Orlando Sentinel

In wake of splashy signings, target on Rangers expands.

- By Ronald Blum

As the Dodgers made splashy signings with Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto this offseason, other teams focused on modern baseball’s stark reality: pricey payrolls often don’t translate into titles.

Baseball’s biggest spender has won the World Series just three times in the last 23 seasons: the 2009 Yankees, 2018 Red Sox and 2020 Dodgers. Going back to the start of the wild-card era in 1995, the highest roller has just six championsh­ips, with the Yankees also winning in 1996, 1999 and 2000.

“Clearly having a very high payroll is correlated with winning more games in the regular season,” baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred said last week. “The saving grace for us has been that our playoffs are unpredicta­ble enough that the 110-win team doesn’t automatica­lly march through the playoffs.”

Just 12 of the last 29 World Series winners had the top regular season record in their league. Steve Cohen’s Mets became the most expensive failure in baseball history last year, boosting payroll to a record $355 million on opening day, then finishing fourth in the NL East at 75-87 and incurring a record luxury tax of nearly $101 million.

“Some of the best teams in baseball that we’ve seen over the last 10 years have a hard time winning the World Series,” Cohen said.

Since the Rangers won their first title after finishing second in the AL West at 90-72, the Dodgers made the most ostentatio­us additions by reaching a record 10-year, $700 million contract with two-way star Ohtani and a 12-year, $325 million deal with righthande­r Yoshinobu Yamamoto. They also acquired right-hander

Tyler Glasnow from the Rays and gave him a five-year, $136.5 million agreement.

The Dodgers and Padres opened the season last week with a two-game series in Seoul, South Korea. Other teams begin Thursday and Friday in hopes of preventing the Rangers from becoming the first repeat champion since the 1998-2000 Yankees. Bruce Bochy, who turns 69 next month, will try to join Joe McCarthy, Casey Stengel and Connie Mack as the only managers with five Series titles.

Changing places

Other free agents who wound up with new teams included Giants left-hander Blake Snell, who won his second career Cy Young Award last season with the NL West-rival Padres, Cardinals right-hander Sonny Gray, Giants third baseman Matt Chapman and Astros closer Josh Hader.

The Giants also brought in an Asian star, giving South Korean outfielder Jung Hoo Lee a six-year, $113 million contract.

Juan Soto was the most-prominent player traded, dealt from the Padres to the Yankees for his final season before free agency.

In the final days leading up to opening day, left-hander Jordan Montgomery signed with the reigning NL champion Diamondbac­ks and designated hitter J.D. Martinez joined the Mets.

Some teams appear to have reduced payroll because of local broadcast revenue uncertaint­y. MLB took over broadcasts of Padres and Diamondbac­ks games last year after Diamond Sports Group filed for bankruptcy protection.

Big-league umpires might welcome a notable new co-worker too. Jen Pawol was given a fulltime Triple-A assignment and is on the verge of becoming the first woman to umpire a major league game.

It’s strictly business

The A’s head into an uncertain future. Their lease at the Oakland Coliseum expires after this season and the team plans to move into a new Las Vegas ballpark in 2028 with no home site set for 2025-27.

The Orioles has entered a new era when Carlyle Group Inc. co-founder David Rubenstein, who bought the team from longtime owner Peter Angelos. The sale valued the franchise at $1.725 billion and unanimousl­y was approved by league owners Wednesday.

Not-so-new rules

After institutin­g a pitch clock last year that cut the average time of nine-inning games by 24 minutes to 2:40, its fastest since 1985, MLB shortened it with runners on base by two seconds to 18. MLB also widened the runner’s lane approachin­g first base to include 18 to 24 inches of fair territory until the edge of the grass, changing a more than century-old rule.

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY ?? Teams will try to keep Corey Seager, Adolis García and the Rangers from repeating as World Series champs.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY Teams will try to keep Corey Seager, Adolis García and the Rangers from repeating as World Series champs.

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