Juan Soto signed with the New York Mets, not only leaving the Orioles' division, but their league too. Corbin Burnes signed with Arizona and Roki Sasaki is a Los Angeles Dodger.But the O’s on Monday saw one of their own sign with another club and also stay in the American League East when outfielder Anthony Santander agreed to a five-year deal
Spring training is less than a month away, but there is still plenty of MLB offseason business to tackle. A handful of notable players remain on the free-agent market, including A
Anthony Santander is on the move. The former Baltimore Orioles outfielder agreed to a deal with the Toronto Blue Jays on Monday, according to MLB
The Orioles took to social media to post a tribute video on Anthony Santander. Fans immediately slammed the team for missing out on the star.
The Toronto Blue Jays are in agreement with free agent outfielder Anthony Santander, pending a physical, according to a new report.
After missing out on other top free agents, Toronto gets an injection of power in the lineup with the switch-hitting slugger.
The addition of Santander, who hit 44 home runs with the Baltimore Orioles last season, follows the deep-pocketed Jays’ failed pursuits of Shohei Ohtani last offseason and of Juan Soto, Corbin Burnes and Roki Sasaki this winter.
One of the top free-agent sluggers is heading to the Toronto Blue Jays. The Jays and outfielder Anthony Santander have agreed to a five-year contract worth more than $90 million, CBS Sports HQ's Jim Bowden confirmed Monday.
The Toronto Blue Jays are copying from a popular playbook by deferring the majority of Anthony Santander's salary until after the final year of his contract.
He may have been Plan C or D, but the Toronto Blue Jays finally landed a big-ticket free agent earlier this week when they signed slugger Anthony Santander to a five-year contract worth $92.5 million.
The Blue Jays’ five-year, $92.5 million deal with slugger Anthony Santander includes $61.75 million in deferred money, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed Thursday. The deferred money brings the present-day, by player’s union’s calculation, down to $68.6 million.