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MLB free agency: Braves sign Jurickson Profar to 3-year, $42 million deal; Dodgers make Roki Sasaki signing official

Stay up to date with the latest from the baseball hot stove

MLB free agency is cruising right along, with many of the big names off the board. But some impact players are still available, and the trade market has been active.

Here's a quick look at where things stand so far this offseason:

After a relatively quiet offseason, the Braves are adding 2024 All-Star Jurickson Profar on a three-year, $42 million contract. Profar spent the previous season and a half with the San Diego Padres, hitting .280/.380/459 in 2024 and earning a Silver Slugger award. He will make $12 million in 2025 and $15 million in each of the following two seasons.

Since winning the World Series in 2021, the Braves have struggled to get back to the top of the sport. They've made the playoffs in the past three seasons but haven't made it past the Division Series.

After missing out on Roki Sasaki, the Toronto Blue Jays are reportedly in agreement with Anthony Santander on a five-year, $92.5 million deal, per multiple reports. Santander, 30, had a career season in 2024, smashing 44 home runs for the Baltimore Orioles while batting .235 with an .814 OPS.

He was ranked No. 11 on Yahoo Sports' list of the Top 50 MLB free agents going into the offseason.

As a left-handed batter, Santander, a switch-hitter, hit .225 with a .793 OPS and 12 homers in 2024. But he did most of his damage as a power hitter batting right-handed, slugging 32 home runs with a .225 average and .822 OPS.

Roki Sasaki, the No. 2 player on Yahoo Sports' Top 50 free-agent rankings, is headed to Los Angeles. He announced his decision on his Instagram. His signing bonus is reportedly $6.5 million, per The Athletic.

Sasaki's other finalists were the Toronto Blue Jays, San Diego Padres, New York Yankees, San Francisco Giants, New York Mets, Chicago Cubs and Texas Rangers. According to The Athletic, the Blue Jays hosted Sasaki for a visit in January, and then the Dodgers hosted him for another visit that included star players. Apparently, the latter meeting was more successful.

The international signing period opened Jan. 15, and Sasaki had until Jan. 23 to make his decision.

Tanner Scott, the top reliever on the MLB free-agent market, got paid like it.

The former San Diego Padres southpaw has agreed to a four-year, $72 million deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers, according to multiple reports. Scott joins an increasingly deep Dodgers bullpen and gets paid well to do it.

Scott, who was traded from the Marlins to the Padres at last summer's deadline, posted a 2.73 ERA with 31 strikeouts in 26 1/3 innings with San Diego in the second half.

The deal is among the largest ever given to a reliever, with Edwin Díaz's five-year, $102 million contract with the New York Mets still representing the high-water mark.

Yahoo Sports ranked the 30-year-old Scott as the No. 22 free agent on the market this offseason and the highest among the available relievers.

Required reading:

Follow along with Yahoo Sports as we track all the rumors, signings and more during MLB free agency:

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  • Astros renew talks with 3B Alex Bregman: Report

    Alex Bregman's career with the Astros appeared to be over after Houston signed free-agent first baseman Christian Walker. However, with Bregman's market apparently stalled, the Astros have resumed talks with the third baseman, who's played all nine of his MLB seasons with Houston, reports The Athletic.

    Bregman has reportedly attracted interest from the Red Sox, Blue Jays, and Tigers. But his rumored pursuit of a contract in the five-year, $200 million range has apparently been an obstacle, as it was with the Astros.

    Houston made a six-year, $156 million offer to Bregman and that deal is still available, according to reports.

    Bregman batted .260 with an .768 OPS, 26 home runs, 30 doubles and 75 RBI in 634 plate appearances last season for the Astros.

  • What to make of Profar's deal with Atlanta?

    Traditionally one of the more active teams each winter, Atlanta had been eerily quiet this offseason coming off its seventh consecutive trip to October. The Braves were one of just a handful of teams that had yet to sign a free agent to a guaranteed big-league deal this winter, but they finally got on the board with the addition of Profar on a three-year deal worth $42 million.

