video and PowerPoint, PDF-form, that sort of thing,’ Wolfe said. “But we didn’t give teams a hard deadline to submit that information because we want them to be able to put the time in to do it right. Obviously, some teams were already working on these things, some of them for months I believe.”

The hope, Wolfe said, is for Sasaki to sign as close to the Jan. 15 international signing period as possible, providing time for him to get acclimated in his new city.

Sasaki has been heavily criticized in Japan for leaving NPB at a young age, two years before he’d be eligible for a massive payday like Yoshinobu Yamamoto received in his 12-year, $325 million deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers last winter.

“A lot of people jumped on board there creating some false rumors about him and his family,” Wolfe said. “It was very detrimental to his mental state.”

While the Dodgers are the favorites to sign Sasaki, joining fellow Japanese stars Shohei Ohtani and Yamamoto, Wolfe reiterated that the field is wide open.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was careful not to even mention Sasaki’s name in his press briefing on Monday, but San Diego Padres manager Mike Shildt was effusive in his praise for Sasaki, even predicting they would land him, joining his mentor Yu Darvish.

“We fully expect to be right there in the mix,’ Shildt said, “and at the end of the day, have Sasaki a Padre.’

There’s speculation that Sasaki, who’s soft spoken and reserved with a dry sense of humor, could prefer a quieter place like San Diego over Los Angeles, the country’s second-largest city.

“I think that there’s an argument to be made that a smaller, mid-market team might be more beneficial for him as a soft landing coming from Japan, given what he’s been through’’ Wolfe said, “and not having an enjoyable experience with the media. I’m not saying it will be, I don’t know how he’s going to view it, but it might be beneficial for him to be in a smaller market. I really don’t know how he looks at it yet because I haven’t had a chance to really sit down and discuss it with him in great detail.”

Wolfe denied, however, that the Southern California teams would have an advantage being the closest U.S. cities to Japan.

“I think about five or 10 years ago that was something that maybe they weighed a little bit more,’’ Wolfe said, “but now you can fly direct from Japan to most of the major cities in the U.S. It’s not really that much of an issue anymore.”

Sasaki has not met with any teams yet but is already doing his homework.

“He’s talked to a lot of players, foreign players, that have been on his team with Chiba Lotte,” Wolfe said. “He asked a lot of questions about weather, about comfortability, about pitching development. And just watching what other Japanese players in the major leagues are doing and how they are doing.”

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Donald Trump is making a deliberate effort to soften his tone.

Or is he?

I’ve given this a lot of thought, having interviewed Trump twice this year, including two weeks before the election. He was focused and substantive, trying to reach a more independent audience, and while he took some campaign-style shots, he was relatively restrained by Trumpian standards.

Now that he’s the de facto president, I saw a similar Trump on display in the ‘Meet the Press’ interview. Kristen Welker’s follow-ups must have annoyed him, because he told her she had asked ‘nasty’ questions.

During the campaign, such episodes were overshadowed by Trump’s rock-n-roll rallies, where he’d ramble on about the great Hannibal Lecter or Arnold Palmer’s genitalia. But his declaration on NBC that he also wants to represent those who didn’t vote for him is a long way from his 2017 ‘American carnage’ inaugural address.

And yet, the president-elect has also mastered the art of saying things that can be interpreted two ways, or sending not-so-coded messages.

The Washington Post editorial board, not a big fan, says Trump ‘tried to sound a conciliatory tone’ with Welker, backed by substance.

Trump declared he wouldn’t oust Fed chief Jerome Powell, and wants to work with Democrats to protect the Dreamers. Trump said he ‘would not restrict the national availability of abortion medication, and that the United States will ‘absolutely’ remain in NATO, as long as other member states spend what they have pledged on defense.’ 

And why shouldn’t he appear more reasonable? He’s got the job he believes was unfairly taken from him. He can’t run again. He knows his first term was savaged by the left-leaning media establishment. If he can have a more successful second term – after turning on some top aides in the last go-round – he could modify history’s verdict.

And that brings us to the question of retribution. He said on NBC that the best retribution is success, the same line he used with me. On ‘Meet the Press’ he even retracted a campaign declaration that he would name a special prosecutor to go after Joe Biden. 

When Welker asked whether he’d order the Justice Department, which he sees as having persecuted him, to investigate Biden and his administration, Trump gave a response that I doubt he would have offered in the first term.

