Blake Snell, Dodgers and Tyler Glasnow
Seattle Mariners at San Diego Padres
If Pivetta gets hurt, Padres could cut deal short
· 3d
Nick Pivetta’s Padres contract includes $5 million conditional team option for 2029 if he gets hurt
· 3d
Nick Pivetta’s Deal With The Padres Reveals A Potential Cash Crunch
If Pivetta gets hurt, Padres could cut deal short after 2 years or extend it to 5th year for $5M
San Diego could cut short Nick Pivetta’s $55 million, four-year contract after two seasons if he gets a specified long-term injury and the Padres also could extend the deal for a fifth season at the r
The San Diego Padres are reportedly looking to trade infielder Luis Arráez this season and one MLB writer linked a few teams to the star.
Padres, Dodgers and Spring Training
· 1h
Padres Pitcher Cole Paplham Gets Hit in the Face by 102 MPH Line Drive During Training Game Against Dodgers
Padres Could Trade Dylan Cease Later in Spring Training Under One Condition
The San Diego Padres have made major roster upgrades this month. An increasingly quiet offseason rightfully brought frustration, fear, and anxiety among Friars faithful, but president of baseball ...
Padres Reliever Hit by Spring Training Curse in Freak Dodgers Accident
The Dodgers beat the Padres 8-3 on Sunday at Camelback Ranch. Batter’s box: Ethan Salas, the Padres’ second-ranked prospect, doubled off the wall in center field to drive in a run. He finished 1-for-2.
Matt Waldron was committed to the knuckleball, which is a directive for him this spring. He surrendered a lead-off double and an RBI single on the pitch in the first inning of Saturday’s 10-3 Cactus League victory over the A’s.
Jackson Merrill, Padres
Bleacher Report linked two American League teams to San Diego Padres' first baseman Luis Arraez, who is set to make $14 million in 2025.
The Padres beat the Mariners 5-2 on Friday at Peoria Stadium in both teams’ spring training opener. Batter’s box: Manny Machado hit the first pitch he saw halfway up the batter’s eye directly beyond the center field wall.
Matt Waldron stood in the Padres clubhouse on the first morning of spring training and recalled an afternoon a couple of weeks earlier back in San Diego. On that day, he had been seated alongside four teammates on a stage in front of a couple hundred elementary school children.
As Major League Baseball continues experimenting with the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system, not all players are on board with the changes. San Diego Padres ace Yu Darvish recently voiced his concerns about the technology,
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