Mets could still bring Pete Alonso
The Toronto Blue Jays could potentially follow up their addition of Anthony Santander by signing first baseman Pete Alonso.
That was the basis of Kansas City Royals first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino’s argument on “The Chris Rose Rotation” on Monday. The 27-year-old pointed to slugger Pete Alonso as an example of a first baseman undervalued by his former team, the New York Mets.
Different teams have pursued Pete Alonso, with the New York Mets facing competition from a "mystery team." Former Mets GM Jim Duquette revealed the Blue Jays are no longer in the race. Alonso has declined a significant Mets offer,
A potential free agent option for the New York Mets, outfielder Anthony Santander, agreed to a five-year, $92.5 million deal, with the Toronto Blue Jays on Mond
The Toronto Blue Jays had been a considered a leading destination for free agent slugger Pete Alonso until they signed Anthony Santander on Monday.
After slugger Pete Alonso reportedly rejected a contract offer from the New York Mets that was a three-year deal in the $68 million to $70 million range (accord
Alonso remains a free agent who is seemingly without a plethora of options available to him as the start of spring training approaches.
The Mets made what they perceived as a last-ditch effort to sign Pete Alonso and when that was rejected began their pivot away from their slugging first baseman, The Post has learned.
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,
During an appearance on the “The Chris Rose Rotation” podcast Monday, the Richmond native purported that Billy Beane’s prized stat undervalues his breed — first basemen — and that the Mets front office should look past Pete Alonso’s career 3.8 average and at everything else he brings to the table.
On The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo analyze the free agency drama that has surrounded the Mets and Pete Alonso, and discuss how it got to the point of stalemate.