No, he said, that would be up to his attorney general and FBI director, which will definitely be Pam Bondi and probably Kash Patel. Would he tell them to do it? Nope.

It’s called distancing.

Now one could argue that he was in effect suggesting they do it by announcing it on national television. But I’m sure they knew his views anyway. 

Trump’s one misstep on NBC was lashing out at members of the House Jan. 6 Committee. He said Liz Cheney ‘did something that’s inexcusable, along with [Bennie] Thompson and people on the Un-Select Committee of political thugs and, you know, creeps,’ Trump told moderator Kristen Welker, arguing without proof that they ‘deleted and destroyed’ testimony. ‘Honestly, they should go to jail.’

So that was a gift to his critics, enabling most journalists to lead with him wanting the lawmakers behind bars. By the way, their investigation and hearings are protected by the Speech and Debate clause, which gives the members immunity.

Trump senior adviser Jason Miller told CNN that his boss’ words had been taken ‘out of context,’ that he ‘wants everyone who he puts into key positions of leadership … to apply the law equally to everybody,’ mentioning Bondi and Patel.

In a similar vein, Trump has mainly avoided attacks on individual journalists, this after saying he would reach out to even hostile outlets. But he made an exception and mocked Maggie Haberman of the New York Times when she co-authored a couple of stories he didn’t like.

So will we be getting Trump 2.0, or Trump 1.0 with plenty of fancy packaging?

Veteran Trump watchers know that he can slip off the high road when he gets angry, that it’s not just about mass deportations, slashing inflation and drill, baby, drill. 

But I still believe we’re seeing a more disciplined, restrained and moderate Trump so far. He campaigned on shaking things up, so there are plenty of clashes to unfold. What’s fascinating is that he’s already essentially running the country while Biden has faded and, since the pardon fiasco, is refusing to talk to the press.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The pieces are coming together for the startup basketball league Unrivaled.

The 3×3 women’s hoops league announced Tuesday that it has signed a multiyear deal for Under Armour to become its official uniform partner and performance outfitter. This follows the league announcing a number of recent big player signings and reaching a media broadcast deal in October with TNT Sports.

Financial terms of the deal were not provided, but Under Armour will provide all players, coaches and staff with performance apparel and accessories both on and off the court.

“We couldn’t be more thrilled to partner with Unrivaled to outfit some of the best women’s basketball players in the world as they compete on this exciting new stage,” said Sean Eggert, Under Armour senior vice president of global sports marketing.

The retailer said that all players who do not have an active shoe deal will have Under Armour basketball footwear options available to them. Additionally, Under Armour will give players the opportunity to create custom products.

Unrivaled will kick off its inaugural season Jan. 17 in Miami. The league has positioned itself as a destination for WNBA stars to play basketball in the U.S. during the offseason.

In the past, many WNBA players have had to go overseas to play in the offseason as a way to supplement the income. Starting salary in the WNBA is $64,154 according to ESPN.

Unrivaled has signed 36 top players by offering attractive financial incentives that include equity. The league said it offers the highest average salaries in women’s professional sports league history. It’s being backed by a number of investors.

This latest deal comes as Baltimore-based Under Armour is in the midst of a turnaround effort after founder Kevin Plank took the helm again this past March. Former Marriott executive Stephanie Linnartz had been in the role for barely a year before she was ousted; she was the second CEO the company had cycled through in less than two years.

Over the past few years, the brand has struggled to keep up with competition and drive full-price sales, relying on promotions and the off-price channel to move its products.

Before she left, Linnartz had been trying to market more to women and improve the product offering, but when Plank retook the helm, he walked that strategy back and said the company would be doubling down on its men’s apparel business. He later announced a turnaround plan that centers on making Under Armour a premium brand and pulling back on discounting so it can improve profits and boost demand.

Last month, the company saw a bright spot when reporting fiscal second-quarter earnings. It lifted its annual profit forecast and Plank said the turnaround is “beginning to gain traction.” Still, the stock is down about 81% from its all-time high on Sept. 17, 2015.

Under Armour’s deal with Unrivaled offers a glimpse into where the company is putting its money and, perhaps, indicates it wants to focus more on female athlete as it looks to capitalize on the hype of women’s sports to reenergize the brand.