    The Padres — with whom Profar starred in his breakout 2024 season — have also yet to sign a major-league free agent this winter, and they surely would’ve loved a reunion with Profar. But San Diego’s ongoing ownership dispute and bloated payroll apparently made retaining Profar difficult. Instead, he joins a Braves team that had an unsettled left-field depth chart that projected to feature the largely unproven Jarred Kelenic and recent signee Bryan De La Cruz in a platoon of sorts. Now that duo can cover right field until Ronald Acuña Jr. returns from ACL injury, at which point Acuña should join Profar and center fielder Michael Harris II to form one of the more dangerous outfield trios in the National League.

    The switch-hitting Profar and his excellent on-base skills will provide some much-needed balance to a Braves lineup that severely underwhelmed in 2024. While Profar’s plate discipline has always been stellar, it was a notable uptick in power production supported by huge strides in his batted-ball quality that fueled his 2024 breakout that he has now parlayed into an eight-figure deal. Although he’ll no longer be a main character in the Dodgers-Padres rivalry, Profar could continue to play a key role for a team hoping to dethrone the champs in 2025.

  • Jurickson Profar signs with Braves

    Outfielder Jurickson Profar has signed a three-year, $42 million deal with the Atlanta Braves, the team announced Thursday.

    According to the Braves, Profar, who was No. 15 on Yahoo Sports' Top 50 MLB free agent list, will earn $12 million in 2025 and $15 million in 2026 and 2027.

    Last season with the San Diego Padres, Profar posted a career year, batting .280, hitting 24 home runs and driving in 85 runs with 10 stolen bases. Among National League left fielders, his 4.3 fWAR was highest, and he was above the 90th percentile in expected wOBA (.364) and expected batting average (.283). He was also the sixth-best hitter by wRC+ in the NL.

  • Anthony Santander's deal with Blue Jays includes $61.75M in deferred money, opt-out

  • Tanner Scott is officially a Dodger

    Read about his signing here.

  • Roki Sasaki says Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto didn't influence decision to join Dodgers

    The Los Angeles Dodgers celebrated their latest talent coup on Wednesday at Dodger Stadium, officially introducing Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki as a member of the team.

    After statements from Dodgers CEO Stan Kasten and president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman, Sasaki introduced himself through an interpreter before facing questions from media for the first time as a Dodger.

    The primary question concerned the influence of fellow Japanese Dodgers stars Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto on his decision.

    Read the full story here.

  • Guardians sign reliever Paul Sewald to 1-year deal

    The Cleveland Guardians are adding reliever Paul Sewald on a one-year, $7 million deal, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan. The contract includes a mutual option for 2026.

    Sewald spent the past season and a half with the Arizona Diamondbacks after a 2023 deadline trade from the Seattle Mariners. In 2024, he pitched 39 2/3 innings and posted a 4.31 ERA with 43 strikeouts.

  • Tim Anderson signing minor-league deal with Angels: Report

  • Dodgers make it official with Sasaki

    The Dodgers will formally introduce Roki Sasaki at 3 p.m. PT Wednesday.

  • Why Roki Sasaki signing with the Dodgers isn't surprising

  • Welcome to Toronto, Anthony Santander

  • The Blue Jays did what they needed to do

    The Toronto Blue Jays had to do something.

    After futile runs at multiple top free agents — Juan Soto, Corbin Burnes and Roki Sasaki all spurned Canada’s team this winter — the Jays found themselves in a position of desperation. Their roster, though capable of competing in 2025, remained incomplete and undermanned, particularly on offense. And with two of the club’s franchise cornerstones, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Bo Bichette, just a year from free agency, the future was growing increasingly hazy. The pressure, for this franchise without a postseason win since 2016, had reached a fever pitch.

    But on Monday, the Jays gave themselves some breathing room and a much-needed injection of power, with the club reportedly agreeing to terms with slugging outfielder Anthony Santander on a five-year contract. It’s an inevitable, obvious pairing between a team sorely lacking in pop and a free agent with immense juice.

    Read the full column here.

  • Dodgers close to adding another reliever

    After signing Tanner Scott, the reigning World Series champs are looking to add Kirby Yates to their bullpen.

  • Blue Jays adding Anthony Santander: Report

    Finally, some good news for Blue Jays fans. MLB Network's Jon Morosi reports that Anthony Santander is headed to Toronto, pending a physical. The deal is for five years and $92.5 million, per multiple reports.

