Not only did the Padres wait until Jan. 24 to make their first major league acquisition — right-handed pitcher Ron Marinaccio in a trade with the Chicago White Sox — but the Friars are yet to make a big league signing, although reports have circulated Tuesday that the team is in agreement on a one-year deal with catcher Elias Diaz.
The Padres signed their first Major League free agent of the offseason, bringing back catcher Elias Diaz on a one-year contract
The San Diego Padres have had an underwhelming offseason. With name after name coming and going through the rumor mill, to free agents not coming back to the s
It has been a quiet off season for the San Diego Padres. After a devastating Game 5 loss in the NLDS to the Los Angeles Dodgers, there seems to be a feeling of
The San Diego Padres could look to pursue former Los Angeles Dodgers star pitcher Jack Flaherty in free agency.
The San Diego Padres are reportedly taking taking interest in signing a World Series champion after missing out on Roki Sasaki.
San Diego Padres owners claim that a lawsuit filed by the late owner's wife impacted their ability to sign star pitcher Roki Sasaki in free agency.
So now what? Roki Sasaki was the Padres' Plan A this winter. They hoped desperately to woo the ace Japanese right-hander as an anchor of their starting rotation for years to come. They made that much known from the moment he was posted last month.
Behind New England, the NFL’s best win rates over those 31 years belong to Green Bay (68th in market size, .632 win rate), Pittsburgh (27, .625), Kansas City (33, .587) and Baltimore (29, .574) with Indianapolis (25, .557), New Orleans (50, .514) and Buffalo (54, .513) nearby.
While the Dodgers, Padres and Blue Jays were battling it out for Roki Sasaki, the defending World Series champs seem to have won.
Padres plan to spend significantly more on players in 2025 than they did on team that won 93 games last season
The Padres, with Japanese star Yu Darvish on the roster, felt they had a legitimate shot at Sasaki, and they had more money to play with, almost $6.26 million, than L.A. But the Dodgers, who eliminated the Padres on their way to the World Series last season, prevailed again.