Under Armour currently has partnerships with top women’s college programs such as the University of South Carolina, Notre Dame, Maryland and Utah.

“As a brand, we have a long history of investing in women’s basketball, from the grassroots level all the way up to the pros,” Eggert said.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami will face Sporting Kansas City, while Los Angeles FC will meet the Colorado Rapids in the first round of the 2025 Concacaf Champions Cup tournament next February.

The Champions Cup draw was announced on Tuesday, with 10 MLS clubs in the 27-team field to decide which team is the best in North America, Central America and the Caribbean.

The tournament begins on Feb. 4 – well before the Feb. 22-23 start of the 2025 MLS season. The final will be played on June 1.

Five clubs, including two MLS teams, will enter the tournament in the round of 16. L.A. Galaxy, the MLS Cup champions, will face the winner between Real Salt Lake and CS Herediano (Costa Rica). The Columbus Crew, this year’s Leagues Cup winners, await the winner of LAFC-Colorado in the second round.

The Inter Miami-Kansas City winner would advance to face Cavalier FC (Jamaica), the 2024 Concacaf Caribbean Cup champions. Club América (MEX) and LD Alajuelense (CRC) also advanced to the Round of 16.

 The Seattle Sounders will face Antigua GFC (Guatemala); the Vancouver Whitecaps will meet Deportivo Saprissa (Costa Rica) and FC Cincinnati will meet FC Motagua (Honduras) in the other first-round matches involving MLS teams.

The tournament crowns the best club in North America, and will certainly help Inter Miami and Seattle prepare for the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup next summer.

MLS CUP: Ranking every Major League Soccer championship game

Concacaf Champions Cup first round matches

The first round will see two matchups between MLS teams:

Match 1: LAFC vs. Colorado Rapids
Match 2: Inter Miami vs. Sporting Kansas City
Match 3: Monterrey (MEX) vs. Forge FC (CAN)
Match 4: Vancouver Whitecaps FC (CAN) vs. Deportivo Saprissa (CRC)
Match 5: Pumas UNAM (MEX) vs. Calvary FC (CAN)
Match 6: Guadalajara (MEX) vs. Cibao FC
Match 7: Cruz Azul (MEX) vs. Real Hope FA (HAI)
Match 8: Seattle Sounders vs. Antigua GFC (GUA)
Match 9: Tigres UANL (MEX) vs. Real Esteli FC (NCA)
Match 10: FC Cincinnati vs. FC Motagua (HON)
Match 11: Real Salt Lake vs. CS Herediano (CRC)

Which teams are participating in the 2025 Concacaf Champions Cup?

Here are the 27 teams, and how they qualified:

Canadian Championship (one club): Vancouver Whitecaps FC (CAN) 
Canadian Premier League (two clubs): Cavalry FC (CAN) and Forge FC (CAN) 
Concacaf Caribbean Cup (three clubs): Cavalier FC (JAM), Cibao FC (DOM), Real Hope FA (HAI) 
Concacaf Central American Cup (six clubs): Antigua GFC (GUA), CS Herediano (CRC), Deportivo Saprissa (CRC), FC Motagua (HON), LD Alajuelense (CRC), Real Estelí FC (NCA) 
Leagues Cup (three clubs): Colorado Rapids (USA), Columbus Crew (USA), Los Angeles FC (USA) 
Liga MX (six clubs): CD Guadalajara (MEX), CF Monterrey (MEX), Club América (MEX), Cruz Azul (MEX), Pumas UNAM (MEX), Tigres UANL (MEX) 
MLS (five clubs): FC Cincinnati (USA), Inter Miami CF (USA), LA Galaxy (USA), Real Salt Lake (USA), Seattle Sounders FC (USA) 
US Open Cup (one club): Sporting Kansas City (USA) 

When will the Concacaf Champions Cup will be played?

Round One begins with games to be played over the following dates: Feb. 4-6, 11-13, 18-20 and 25-27.

The Round of 16 will be played on March 4-6, and March 11-13. The quarterfinals will be played on April 1-3 and April 8-10. The semifinals are April 22-24 and April 29-May 1.

The final is scheduled for June 1.

What is the Concacaf Champions Cup tournament format?

The first four rounds will have opponents each host a home match, with aggregate goal scoring. The final will be a single match to decide the champion.

