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Browsing: resign
This had always been the plan.
From the day the Warriors signed Seth Curry to play alongside his older brother Stephen Curry for the first time professionally, it was made clear that the Warriors were eventually going to cut and waive Curry, only to re-sign him a month or two later. That cut came on Saturday.
Team finances and the tax aprons drove this. The Warriors are hard-capped at the second apron (because they used the taxpayer mid-level exception to sign Al Horford). After agreeing to a new contract with Jonathan Kuminga, then soon after deals for Horford and Deâ€Anthony Melton, the Warriors were bumping up against that cap. One of Seth Curry or Gui Santos had to be waived to get under that hard cap to start the season, and Curry was always the guy going to get the time off (this was clearly communicated with everyone, including Stephen).
The Warriors can re-sign Seth Curry on Nov. 15, when they will have the space to sign a pro-rated minimum contract for the rest of the season. However, the Warriors may wait longer than that, maybe into December, just to give themselves more cushion against the tax apron line.
Seth, 35, shot 45.6% on 3-pointers last season on his way to averaging 6.5 points a game in Charlotte. His shooting and style of play mesh well with the Warriors once they re-sign him, in a month or two.
When the Yankees made the Juan Soto deal a couple of offseasons ago, Trent Grisham was seen as a throw-in.
His first season in pinstripes saw Grisham appear in just 76 games and was used primarily as a late-game defensive replacement. Fast forward to 2025 and Grisham became a revelation for the Yankees.
The 28-year-old had a career season and helped stabilize the Yankees outfield, playing center alongside Cody Bellinger and Aaron Judge. But with the unceremonious end to the Yankees’ season, Grisham will be testing the market as a free agent.
With Bellinger testing free agency, and Judge being the only constant, the Yankees’ outfield could be in flux, but should they take a chance and bring back Grisham?
Aug 30, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring against the Chicago White Sox during the 11th inning at Rate Field. / Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images
Why Yankees should re-sign Trent Grisham
As presently constituted, the Yankees will have Judge play right field and potentially a bunch of kids manning the outfield. Jasson Dominguez will likely get another crack at becoming an everyday player, but what about the third outfield spot? The Yankees need stability as a win-now team, and they can’t possibly trot out two kids every game, and New York could do worse than bringing back Grisham.
Again, Grisham had his best offensive season in 2025. His 34 homers are twice as many as his previous career high (2022 with the Padres) and his 74 RBI are 12 more than his previous high in 2021. It wasn’t just his homers and RBI. Grisham set career marks in slugging (.464), hits (116), walks (82) and OPS (.811).
Grisham was also extremely clutch for the Yankees. According to FanGraphs, he hit .308 with seven home runs and 1.259 OPS in high-leverage situations, including five blasts with two outs and runners in scoring position.
And the former two-time Gold Glover is still very good in CF, despite his seemingly lackadaisical approach.
Grisham will also be a more affordable option than Bellinger or other free agent outfielders like Kyle Tucker, so there is a spot for Grisham if the Yankees are in need of a veteran outfielder.
New York Yankees outfielder Trent Grisham (12) during a game against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. / John Jones-Imagn Images
Why Yankees should not re-sign Trent Grisham
Let’s face it. Do you expect Grisham to come close to his offensive production moving forward?
It’s very likely that 2025 Grisham is an outlier. His offensive numbers, especially his power, were way higher than in previous seasons. Here’s a breakdown of his numbers in his last five seasons:
- 2021: .242/.327/.413, .740 OPS, 15 HR (132 games)
- 2022: .184/.284/.341, .626 OPS, 17 HR (152 games)
- 2023: .198/.315/.352, .666 OPS, 13 HR (153 games)
- 2024: .190/.290/.385, .675 OPS, 9 HR (76 games)
- 2025: .235/.348/.464, .811 OPS, 34 HR (143 games)
Ok, if you want to roll the dice on Grisham, he picked a great time to have a career year. There could be a team out there that will believe the 2025 production and pay Grisham close to what he wants. What that number looks like is not clear, but at just 28 years old, Grisham could be looking for a long deal, or at least one with multiple options in it.
The Yankees can extend the qualifying offer to Grisham, which would cost the team $22.02 million in 2026 and could make other teams balk at offering him a nice contract if they don’t want to give up a draft pick to sign him. Could Grisham get a deal worth more than that qualifying offer? Perhaps, but the real question is, should the Yankees even extend that offer?
