Pete Alonso and the New York Mets have finalized their $54 million, two-year contract on the same day spring training opened ...
Days before Pete Alonso agreed to return to the Mets, he met at a Tampa social club with his agent, Scott Boras, Mets owner ...
First baseman Pete Alonso is staying with the New York Mets, agreeing to a $54 million, two-year contract, a person familiar with the deal told The Associated Press.
Pete Alonso is returning to the New York Mets.The free-agent first baseman has reportedly agreed to a two-year deal with the Mets that includes an opt-out after the first season, according to ESPN's ...
Slugging first baseman Pete Alonso agreed to a two-year, $54 million with New York Mets that includes an opt-out after the first year, finally re-signing with the team that drafted him after a ...
Once thought to have played his last game in the home uniform at Citi Field, Pete Alonso now appears to be headed for a reunion with the New York Mets. USA Today's Bob Nightengale tweeted Friday ...
For Boomer Esiason, Friday is P-Day. The former Jets quarterback and current WFAN host was convinced Thursday night that first baseman Pete Alonso and the Mets would finally reunite Friday ...
Could another NL team enter the sweepstakes for New York Mets free agent first baseman Pete Alonso ... a potential "dark horse" candidate to land Alonso. The 30-year-old slugger remains on ...
The New York Post's Jon Heyman revealed that the Cincinnati Reds could be a contender to land Alonso as his free agency continues. "How about long-shot Reds as a Pete landing spot? Could the Reds ...
The Toronto Blue Jays have been trying extremely hard to close a deal with free agent Pete ... him yet. Alonso is the Blue Jays' top target right now as he could help them also land free-agent ...
Let’s get to your questions in one last Blue Jays Inbox before camp begins: Quick one: Likelihood of Alonso? Scherzer? Anyone to save the day? – @MivilleTaylor Pete Alonso’s market ... the team’s ...
Pete Alonso, a free agent for the first time in his career, is entitled to continue exploring the market to see what else is out there. He earned that right with his six years of MLB service time.
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