Earlier this offseason, the New York Mets signed superstar free agent Juan Soto to a 15-year deal worth $765 million. Here's the breakdown of how much Soto will make per year, per hour, per minute and more.
New York Mets' new player Juan Soto had trouble traveling from his native Dominican Republic to the Big Apple to be present at the festival that New Yorkers hold annually with thei
Weeks after Juan Soto signed a monster 15-year, $765 million contract with the Mets, there was still a buzz among his new teammates.
The Major League Baseball season is months away but fans and players for the New York Mets got the party started early on Saturday, celebrating the arrival of generational hitting talent Juan Soto ahead of their 2025 campaign.
New York Mets superstar outfielder Juan Soto will wear his traditional number 22 in 2025, as young third baseman Brett Baty agreed to give it to him
Mets' Brett Baty reveals the reason for choosing his new jersey number after making a swap with star Juan Soto.
Outfielder Juan Soto poses for a photo after a New York Mets news conference to introduce their free agent superstar, Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024, at Citi Field in Queens, N.Y. Soto, who played for the Yankees last season, signed a contract with the Mets worth $765 million over 15 years earlier this week. Andrew Mills | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
The deep freeze enveloping New York is symbolic of what’s going on between the Mets and Scott Boras over Pete Alonso, and it really is quite amazing how the euphoria over their$765 million Juan Soto deal has dissipated so much in just six weeks: Boras is scrambling mightily to find deals remotely close to his initial asking prices for Alonso — and his other high profile client Alex
NL MVP finalist Francisco Lindor gave his best efforts to take the New York Mets into the postseason and then an underdog run to the NLCS, where it took the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers six games to eli
The New York Mets had an inspired second half of the season in 2024 that saw them push the Los Angeles Dodgers to the brink in the National League Championship Series.
A new rumor claims the New York Mets actually tried to use the Los Angeles Dodgers controversial deferral strategy recently.