Concacaf Champions Club winners

Mexican clubs have traditionally dominated the tournament, winning 18 of the last 19 Champions Cups. Club America (7), Cruz Azul (6), Pachuca (6) and Monterrey (5) have won the most titles in Champions Cup history.

Columbus Crew lost last year’s final to Pachuca, while LAFC lost the final in 2020 and 2023. Real Salt Lake (2011) and Toronto FC (2018) have also reached the final.

Messi and Inter Miami were eliminated in the quarterfinals by Monterrey last April.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

LAS VEGAS – The first 12-team College Football Playoff resulted in the first leak of a team chosen for the field.

“I was furious,” CFP director Rich Clark said Tuesday to USA TODAY Sports. “I told all involved, you’ve betrayed the process.”

Brett McMurphy of the Action Network posted on X (formerly known as Twitter) that SMU would be given the final at-large spot ahead of Alabama – 30 minutes before the Mustangs was revealed as the 11th seed in the playoff

The debate was the biggest decision by the 13-member selection committee, and created controversy before and after the selection. Never in the history of the College Football Playoff had a leak occurred, and Clark says there will be an investigation to determine how the information was leaked.

“There are only a certain number of people who know,” Clark said. “ I know one thing, it wasn’t me. There’s the selection committee, ESPN and our staff. Someone in that group (is the leak).”

But finding who released the information will be a difficult process. Clark said he heard about the leak from his son Milo, who sent him a text prior to the release of SMU has the last team in.

“He said, ‘Dad, what happened?’ I had no idea what he was talking about until I saw it,” Clark said.

WHO WINS IT ALL: Our College Football Playoff bracket projection

Clark was speaking Tuesday at the Sports Business Journal Intercollegiate athletics forum. On the big stage, he spoke about the process of how the committee reached its decision, including revealing that the committee will send ideas to the conference commissioner on how to make the playoff better. 

Those ideas, however, don’t include absolute transparency. In other words, the specific weekly votes, by committee member, shouldn’t be revealed. Clark also believes the playoff should have multiple rankings shows, not just one show to announce the rankings. 

“We have to have enough (playoff shows) for transparency,” Clark said. “If we go just the last week, there’s too much mystery to that. If we take it away and put one ranking out there, I think that’s a big mistake.’  

Matt Hayes is the senior. national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Scott Frost is returning to UCF, once again taking over the program he led to an undefeated season in 2017.

The quarterback of that team is joining him, too.

Former Knights star McKenzie Milton has officially been added to Frost’s staff as the team’s quarterbacks coach, the university announced on Monday.

“I’m beyond excited to be back in Orlando and part of the UCF family once again,’ Milton said in a statement. ‘UCF holds such a special place in my heart, and to return as quarterbacks coach is truly an honor. I couldn’t be more excited to work alongside Coach Frost, who has been such a pivotal figure in my career. I can’t wait to help develop the next generation of Knights and build on the incredible tradition of success we’ve established here at UCF.”

Milton arrives at UCF from Tennessee, where he spent the past two seasons as an offensive analyst for Volunteers coach Josh Heupel, who coached Milton during his final season at UCF in 2018 after Frost left for Nebraska.

Across three seasons at UCF, from 2016-18, Milton threw for 8,683 yards and 72 touchdowns. His 9,761 career yards of total offense are the third most by any player in program history while his 4,037 passing yards and 37 touchdowns remain program single-season records.

Milton was a two-time American Athletic Conference offensive player of the year who led the Knights to back-to-back New Year’s Six bowl appearances. He finished sixth in Heisman Trophy voting in 2018.

At UCF, he’ll reunite with Frost as they attempt to help the program improve from what has been a relatively rocky transition to the Big 12. In their two seasons in their new league, the Knights have gone an underwhelming 10-15 overall and 5-13 in conference play, including a 4-8 overall record during the 2024 season.

After four seasons as UCF’s head coach, Gus Malzahn resigned in late November to become the new offensive coordinator at Florida State. The vacancy he left behind was filled by Frost, who went 19-7 in two seasons before enduring an unsuccessful 47-game run at his alma mater, Nebraska, where he went 16-31 before being fired three games into the 2022 season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Less than three weeks after the NFL issued a warning about ‘organized and skilled’ criminals targeting athletes’ homes, another star quarterback’s home has been broken into.

