The Yankees added a former MVP to their offseason rebuild on Saturday. Paul Goldschmidt reached agreement with the club on a one-year contract worth $12.5 million, an industry source confirmed ...
It was reported by Jack Curry of Yankee Entertainment and Sports Network that Paul Goldschmidt will sign a one-year, $12.5 million deal with the 2024 American League Pennant-winning team.
If Paul Goldschmidt’s first season goes extremely well in terms of health and production at the plate, the New York Yankees will be congratulating him for reaching a milestone in the final weeks ...
The St. Louis Cardinals are looking to embrace the youth movement, but letting Paul Goldschmidt walk will have a ripple ...
The New York Yankees now have their man at first base in former St. Louis Cardinals free agent and 2022 NL MVP Paul Goldschmidt. On Saturday, the Yankees signed Goldschmidt to a one-year ...
The New York Yankees keep making moves. The Yankees have signed first baseman Paul Goldschmidt to a one-year contract, according to the YES Network's Jack Curry. Goldschmidt, 37, has spent the ...
ST. LOUIS — Paul Goldschmidt, a slugging first baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals the past six seasons has signed a $12.5 million, one-year deal with the New York Yankees, multiple sources ...
The New York Yankees and free-agent first baseman Paul Goldschmidt have agreed to terms on a one-year pact worth $12.5 million. Goldschmidt, the 2022 National League's Most Valuable Player Award ...
I didn’t play well most of last year,” Goldschmidt said on a Zoom conference call Thursday afternoon to discuss the one-year, ...
In Paul Goldschmidt, the Yankees brought in a seven-time All-Star just a few seasons removed from being the NL MVP. He also is coming off the worst season of his life, one in which he trended down ...
Paul Goldschmidt has been a free agent for a long time despite a few teams expressing interest in the slugger. Now that Christian Walker has signed a three-year $60 million deal with the Houston ...
Quiet but commanding, reserved yet respected, Paul Goldschmidt wasn’t always the most vocal player in the St. Louis Cardinals clubhouse. He didn’t have to be. His actions spoke for him.