Luke Voit has been almost a one-man act, with the Yankees placing a major league-leading 16 players on the injured list this season.
Author: Bob Nightengale, USA TODAY
Opinion: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. will help make Toronto Blue Jays games must-see TV
As the game’s premier prospect, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. dazzled scouts with his immense power. Now he will make Toronto Blue Jays game must-see TV.
Padres phenom Fernando Tatis Jr. has baseball awestruck: ‘Haven’t seen a talent like that’
Few believed that Fernando Tatis Jr. would be in the majors to begin the season, but the 20-year-old is looking like a five-tool player in his first few weeks.
‘It’s a baseball problem’: MLB redoubles its efforts as sport’s black population remains low
“Really, it’s not a black problem or a white problem,” says Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr.
Too early to panic? Red Sox just want to go home after long, ugly road trip
Boston is off to a 2-8 start to the 2019 season and there have been plenty of troubling trends from their two-week road trip.
Ronald Acuña Jr. to receive $100 million over eight years with Braves
The Braves have agreed in principle to the second-largest deal in franchise history with Ronald Acuña Jr., who will receive $100 million over eight years.
Bryce Harper returns to D.C. as the enemy. Will he be embraced or booed by Nationals fans?
Bryce Harper returns to D.C. on Tuesday for the first time since signing with the Phillies. The ex-Nats star expects a mixed reaction from the fans.
New-look Phillies flex their muscles, fans show their love in Bryce Harper’s debut
The rebuilt Phillies looked the part on Opening Day, while new star Bryce Harper received standing ovations from the Philadelphia faithful.
MLB salaries: Middle class is disappearing in baseball
Baseball’s middle class has disappeared — the middle class is getting squeezed. Fewer players are being paid between $3-5 million.
From summonses to sky-high expectations, Red Sox welcome the problems brought on by a World Series title
Winning the World Series is great, but as one Boston pitcher found out – a long October can have major consequences.