Police were called to Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s home for a reported break-in during the Bengals’ ‘Monday Night Football’ game against the Dallas Cowboys.

The Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the break-in of Burrow’s home in Anderson Township, Ohio, during the Bengals’ 27-20 road win over Dallas. The sheriff’s office told The Enquirer that the break-in occurred shortly after 8 p.m. Monday night. No other details were released.

According to 911 calls obtained by WLWT, a caller stated someone broke into Burrow’s house and it was ‘completely messed up.’ Radio traffic from the night specifies that an officer at his house that night said there was a shattered window to a bedroom that was ransacked.

On Nov. 21, the NFL released a memo to all 32 teams that organized criminals are targeting professional athletes’ homes.

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

In the memo, the NFL specified that ‘law enforcement officials have noted these groups appear to exploit team schedules to target athletes’ homes on game days.’

Kansas City Chiefs players Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce also had their homes burglarized in early October during a ‘Monday Night Football’ game this season.

Belton, Mo. police were called to Mahomes’ residence after his security team called in an incident. According to police documents obtained by The Kansas City Star, the Cass County Sheriff’s Office characterized the incident as ‘Burglary/Breaking & Entering.’

Documents show that $20,000 was taken from Kelce’s home, and the back door was damaged.

League officials say in the memo that ‘burglary groups appear to be gathering information on potential victims through public records, media reports and social media.’

The NFL recommends players and teams wait until after team activities end to post updates on social media.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Tuesday at Major League Baseball’s annual Winter Meetings featured Max Fried agreeing to a $218 million deal with the New York Yankees, the biggest contract in history for a left-handed pitcher.

The Texas Rangers brought back postseason hero Nathan Eovaldi on a three-year, $75 million deal shortly after the Fried news broke, taking another top free agent pitcher off the board.

Elsewhere in Dallas, we learned the St. Louis Cardinals are working hard to deal 10-time Gold Glove third baseman Nolan Arenado, who would have to waive his non-trade clause. Japanese phenom Rōki Sasaki was officially posted, joining the market as an ace who won’t cost more than $7.5 million. The Toronto Blue Jays landed All-Star infielder Andrés Giménez in a trade with the Cleveland Guardians in an effort to boost the offense

‘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,’ Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Tuesday morning.

‘That’s the fun part about now.’

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

Nathan Eovaldi returning to Rangers

DALLAS — The Texas Rangers are 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.

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.

“Good starting pitching is expensive,” Rangers GM Chris Young told Dallas reporters Monday.

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.

– Bob Nightengale

Blue Jays get Andrés Giménez in trade with Guardians

The Toronto Blue Jays, spurned in attempts to add the top free agent in each of the past two winters, opted for the trade route Tuesday and acquired All-Star second baseman Andrés Giménez from the Cleveland Guardians, ESPN reported. 

Giménez, 26, was a key piece of the blockbuster deal that shipped Francisco Lindor to the New York Mets. He since signed a seven-year, $106.5 million contract extension in Cleveland – although that certainly did not ensure he’d remain a Guardian. 

Instead he’ll form a double-play combo for at least one season with Bo Bichette as the Blue Jays aim to contend in the last season Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. are under contract.

Reliever Nick Sandlin is also going to Toronto. In return, the Guardians will receive infielder Spencer Horwitz and outfield prospect Nick Mitchell, ESPN reported. 

Max Fried contract with Yankees for eight years, $218 million

Max Fried did not set out to be a Juan Soto consolation prize this winter. Yet the New York Yankees will pay him plenty of money to be just that.

Fried and the Yankees are in agreement on an eight-year, $218 million contract, a person familiar with the agreement confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal is not yet finalized.

Fried, 31, will slot near the top of the Yankees’ rotation, behind 2023 AL Cy Young Award winner Gerrit Cole and another lefty free agent, Carlos Rodon, who’s entering the third year of a six-year, $162 million deal.

Fried has been one of the most consistent starters in baseball over the past half-decade, but has missed time the past two seasons with forearm injuries. His 2.81 ERA since 2020 leads all starters with at least 600 innings pitched.

Nolan Arenado trade: Cardinals star is ‘not going to go just anywhere’

DALLAS — The St. Louis Cardinals have informed third baseman Nolan Arenado that they will do everything possible to trade him this winter, and have even granted permission to his agent to help facilitate a deal.