The Yankees could use that money toward bringing back Bellinger or even swinging for Tucker.
Jul 19, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (12) drives in a run on a fielder’s choice against the Atlanta Braves in the sixth inning at Truist Park. / Brett Davis-Imagn Images
Verdict
The one reason the Yankees should re-sign Grisham is if they believe the offensive production he delivered in 2025 is legit. But I have a hard time believing it is, and I don’t think they do either.
Now, should they extend the qualifying offer? Probably not. If Grisham can get a lucrative deal elsewhere, God bless him, but if the Yankees want to try and bring him back, make him a solid offer, but not one that would exceed what his QO would have been, and only after other options are off the table.
Cleveland Guardians re-sign veteran catcher Austin Hedges
\n\n”,”providerName”:”Twitter”,”providerUrl”:” was one of three Guardians players who was set to become a free agent this offseason, along with outfielder Lane Thomas and reliever Jakob Junis. Instead, the 33-year-old backstop will return for a sixth season in Cleveland.\n\nWhile Bo Naylor has emerged as the Guardians†starting catcher, Hedges has remained a key cog to the teamâ€s success behind the plate and inside a clubhouse full of many up-and-coming players.\n\nThe Guardians once were 15 1/2 games out of first place in the AL Central this summer. They went on to make a historic comeback to clinch their second consecutive division title, and folks around the team continually pointed to Hedges as a stabilizing presence in the room.\n\n“He’s always talking in the dugout. He’s talking with the starters who aren’t pitching,†manager Stephen Vogt said of Hedges last month. “He’s talking with the other hitters. He’s actively engaged in chatter and keeping our guys focused. He’s a great leader, great teammate. He pushes everyone around him to get better.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”OEmbed”,”html”:””,”providerName”:”MLB”,”providerUrl”:null,”thumbnail_url”:”https://img.mlbstatic.com/mlb-photos/image/upload/ar_121:168,c_fill,g_face/w_121/v1/people/595978/action/vertical/current”,”type”:”oembed”,”width”:425,”contentType”:”rich”},{“__typename”:”Markdown”,”content”:”“\\[What\\] Austin brings on the field, obviously, is a huge amount of value. But what he brings in the clubhouse, in the dugout with his teammates is equal to that. We wouldn’t be where we are without Hedgey, not only on the field, but in the clubhouse as well.â€\n\nThose intangibles led the Guardians to bring back Hedges on a one-year deal each of the past two offseasons. They initially acquired him from the Padres at the 2020 Trade Deadline, but he departed for the Pirates as a free agent following the â€22 season and went on to win the â€23 World Series with the Rangers.\n\nThis past season, while Hedges recorded a .527 OPS at the plate in 68 games, he once more was one of the best defensive catchers in the Majors. He was tied with the Yankees†Austin Wells for third among qualified backstops in catcher framing runs (11).\n\nHedges was tied with the Mets†Luis Torrens for first among qualified catchers in caught stealing percentage (43 percent). All the while, Guardians pitchers recorded a 3.72 ERA in his 479 2/3 innings when Hedges was behind the plate.\n\nWith Hedges rejoining the fold, the Guardians once more could feature three catchers next season. Along with Naylor, David Fry is set to return to catching after he was limited to DH duties in 2025, following the Tommy John surgery he underwent last November.\n\nFry is versatile and also played left and right field and first and third base in 2024.”,”type”:”text”},{“__typename”:”Video”,”contentDate”:”2025-10-02T23:27:20.858Z”,”preferredPlaybackScenarioURL({\”preferredPlaybacks\”:\”mp4AvcPlayback\”})”:” Hedges reacts to the Guardians being eliminated from the 2025 postseason and young players experiencing their first playoff action”,”displayAsVideoGif”:false,”duration”:”00:01:13″,”slug”:”austin-hedges-reflects-on-guardians-playoff-run”,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”GameTag”},{“__typename”:”TeamTag”,”slug”:”teamid-114″,”title”:”Cleveland Guardians”,”team”:{“__ref”:”Team:114″},”type”:”team”},{“__typename”:”PersonTag”,”slug”:”playerid-595978″,”title”:”Austin Hedges”,”person”:{“__ref”:”Person:595978″},”type”:”player”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”vod”,”title”:”vod”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”alwc”,”title”:”AL Wild Card”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”series-a”,”title”:”Series A”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”postseason”,”title”:”postseason”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”imagen-feed”,”title”:”Imagen feed”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”interview”,”title”:”interview”,”type”:”taxonomy”}],”thumbnail”:{“__typename”:”Thumbnail”,”templateUrl”:” Hedges reflects on Guardians’ playoff run”,”relativeSiteUrl”:”/video/austin-hedges-reflects-on-guardians-playoff-run”},{“__typename”:”Markdown”,”content”:”Though the Guardians were eliminated in three games in the AL Wild Card Series against the Tigers, they showed the baseball world you canâ€t count them out, and the group knows it can lean on what it experienced next season and beyond.