The offseason keeps getting worse for the San Diego Padres – and better for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Three of the top four teams in the National League West hav
San Diego Padres starting pitcher Michael King believes that beating the LA Dodgers in 2025 has become even more difficult after their recent additions of Blake Snell, Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott to
The San Diego Padres have endured several losses in a the span of a few short months. Losing out on Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki is just the latest failure for t
The future is murky in San Diego after striking out on Roki Sasaki.The club has entertained the idea of trading away some of its star players to lower payroll commitments for 2025 and pursue more affordable talent,
The San Diego ... joined the Padres' NL West rivals in the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers have signed a number of free agents this offseason, including three former Friars. Blake Snell, Tanner ...
The Padres loaded up two trucks to send to Peoria, Arizona where they will begin spring training in February ahead of the 2025 season.
While the Dodgers, Padres and Blue Jays were battling it out for Roki Sasaki, the defending World Series champs seem to have won.
San Diego Padres general manager A.J. Preller speaks out after his team's failed pursuit of Roki Sasaki, who chose to sign with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
It turns out the Los Angeles Dodgers aren't the only team in the NL West permitted to make offseason moves. According to Dan Hayes and Dennis Lin of
In San Diego, news that one-man Powerball ticket Roki Sasaki has decided to join the Dodgers was more than a gut punch. It was a steel-toed boot to the shin, a Clydesdale stomp to the foot, a right hook to the jaw. This hurt in all kinds of ways, big and bigger than big.
The San Diego Padres are shopping right-hander Michael King. Mike Axisa of CBS Sports has the Giants as one of six "bubble teams' that are in need of rotation help.
A week after his upcoming deal was first reported, Yates has reached a one-year deal with Los Angeles, per MLB.com's Mark Feinsand. He'll be paid $13 million with a potential $1 million bonus if he reached 55 appearances, per ESPN's Jeff Passan.