    Santander spent his entire eight-year career in Baltimore and was a first-time All-Star in 2024 , slashing .308/.506/.814.

    Read more here.

  • Dodgers add this winter's top reliever, too

    Tanner Scott, the top reliever on the MLB free-agent market, got paid like it.

    The former San Diego Padres southpaw has agreed to a four-year, $72 million deal with the Los Angeles Dodgers, according to multiple reports. Scott joins an increasingly deep Dodgers bullpen and gets paid well to do it.

    Scott, who was traded from the Marlins to the Padres at last summer's deadline, posted a 2.73 ERA with 31 strikeouts in 26 1/3 innings with San Diego in the second half.

    The deal is among the largest ever given to a reliever, with Edwin Díaz's five-year, $102 million contract with the New York Mets still representing the high-water mark.

    Yahoo Sports ranked the 30-year-old Scott as the No. 22 free agent on the market this offseason and the highest among the available relievers.

    Read more here.

  • What's next for the Blue Jays and Padres after missing out on Roki Sasaki?

    Hope is a dangerous beast.

    Or, in other words: Roki Sasaki is a Los Angeles Dodger, and few in the baseball industry are particularly surprised.

    The 23-year-old Japanese hurler, one of the most promising talents in the nation’s storied baseball history, announced Friday on Instagram that he agreed to a deal with the defending World Series champs. For Dodgers fans, it’s cause for celebration. For the rest of the league, it’s a disappointing conclusion to a fascinating free agency and another reason to gripe and groan about the growing might of MLB’s new evil empire.

    Frustration, from the fan bases and front offices that missed out, is justifiable and understandable. So, too, is the decision Sasaki made for himself.

    Read the full story here.

  • What does the Dodgers' rotation look like with the addition of Roki Sasaki?

    It was just 15 months ago that the Los Angeles Dodgers crashed out of the NLDS at the hands of the Arizona Diamondbacks. Swept by a division rival that had won 16 fewer games than the Dodgers in the regular season, it was another maddening early exit from October for a franchise that had become all too familiar with such a feeling. Despite repeatedly assembling rosters seemingly fit for a championship run, Los Angeles kept coming up short.

    Although the calendar would suggest otherwise, that abrupt, embarrassing elimination against Arizona now feels like a distant memory. Since that NLDS loss, which president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman deemed “an organizational failure,” the Dodgers have achieved an extraordinary amount of organizational success. Their latest triumph: the signing of 23-year-old Japanese right-hander Roki Sasaki, a generationally gifted pitcher whose unique free agency became one of the biggest hot stove storylines MLB has seen in quite some time.

    Many organizations coveted Sasaki, whose status as an international amateur made him available for a fraction of what he would’ve been worth had he waited until he turned 25 and come to MLB as a full-fledged free agent. This was not a player for whom the Dodgers could simply flex their financial muscles and outbid the competition; this was a matter of recruiting and selling a vision of a place where a young pitcher can maximize his big-league dreams. Ultimately — thanks in large part to the past year, in which the franchise supercharged its roster to new heights, won the World Series and cemented its reputation as a developmental powerhouse — the Dodgers offer a compelling pitch by those standards as well. And so, sure enough, Sasaki chose Los Angeles as the home for the first chapter of his highly anticipated major-league career.

    Read the full story here.

  • Roki Sasaki gives Dodgers monster Japanese trio in rotation

    Roki Sasaki was expected by many to sign with the Los Angeles Dodgers. They were right.

    The flame-throwing right-hander from Japan agreed to a deal with the Dodgers on Friday, according to a post on his Instagram account.

    The Dodgers beat out basically all of MLB for Sasaki, who met with several teams to evaluate what they could bring to the table beyond money. The Dodgers, San Diego Padres and Toronto Blue Jays were reported to be the finalists, with the Dodgers and Padres seen as the co-favorites for most of the process.

    After receiving the signing bonus, Sasaki will have the same status as any other MLB rookie once he makes his debut, going through pre-arbitration and arbitration years before he hits free agency after six years of MLB service time.

    Meanwhile, Sasaki's NPB team, the Chiba Lotte Marines, will receive a posting fee worth 20% of the signing bonus. In four seasons with the Marines, Sasaki posted a 2.02 ERA and 0.883 WHIP with 524 strikeouts in 414 2/3 innings.