\n\n“We’ve proved a lot to ourselves,†Hedges said after Cleveland was eliminated from the postseason. “Itâ€s just more evidence of why we just keep believing in ourselves until the last out of the game on a daily basis over and over and over again. It’s exhausting. We’re all exhausted right now mentally, but that’s how you should be — even more so than physically at the end of the season because you care so much, because you’re so locked in for 27 outs, especially in the postseason.\n\n“… But the beauty of experiencing that is you do have that roadmap. So now we have a couple more road signs on that map that tell us where to go next year because we’ve been there already. I’m looking forward to seeing what this group can do with that.\””,”type”:”text”}],”relativeSiteUrl”:”/news/cleveland-guardians-resign-veteran-catcher-austin-hedges”,”contentType”:”news”,”subHeadline”:null,”summary”:”CLEVELAND — Beloved Guardians catcher and team leader Austin Hedges is sticking around.\nThe Guardians have reached a one-year contract with Hedges, according to MLB Network insider Jon Heyman, who reported the deal is worth $4 million plus $500,000 in incentives. The deal has not been confirmed by the club.”,”tagline({\”formatString\”:\”none\”})”:null,”tags”:[{“__typename”:”InternalTag”,”slug”:”storytype-article”,”title”:”Article”,”type”:”article”},{“__typename”:”ContributorTag”,”slug”:”tim-stebbins”,”title”:”Tim Stebbins”,”type”:”contributor”},{“__typename”:”TeamTag”,”slug”:”teamid-114″,”type”:”team”,”title”:”Cleveland Guardians”,”team”:{“__ref”:”Team:114″}},{“__typename”:”PersonTag”,”slug”:”playerid-595978″,”title”:”Austin Hedges”,”person”:{“__ref”:”Person:595978″},”type”:”player”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”transactions”,”title”:”transactions”,”type”:”taxonomy”},{“__typename”:”TaxonomyTag”,”slug”:”apple-news”,”title”:”Apple News”,”type”:”taxonomy”}],”type”:”story”,”thumbnail”:” Guardians re-sign veteran catcher Austin 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AEW/Lee South
One of the most popular stables in AEW originally started in WWE, and the trio has found a lot success in Tony Khan’s company since reuniting in October 2024Â following their WWE departures. The Hurt Business-turned Hurt Syndicate featuring MVP, Bobby Lashley, and Shelton Benjamin have been dominating AEW, and Khan has spoken glowingly about the brains behind the operation, MVP, calling him an outstanding mind in professional wrestling. It’s something MVP called humbling and flattering in a recent interview with Jimmy V3, where he also spoke about being the mind behind getting the Hurt Syndicate in AEW.
“I told Bobby when we were still at WWE, I was the one that said, ‘Let’s not re-sign,’ because Shelton had been released,” MVP explained. “I said, ‘Don’t re-sign. I’m not going to re-sign. Let’s get together, get Shelton and go to AEW.’ It took a little convincing and Bobby came on board and Tony has been gracious enough to let us get the band back together and continue. Because we felt like we had unfinished business. We felt like we had been disbanded too soon, and most fans felt that way, and Tony gave us an opportunity to get the band back together and to continue to contribute and have fun.”
MVP said the proof is there when the fans start singing the Hurt Syndicate’s theme song when they walk out. He said that Khan has been a pleasure to work for and that he, Benjamin, and Lashley are grateful to him.
If you use any quotes from this article, please credit Jimmy V3) and provide a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription.
Right after the Mets’ season ended, Edwin Diaz was asked about his opt-out. And he was not ready to declare publicly that he is exercising it.
“Not yet. I was waiting for the season to be over to go home, talk to my family — always I like to make decisions with my family,” Diaz said. “I want my family to feel comfortable, feel like part of my decision. Now I’m going home, I will start thinking about that and see what happens in the future.”
Diaz was also asked whether he would want to return to the Mets if he opts out.
