Miami further empties out a weak farm system to get Dan Straily from Cincinnati.
Drew Storen, Ben Revere, Peter O’Brien find new homes while Rajai Davis and Alex Avila return to old stomping grounds.
The Reds’ relievers set a record, the Giants’ blow another late lead, and two starters elsewhere don’t let their teammates get anywhere near the mound.
The wonderfully difficult-to-litigate Mat Latos trade, still wonderfully difficult to litigate five years later.
Modern baseball is smarter, which isn’t always as fun.
The Mets get a power hitter, but might just be adding to the glut at a few well-covered positions.
The last piece of the Cueto deal to make the bigs might end up being the real prize.
The unhittable one has cut his walk rate in half this year. Can baseball handle a leap forward from a reliever this dominant?
Last chance to find out about Adam Duvall.
When runners are in scoring position, home runs go down, while everything else–including doubles and triples–goes up. Why?
Batters increase the “swing zone” as the season goes on. To try to understand why, we need to know how.
There is no ideal way to reach first base. It’s time, if it ever wasn’t, to strip judgment from our stats.
Is Pittsburgh vs. Cincinnati turning into a turf war, on a global scale? We’d rather hear both sides of the tale.
The weirdest thing happened to the Reds’ ace. Meanwhile, good job Chris Sale, good job Orioles, good job Jordan Zimmermann, great job Aaron Hicks.