Vladimir Guerrero Jr., the Toronto Blue Jays' 25-year-old four-time All-Star, is approaching the last of his required seasons under control of the team that originally signed him. After the 2025 ...
"Guerrero said last month that he’d turned down a Blue Jays offer of around $340 million, and although that’s a big number, it’s not even close to what he’d get in free agency," wrote Bowden.
However, Guerrero Jr. is only under contract for the 2025 season before becoming a free agent in 2026. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - APRIL 06: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. #27 of the Toronto Blue Jays hits a ...
Even though the Sox haven’t made many moves in free agency, they should take a step forward based on pitching alone.
First baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays are discussing a contract extension. Could they drop Shohei Ohtani money on the slugger?
The Toronto Blue Jays lineup is going to look much different in 2025. With the signing of Anthony Santander, the Blue Jays have added some thump to their lineup.
Sports fans can always ask the “what if?” in a variety of situations. If only a ball bounced a different way. Maybe history changes if a strike three wasn’t cal
Another team has entered the group chat sweepstakes. Free agent first baseman Pete Alonso and his camp met with the Los Angeles Angels on Thursday, as multiple
Alonso has clubs 226 home runs over the past six seasons, which puts him second only to Aaron Judge for that span.
3:05pm: The Blue Jays have been known for a while to have interest in free agent first baseman Pete Alonso. Andy Martino of SNY reports today that talks between the two sides are “advancing,” though he cautions that nothing is done yet and it can’t be certain that a deal will be completed.
The Toronto Blue Jays face a potential future without the face of their franchise. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., a four-time All-Star,
The Toronto Blue Jays catching situation is in a unique spot. When the team traded Danny Jansen at the 2024 trade deadline, they put their full confidence in Alejandro Kirk to play more games behind the plate – leaving behind the tandem that Jays fans have been used to seeing at the big league level.