“Yeah, of course,” he said. “I love this organization. They treat me really, really good. My family, everything. If I decide to opt out I would love to come back.”
While Diaz hasn’t stated his intentions just yet, it will be shocking if he doesn’t opt out of the final two years of the five-year, $102 million contract he signed after the 2022 season — when the Mets locked him up in November during their exclusive negotiating window.
Diaz, who will be entering his age-32 season in 2026, is coming off a year where he was one of the best and most dominant relievers in baseball. And it’s fair to believe that he’ll easily be able to exceed what’s left on his current deal in terms of both years and dollars.
So Diaz opting out is just a matter of time it seems.
When he does, should the Mets bring him back?
Apr 17, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets relief pitcher Edwin Diaz (39) enters the field during the ninth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Citi Field. / Vincent Carchietta – Imagn Images
WHY IT COULD MAKE SENSE TO LET DIAZ GO
With Tanner Scott prying a four-year $72 million dollar deal from the Dodgers last offseason and then responding by posting a 4.74 ERA and the worst strikeout rate of his career, those in Diaz’s camp can argue that someone of Diaz’s caliber deserves a five-or six-year contract worth in excess of $20 million annually.
But it’s hard to see Diaz getting that, given his age and the fact that the biggest deal ever given to a reliever in terms of present day value was to Josh Hader — and it’s difficult to envision a 32-year-old eclipsing that. Hader got a five-year, $95 million deal ahead of the 2024 season before his age-30 season. The deal Diaz signed after the 2022 season, while $7 million more than Hader’s, had a significant portion deferred.
Another thing to consider is that Diaz’s average fastball velocity has been slowly starting to tick down.
He averaged an outrageous 99.1 mph in 2022 in the season before he suffered the knee injury that kept him out for all of 2023.
When Diaz returned in 2024, his average fastball velocity was 97.5 mph. In 2025, it was 97.2 mph.
In a world where Diaz’s fastball starts to significantly dip, he could be especially hittable since his only other viable pitch is his slider.
It’s also fair to wonder how many lucrative, long-term contracts the Mets are comfortable having on the books.
With Juan Soto, Francisco Lindor, and Brandon Nimmo all under contract through at least 2030, would New York be comfortable adding long deals to Diaz and potentially Pete Alonso to that group?
Sep 25, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Mets pitcher Edwin Díaz (39) gestures after getting the final out against the Chicago Cubs during the ninth inning at Wrigley Field. / David Banks-Imagn Images
WHY IT COULD MAKE SENSE TO KEEP DIAZ
Now that I’m done grasping at straws trying to come up with reasons to let Diaz go…
Diaz has shown no real sign of slowing down, fresh off a season where he had a 1.63 ERA (2.28 FIP) and 0.87 WHIP with 98 strikeouts in 66.1 innings.
Since his forgettable 2019 debut season with New York, here’s what Diaz has done over his last five seasons:
270.1 innings pitched
2.36 ERA
0.97 WHIP
14.6 strikeouts per nine
The stuff (while the fastball velo is a bit down from its peak) remains filthy.
Diaz ranked in the 99th percentile this past season when it came to xERA, xBA, whiff percentage, and strikeout percentage. He was in the 89th percentile or better in fastball velocity, barrel percentage, and extension. His ground ball rate, chase percentage, and the average exit velocity against him all graded out well above average.
Batters hit .133 with a .200 slugging percentage against Diaz’s fastball in 2025, while hitting .179 with a .269 slugging percentage against his slider.
New York Mets pitcher Edwin Daz (39) reacts after the final out of the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park. / Aaron Doster-Imagn Images
In addition to what Diaz brings on the mound (and he’s been incredibly reliable, making 54 or more appearances each of the last four seasons), there are the intangibles.
Diaz has not only embraced New York, but has proved that he can thrive here.
He also has a serious desire to be a Met, which he showed while quickly re-signing following the 2022 campaign and with his comments after this season.
VERDICT
This should be the easiest decision the Mets make all offseason.
Beyond all the arguments in favor of Diaz is the fact that the Mets don’t have anyone in line to replace him.
New York’s bullpen for 2026 is basically Brooks Raley, A.J. Minter (who should be back healthy after missing most of this season due to a lat injury), and a whole bunch of question marks.
For a team that is going to enter next season with the expectation of contending for a World Series, finding a closer is of huge importance.
And they don’t have to go far for him.
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