The Toronto Blue Jays appear to be in on Rōki Sasaki. According to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal, the Blue Jays met with the Japanese ace in Toronto recently.
Two FOX Sports writers identify the best landing spots for 10 of the most intriguing free agents still on the board.
Hot Stove season stretches on, and with each passing day, we're closer and closer to learning where one of the biggest free agents in recent baseball history will sign: Japanese ace Roki Sasaki is currently mulling his options, and it seems like he'll be making a decision at some point near the end of his 45-day posting window on Jan. 23.
Cubs fanbase growing restless as owner Tom Ricketts insists they don't have the money to spend like the Dodgers and Mets.
The Toronto Blue Jays are finalists for a top free agent. According to ESPN’s Jeff Passan, the Blue Jays, along with the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres, are finalists to sign Japanese pitcher Rōki Sasaki.
A Los Angeles Dodger-turned-free agent pulled off a strong bounce-back season in 2024, and now he might be joining the San Francisco Giants.
We’ve known for a very long time that the San Francisco Giants were highly unlikely to sign Rōki Sasaki, but we all held on to a very tiny glimmer of hope. Now that hope has shifted. We are no longer hoping that Sasaki will sign with the Giants,
D-backs RHP Corbin Burnes has had to evolve throughout his career, and he explained the recent dip in strikeouts as an approach change.
Fairly or not, there’s power in narrative, so when Roki Sasaki did what the industry expected and chose the Dodgers, well, it certainly reinforced the one about the Blue Jays being perennial runners-up.
Buster Posey and Randy Winn have both alluded to wanting players to stay at a level for a full year, which is certainly a massive shit from what we saw in the final years of Farhan Zaidi’s tenure. But will that actually be the case?
After missing out on Roki Sasaki, the Blue Jays “remain involved in” the starting pitching market, Sportsnet’s Ben Nicholson-Smith writes. While Toronto has been more primarily linked to hitters this winter,