    Read more here.

  • A's continue to spend, sign RP José Leclerc

    The 31-year-old Leclerc has pitched eight seasons in MLB, all with the Texas Rangers. In 2024, he made 64 appearances, striking out 89 batters and recording a 4.32 ERA and 1.32 WHIP in 66 2/3 innings pitched.

  • Mets agree to 2-year, $22 million contract with lefty reliever A.J. Minter

    The New York Mets keep growing their bullpen, adding left-handed reliever A.J. Minter on Friday, per multiple reports. Minter and the Mets agreed on a two-year, $22 million deal that includes an opt-out in the first season.

    Minter, who spent the first eight seasons of his MLB career with the Atlanta Braves, threw 35 strikeouts in 34 1/3 innings for the Braves last season, recording a 2.62 ERA and 1.02 WHIP.

  • Red Sox, Jarren Duran agree on 1-year, $3.85M deal

  • Jack Flaherty is waiting on Roki Sasaki just like the rest of us ...

  • Blue Jays trade for outfielder Myles Straw

    Per Sportsnet's Ben Nicholson-Smith, Toronto also received $2 million in international bonus signing pool space in the trade, indicating they could still be in on Roki Sasaki.

  • Sasaki sweepstakes down to Dodgers, Blue Jays?

    The Padres are reportedly beginning to focus on other international free agents, indicating that they could be out on prized Japanese pitcher Roki Sasaki.

  • Cubs, Kyle Tucker avoid arbitration, agree on $16.5 million deal

  • Mets re-sign outfielder Jesse Winker to one-year deal reportedly worth up to $9 million

    The New York Mets are bringing back Jesse Winker for another year, signing the 31-year-old outfielder to a one-year deal that is reportedly worth up to $9 million. Winker joined the team in July 2024 via trade from the Washington Nationals and was a key part of the team's postseason run.

    The move also hints at the Mets' tactics on first baseman Pete Alonso, who is one of the top free agents this offseason. With talks to bring back Alonso stalled, and with the first baseman reportedly receiving significant interest from other teams, re-signing Winker might be a signal that the Mets are not expecting Alonso to return and are starting to look at other options.

  • Yankees make a trade

  • Roki Sasaki's decision imminent as international signing period opens

    One of the most highly anticipated and unique free agencies in Major League Baseball history is nearing its conclusion in the next week or so. Roki Sasaki, a 23-year-old, right-handed pitcher whose generational talent has been revered in his native Japan since he was a teenager, will soon decide where he will begin his big-league career.

    A process that began in earnest when his NPB team, the Chiba Lotte Marines, posted him on Dec. 10 has gradually unfolded over the past month, with the entire baseball industry eagerly awaiting his decision and the potential fallout. With his window to sign officially opening Wednesday and extending through Jan. 23, Sasaki has reportedly narrowed the field to three finalists: the Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres and Toronto Blue Jays.

    If you haven’t been tracking each and every plot point of Sasaki’s free agency along the way, don’t fret — it’s not too late to get caught up and prepare for his entrance into the MLB universe as one of the most intriguing characters of the upcoming season.

    Here’s everything you need to know about how we got to this point and how things might transpire from here.

  • Sasaki meeting with Dodgers again

    The Roki Sasaki sweepstakes are down to just three teams: the Dodgers, Padres and Blue Jays. According to The Athletic, the Dodgers are getting one more meeting with Sasaki on Tuesday, which will reportedly involve "several of their star" players.

    The international signing period opens on Wednesday, at which point Sasaki will have eight days to sign with a team.

  • No Sasaki for Cubs

  • Sasaki sweepstakes down to three teams

    The Roki Sasaki sweepstakes is down to just three teams. The Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres and Toronto Blue Jays are the three finalists to land the Japanese star once the international signing period opens on Wednesday. According to ESPN's Jeff Passan, we should have his decision shortly.

  • Mariners sign Donovan Solano to 1-year deal

  • Mets, Rangers also out on Sasaki

    With the international signing period opening Wednesday, Roki Sasaki is narrowing down his options. His camp has reportedly informed the Mets and Rangers that he will not be signing with them.

