The New York Mets could emerge as the best fit for superstar Pete Alonso despite some reports indicating otherwise.
After slugger Pete Alonso reportedly rejected a contract offer from the New York Mets that was a three-year deal in the $68 million to $70 million range (accord
Where Pete Alonso will land this upcoming season is one of the biggest questions surrounding MLB’s offseason. Several reports have
By now one would hope Pete Alonso has finally gotten the memo: The Mets never wanted him back. That’s why they never budged off their three-year offer in the $70 million range to him when he and his agent Scott Boras continued to push,
During an appearance on the “The Chris Rose Rotation” podcast Monday, the Richmond native purported that Billy Beane’s prized stat undervalues his breed — first basemen — and that the Mets front office should look past Pete Alonso’s career 3.8 average and at everything else he brings to the table.
Despite David Stearns and Mets owner Steve Cohen's words of praise toward Pete Alonso, the destination of the first baseman remains open-ended.
The Mets, according to sources, are of the belief Alonso will sign elsewhere. The Post’s Joel Sherman reported on Thursday that Alonso declined a three-year offer from the team that would have paid in the $68 to $70 million range.
The New York Mets are linked to free agent slugger Jurickson Profar to replace Pete Alonso, according to Robert Murray.
The Toronto Blue Jays have taken a lot of heat over the course of this offseason for failing to make a big move. Toronto missed out on big targets such as Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott. Despite striking out on most of the top pitchers this offseason, the Blue Jays turned their attention to the other side and made a big splash.
The Mets proposed a decent contract offer of (3 years $68-70 million) with an opt out. As of now it’s Alonso not with the Mets, and no team has reportedly made an offer, though hearing Blue Jays and Giants are teams in pursuit. The cross-town Yankees have done their heavy off-season lifting so Alonso is not in the plans.
The Mets are treading dangerous waters by allowing Pete Alonso to walk into free agency. This isn't just about dollars and cents; it’s about losing a