Where can the Cubs go for bullpen help? Can Swanson bounce back from surgery? Where will Crow-Armstrong hit in the lineup?
As the MLB offseason continues, rumors about potential targets for the Cubs after missing out on Tanner Scott and Kirby Yates continue.
The Chicago Cubs have been in the market for a bullpen addition. Their relief corps struggled mightily in 2024 and served as a major reason for them missing the postseason in finishing in third place in the National League Central.
The Chicago Cubs are seeing potential reliever options fly off the board, and once again the Los Angeles Dodgers are in the driver’s seat, reportedly signing Kirby Yates.
Unless you are a Los Angeles Dodgers fan, you are getting annoyed by the amount of money that organization is shelling out to free agents. Just last year, the Dodgers gave Shohei Ohtani a 10-year, $700 million deal. Although most of that money is deferred, it is a ridiculous amount of money to commit to.
The Chicago Cubs top target of this offseason has finally chosen his first MLB team, the Los Angeles Dodgers. Japanese phenom Roki Sasaki shared the news himsel
The Chicago Cubs were in talks to trade one of their starting infielders at the Winter Meetings, according to a new report, but appear set to start him in 2025.
With less than a month to go until pitchers and catchers report, the Dodgers appear primed to enter the season once again considered the favorites to capture the title.  Naturally, that got us to thinking about what it would take for the Dodgers to not just fall short of the World Series -- any seasoned baseball observer knows there are few guarantees so far as postseason success goes -- but to miss the playoffs entirely.
While the Dodgers operate from a financial advantage, they also are schooling opponents with a relentlessness not enough rival owners share.
The Chicago Cubs are trying to pick themselves up off the mat after missing out on star closer Tanner Scott. Adding him would have been the most important addit
Cubs fanbase growing restless as owner Tom Ricketts insists they don't have the money to spend like the Dodgers and Mets.