By now one would hope Pete Alonso has finally gotten the memo: The Mets never wanted him back. That’s why they never budged off their three-year offer in the $70 million range to him when he and his agent Scott Boras continued to push,
After rejecting a seven-year, $158 million contract from the New York Mets in 2023, free-agent first baseman Pete Alonso now finds himself in a situation where he will perhaps be ruing that decision.
The contractual situation of Pete Alonso with the New York Mets seems to have no favorable way out. The first baseman rejected a seven-year, $158 million offer in 2023 and with the
Pete Alonso's free agency is attracting a lot of conversation as the player is still without a team for the 2025 season with Spring Training just over a month away.
Still, some notable free agents and trade targets remain available, and that means a daily supply of MLB rumors as we move deeper into the back half of MLB's offseason. Speaking of which, Friday's supply of rumors can be found just below.
For free agents, spring training is something of a soft signing deadline. No one wants to be without a job when camp opens. Free agents want to know where they're playing, where they're going to live,
Pete Alonso's agent Scott Boras have offered a three-year contract to the Mets as his slow free agency crawls along
The Mets have the clearest hole at first base after their competition — the New York Yankees (Paul Goldschmidt), Houston Astros (Christian Walker), Arizona Diamondbacks (Josh Naylor) and Nationals (Nathaniel Lowe) ― have filled their needs at the position.
Pete Alonso, his agent Scott Boras and the New York Mets remain at a stalemate in contract negotiations. Former GM and current analyst Jim Duquette reported la
The likelihood that first baseman Pete Alonso will return to the New York Mets has all of a sudden plummeted. Despite initial widespread belief throughout the
Pete Alonso has reportedly pitched an opt-out laden three-year deal to the Mets and the Mets alone. Get more details at MLB Trade Rumors.
And he's been far less successful with his other big-name clients. As Pete Alonso and Alex Bregman continue to twist in the wind, running out of leverage by the day, let's take a look at some players who probably aren't thrilled with their agent right about now.