  • Yankees also not getting Roki Sasaki

  • Giants out on Roki Sasaki

  • Roki Sasaki meets with Toronto Blue Jays: Report

    According to a report from The Athletic, the Blue Jays hosted prized free agent Roki Sasaki for a meeting in Toronto ahead of his impending signing deadline.

    The international signing period opens Wednesday, at which point Sasaki is free to sign with an MLB team. He has until Jan. 23 to make his decision. The Dodgers, Rangers, Cubs, Mets, Padres and Mariners are also believed to be in the running for Sasaki's services.

  • Reliever Jorge López joins Nationals

    López had an eventful 2024 season, as he was DFA'd by the New York Mets after he was ejected from a game and threw his glove into the crowd.

    He moved on to the Chicago Cubs and had a solid finish to the 2024 season, recording a 2.03 ERA and 1.09 WHIP in 26 2/3 innings pitched with the Cubs.

  • Jeff Hoffman gets 3-year, $33 million deal from Blue Jays

    The molasses-slow reliever market got some movement Friday, as former Philadelphia Phillies reliever Jeff Hoffman signed a three-year deal with the Toronto Blue Jays. The deal is reportedly worth $33 million, with $6 million in incentives.

    Hoffman was drafted by the Blue Jays and then traded as one of the prospects in the Troy Tulowitzki deal in 2015. He has moved around since then, finding success in the Phillies' bullpen, with a 2.28 ERA in 118 1/3 innings across two seasons.

  • Orioles agree to one-year, $10 million deal with reliever Andrew Kittredge

    Reliever Andrew Kittredge has agreed to a one-year, $10 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles, per The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal. Kittredge's contract reportedly includes $9 million guaranteed and a $9 million club option with a $1 million buyout.

    Kittredge spent seven seasons with the Tampa Bay Rays before being traded to the St. Louis Cardinals ahead of last season. The 34-year-old reliever finished 2024 with an ERA of 2.80 across 70 2/3 innings for the Cardinals.

  • Why are the A's finally spending in free agency?

  • Tigers, SP Tarik Skubal work out 1-year, $10.15M deal

    Skubal, the 2024 AL Cy Young Award and Triple Crown winner, avoids arbitration. The 28-year-old left hander went 18-4 for the Tigers last season with a 2.39 ERA, 0.92 WHIP and 228 strikeouts.

  • Dodgers trade Diego Cartaya to Twins

    The Los Angeles Dodgers traded catcher Diego Cartaya to the Minnesota Twins on Thursday in exchange for right-handed pitcher Jose Vasquez, the teams announced.

    Cartaya, 23, is a former top catching prospect who spent the 2024 season between Double-A and Triple-A, posting a .221/.323/.363 slash line in 95 total games. Vasquez has spent the past two seasons in the Dominican Summer League.

  • Could Nolan Arenado finally be on the move?

    After he reportedly blocked a trade to the Houston Astros a few weeks ago, Nolan Arenado is reportedly more "open-minded" to waiving his no-trade clause to more teams, per MLB Network's Jon Morosi. The Boston Red Sox seem to be a top destination.

  • A's All-Star Brent Rooker agrees to $60M extension

    A's designated hitter Brent Rooker has agreed to a five-year, $60 million contract extension, according to multiple reports. Rooker, 30, slashed .293/.365/.562 with 39 home runs, 11 stolen bases and 112 RBI in 2024, all career bests. He was an All-Star in 2023.

  • Justin Verlander to spend 20th MLB season with Giants

    Justin Verlander, who will be 42 during the 2025 season, reportedly agreed with the San Francisco Giants on a one-year deal, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan.

    The deal is worth $15 million, per multiple reports.

    Verlander is not the pitcher he once was. He was borderline unusable in his 90⅓ innings in 2024, scuffling to a 5.48 ERA and a career-low strikeout rate. While the three-time Cy Young has been vocal about his desire to pitch until he turns 45, it’s hard to ignore a fastball that continues to lose velocity.

    The Giants are surely hoping Verlander can find some return to form in San Francisco next season. He joins a staff that features 2024 All-Star Logan Webb but lost two-time Cy Young winner Blake Snell to the rival Dodgers in free agency.