Arenado wants to be traded to a contender with the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers his first choice, but is willing to waive his no-trade clause for “more teams than you would think,’ agent Joel Wolfe said.

“He would strongly consider it if it’s the right place to go,’ Wolfe said, “but he’s not going to go just anywhere. We hope something good happens, but he’s not going to approve and move his family and go play somewhere that would be (a lateral move).

“He’s in a good place with the Cardinals. He’s not going to go just to go.’

– Bob Nightengale

Yankees rumors swirl after Juan Soto contract

DALLAS – In the Yankees’ executive suite, they’re coping with Life After Juan Soto.

“We’re going to be relentless in how we move forward,’’ said manager Aaron Boone. “On its face, (signing Soto was) the easiest way of addressing what we need this winter.

“But there’s also other ways of building a team and now we have that challenge in front of us.’’

Already, that challenge is more difficult. Two other key free agents tied to Yankees interest are off the board: Blake Snell and Willy Adames. Those players moved while the Yanks were still negotiating with agent Scott Boras for Soto, who signed a record deal with the Mets.

GM Brian Cashman and Yankees officials were on a Zoom with Snell on the same day the lefty starter agreed to a five-year, $182 million deal with the Dodgers.

A few hours after the Snell call, Boras phoned Cashman to say things “are advancing rather quickly, are you going to make an offer?’’ Cashman replied: “I can’t make an offer until I know what’s going on with Soto first,’ because he “couldn’t do both at that level.’’

– Pete Caldera, NorthJersey.com

Ryne Sandberg announces prostate cancer relapse

Baseball Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg has revealed that his prostate cancer has returned, which will require more ‘intensive treatment.’

The legendary Chicago Cubs second baseman first made public in January that he had been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer. However, he announced in May that he was cancer-free after undergoing chemotherapy and radiation treatment

That made Tuesday’s post on Instagram that the cancer had returned all the more devastating to baseball fans around the world.

‘Unfortunately, we recently learned the cancer has relapsed and it has spread to other organs,’ Sandberg wrote. ‘This means that I’m back to more intensive treatment.’

– Steve Gardner

Reds looking for offensive help

DALLAS — Even the manager who watched his team sign Shohei Ohtani for $700 million a year ago did a double take at Juan Soto’s $765 million deal with the New York Mets this week.

“I didn’t see that happening, period,” Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “I was very surprised.”

Imagine the reverberation levels of the shock down baseball’s economic food chain.

“I was shocked when I saw the bonus. My goodness,” Cincinnati Reds manager Terry Francona said.

The Reds aren’t swimming in any of those deep waters for players after settling much of their pitching questions with the return of Nick Martinez ($21.05 million qualifying offer) and the trade for Brady Singer for Jonathan India. But with Soto gone, and the other big spenders picking up the pace on the next tier of hitters, the market for the hitter the Reds seek might crystallize quickly after that.

“People are starting to see things picking up over the last day,” Reds president Nick Krall said, “but nothing fruitful yet.”

– Gordon Wittenmyer, Cincinnati Enquirer

Blake Treinen re-signs with Dodgers

Blake Treinen is officially returning to the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

The right-handed reliever and the Dodgers agreed to a two-year deal worth $22 million. Treinen, 36, went 7-3 with a 1.93 ERA in 50 games last season and starred in the postseason, appearing in nine games, allowing just three runs in 12.1 innings.

Veteran Washington Post writer elected to Hall of Fame

Thomas Boswell, longtime baseball reporter and columnist at the Washington Post, has been voted the 2025 winner of the BBWAA Career Excellence Award, which is presented annually to a sportswriter “for meritorious contributions to baseball writing.” He will be inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame the weekend of July 25-28 in Cooperstown, New York.

Twins willing to listen to trade calls on Carlos Correa

With Minnesota coming off a disappointing season, followed by an announcement from the Pohlad family that they will be exploring a sale of the franchise, the Twins are willing to listen to any ideas to ease the payroll. And one of the names that has been swirling is All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa.

‘We get calls on a lot of our players,” president of baseball operations Derek Falvey said Monday. “Some, we have to listen; we have to hear the conversation. Some go absolutely nowhere, but they’re the guys that you would expect teams to call on. So in light of the team sale situation, some of the dynamics around our roster otherwise, I think there’s enough teams kind of checking in.

