Coming into the American League Division Series, it was supposed to be the Toronto Blue Jays‘ scrap-it-out, every-man-in, small-ball offense| MLB - Sportsnaut
Everything Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has done to this point in his career has led to this. A marquee matchup for| MLB - Sportsnaut
Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy referred to his soaring team as a bunch of “Average Joes” earlier this season. But| MLB - Sportsnaut
Check out the latest from Dave Litman on Blue jays collapse down the stretch, covering MLB's Bo Bichette, Boston Red Sox, Max Scherzer, New York Yankees, Shane Bieber, Toronto Blue Jays, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and more at Sportsnaut.| Sportsnaut
Normally, if you’re a baseball player — even a role-player — you’re the most famous person in your family. Randy Moffitt was the exception to that rule. In the baseball world, he was a dependable reliever who played for 12 seasons in the majors and saved nearly 100 games. But the rest of the world … Continue reading Obituary: Randy Moffitt (1948-2025)| RIP Baseball
Muncy goes on the IL yet again. Click over to MLB Trade Rumors to read more.| MLB Trade Rumors
The Phillies and Blue Jays have both discussed the possibility of using a six-man rotation when Aaron Nola and Shane Bieber return from the IL.| MLB Trade Rumors
Shane Bieber hopes to be a popular pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays down the stretch, but realizes that in his new home, he'll be the second most famous Bieber after Canadian pop icon Justin Bieber.| Global News
RIP to Joe Coleman, part of a three-generation pitching tradition and a 2-time 20-game winner. His son Casey reported that his father had died in his sleep on July 9 in Jamestown, TN. He was 78 yea…| RIP Baseball
RIP to former outfielder Hosken Powell, who played for 6 seasons in the American League in the 1970s and ’80s. He died on June 27 at the age of 70. Powell played for the Minnesota Twins (1978…| RIP Baseball
In his first baseball career, Ron Taylor was an 11-year reliever in the major leagues, playing a role on two championship teams. In his second, he was “Dr. Baseball,” a medical professi…| RIP Baseball