They traded Gold Glove second baseman Andrés Giménez to the Blue Jays at the winter meetings to get out from under the almost $100 million they owed him. They continued the pattern on Friday by sending another Gold Glove defender, Myles Straw, to Toronto for a player to be named.
Toronto acquired $2 million in international signing bonus pool allocation from the Cleveland Guardians that could be used in its pursuit of Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki as part of a trade that also brought underperforming outfielder Myles Straw to the Blue Jays.
The Toronto Blue Jays have made some moves this offseason, but one move in particular could come back to bite them.
TORONTO -- The Blue Jays acquired $2 million in international signing bonus pool allocation from the Cleveland Guardians that could have been used in their ultimately fruitless pursuit of Japanese ...
Myles Straw is the latest Cleveland Guardians star departing Ohio, as the outfielder was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday.
Check out our Events section for more upcoming events in Toronto. Have an event you’d like to plug? Adding an event to our listings is free and only takes seconds. Whether you’re organizing ...
TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays acquired international bonus pool room from the Cleveland Guardians on Friday. According to two industry sources, they’re adding $2 million in space — pushing ...
TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays acquired unperforming outfielder Myles Straw and $2 million in international signing bonus pool allocation from the Cleveland Guardians in a trade on Friday.
According to MLB Insider Bob Nightengale of USA Today, it feels 'inevitable' that slugging first baseman Pete Alonso will return to the New York Mets. He posted
Max Scherzer heading north of the border rounds out a deep Blue Jays starting rotation that also features Kevin Gausman, José Berríos and Chris Bassitt.
How does MLB make 2.4 million baseballs a season—and why are they causing so much controversy? From juiced balls to strange changes in performance, this video explores MLB's long history of baseball manipulation.
On Friday’s podcast, Paul Hoynes and Joe Noga look at what Avila brought to the bullpen, and who might step in to pick up his innings. They also discuss the NBA’s idea to shorten quarters to 10 minutes, and how baseball’s pace-of-play initiatives might have had something to do with it.