“And what we tell every team is: Listen, we’re open to being creative. We can’t rule anything out before we hear it, no matter who the player is, and so we’ll just be respectful of their process and what they’re going through and try to kick some creative ideas around. It’s what led us to a Pablo (López) trade, or something like that, at different junctures. So we have to stay open-minded to those things.”

Yet, while the Twins may be listening to offers, trading Correa would be very difficult. He has four guaranteed years left on his contract and is owed more than $130 million, plus four club options.

Cardinals intend to trade Nolan Arenado

Cardinals president of baseball operations John Mozeliak said he is looking to ‘reset’ the club after a disappointing 2024 season − and that could include trading 10-time Gold Glove winner Nolan Arenado.

“It’s my intention to try,” Mozeliak said Monday.

“We both remain optimistic that both parties will remain happy somehow. (Arenado remaining with the Cardinals) is a possibility, but I’m not sure that puts us where we want to be. From a financial standpoint of trying to move our payroll – there are certainly other ways to do that, but [trading Arenado] would be a big help. It’s financial, but it also creates a runway for someone else.”

The 33-year-old is coming off the worst season of his career, hitting just 16 homers with 71 RBI and a .719 OPS in 152 games. Arenado is due $74 million over the next three seasons – with the Rockies covering $10 million of that as part of the 2021 deal that sent him to St. Louis.

Top MLB free agents remaining

Juan Soto and Blake Snell, the top two players in USA TODAY Sports’ 2024-25 free agent rankings, are now off the board but there’s elite talent remaining on the market expected to fetch big deals.

Here are the top 10 players still on the market:

SP Corbin Burnes
3B Alex Bregman
1B Pete Alonso
SP Max Fried
OF Teoscar Hernández
OF Anthony Santander
INF Gleyber Torres
SP Nathan Eovaldi
SP Jack Flaherty
RP Tanner Scott

Soto contract is history repeating itself 24 years after A-Rod deal

DALLAS — This is the exact spot where it happened, turning the baseball world upside down, leaving executives fuming, and publicly threatening that it would forever ruin the sport.

The date: Dec. 11, 2000. The time: 1:30 a.m. The location: Room 633, Anatole Hotel, Dallas, Texas.

It was the moment the Texas Rangers agreed to a 10-year, $252 million contract with shortstop Alex Rodriguez.’How can I forget?’ said former Rangers GM Doug Melvin. ‘How can anyone forget?’

Now, 24 years later, at this same hotel, history repeated itself. This time, it’s Juan Soto signing a record 15-year, $765 million contract with the New York Mets.

And once again, particularly from the small- and mid-sized markets, you could hear screaming into the Texas night, and cries that the sport is broken – worrying about a work stoppage in 2026.

Scott Boras, the man who negotiated A-Rod’s contract and now Soto’s, can only laugh and will tell you it’s a shrewd business deal that will only enhance the franchise’s value.

‘I think the process was very misunderstood,’ Boras told USA TODAY Sports of the Rodriguez pursuit. ‘When you look at the surplus value, even though the Rangers didn’t win, it was economically beneficial to the franchise. It was definitely team-friendly.’

– Bob Nightengale

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Baseball Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg has revealed that his prostate cancer has returned, which will require more ‘intensive treatment.’

The legendary Chicago Cubs second baseman first made public in January that he had been diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer. However, he announced in May that he was cancer-free after undergoing chemotherapy and radiation treatment

That made Tuesday’s post on Instagram that the cancer had returned all the more devastating to baseball fans around the world.

‘Unfortunately, we recently learned the cancer has relapsed and it has spread to other organs,’ Sandberg wrote. ‘This means that I’m back to more intensive treatment.’

Sandberg, 65, played 15 of his 16 major league seasons with the Chicago Cubs, retiring after the 1997 season. At the time, he held the record for the most home runs in baseball history by a second baseman.

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He won the National League MVP award in 1984, when he hit .314 with 19 home runs and 32 stolen bases in leading the Cubs to the NL East division title. We went on to make 10 consecutive All-Star appearances while winning nine Gold Glove awards and seven Silver Sluggers.

Sandberg was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2005 and was honored by the Cubs last year with a statue outside Wrigley Field.

‘We will continue to be positive, strong, and fight to beat this,’ Sandberg wrote on Instagram. ‘Thank you for your thoughts and prayers for me and my family.’

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