    Read more here.

  • Scott Boras has shown so far this offseason that he still has his fastball

    New York Mets Dominican superstar Juan Soto attends a press conference with Mets owner Steve Cohen (L), Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns (2nd L) and sports agent Scott Boras (R) in New York on December 12, 2024. Soto joined the New York Mets on a record-breaking 15-year, $765 million deal on December 9. (Photo by DAVID DEE DELGADO / AFP) (Photo by DAVID DEE DELGADO/AFP via Getty Images)
    Agent Scott Boras has had a much better offseason this year, including Juan Soto's megadeal with the New York Mets. (Photo by DAVID DEE DELGADO/AFP via Getty Images)

    For the first time in years, Scott Boras entered the MLB offseason under a thundercloud of skepticism and scrutiny.

    Last winter, the game’s most notorious and most successful agent had himself an absolute stinker — that is, at least, by his supersonic standards. Boras’ four major free agents in 2023-24 — Cody Bellinger, Matt Chapman, Blake Snell and Jordan Montgomery — all emerged with deals well below expectations. The timing of their signings, too, was far from ideal. At the outset of spring training in mid-February, the entire so-called “Boras Four” remained free agents. That timeline seemed to negatively impact both Snell and Montgomery in the early going of the 2024 season.

    It was, unequivocally, the worst free agency of the super-agent’s accomplished career. Equally revered and reviled around the game, Boras seemed to be losing his fastball. Whispers percolated around the industry about whether the 72-year-old could still hack it. Montgomery ditched Boras as his representation, publicly criticizing the agent for his handling of the starter’s disastrous experience on the open market.

    One glance at Boras’ imposing, star-studded client list for free agency 2024-25 — Juan Soto, Corbin Burnes, Pete Alonso, Blake Snell, Alex Bregman — and the pressure was squarely on the agent to prove that he was still the game’s most influential powerbroker.

    Well, so far this winter, Boras has proven that he’s still a force to be reckoned with. January is less than a week old, and thus far this offseason, Boras Corp. has earned its 12 already-signed clients a whopping $1.45 billion in combined guaranteed contract money. That, according to Jon Becker of FanGraphs, accounts for 57% of the total league spending so far this winter.

    Read the full story here.

  • A's reach extension with Brent Rooker

    Brent Rooker and the A's reached a five-year, $60 million extension on Monday. The deal, according to The Athletic's Ken Rosenthal, includes a sixth-year option that pushes the value to $90 million.

    Rooker hit .293 with 39 home runs and 112 RBI last season, both of which were career highs for the 30-year-old.

    Rooker was among a group of A's players spotted at the Kings-Heat game in Sacramento on Monday.

  • Royals will reportedly sign RHP Michael Lorenzen to 1-year, $7 million deal

    Michael Lorenzen was traded from the Rangers to the Royals at the 2024 trade deadline, and Kansas City apparently liked what it saw.

  • Report: Reds trading for Dodgers infielder Gavin Lux

    Gavin Lux is headed to Cincinnati.

    The Reds struck a deal to trade for the Los Angeles Dodgers infielder on Monday, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan. In return, the Dodgers will receive a future draft pick and outfield prospect Mike Sirota.

    Lux held a .251 batting average with 10 home runs and 50 RBI, both of which were career highs, last season with the Dodgers. He spent all six of his seasons in Major League Baseball with the franchise, winning a pair of World Series titles.

    The Reds went 77-85 last season and missed the playoffs for the fourth straight season.

    Read the full story here.

  • Yankees reportedly pursuing 3-time batting champion Luis Arráez from Padres

    According to ESPN's Jeff Passan, the Yankees continue to be in discussions with the Padres over the 27-year-old Arráez.

    San Diego is looking to open up payroll as they go after other free agents such as Roki Sasaki. The Yankees are seeking to fill a need at second base with Gleyber Torres off to the Detroit Tigers.

    Arráez dealt with a bad thumb last season and batted .314 with 200 hits with the Padres and Miami Marlins. He's set to make $14.6 million next season and can become a free agent in 2026.

    Will Luis Arraez be hitting in the Bronx next season? (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)
    Will Luis Arraez be hitting in the Bronx next season? (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)