San Diego Union-Tribune

MEETINGS WRAP UP SANS BIG SIGNINGS

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Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto were still up for grabs as team officials started to head home Wednesday evening following a baseball winter meetings of much talk and little action.

Ohtani, the unique two-way star, is expected to get a record contract of $500 millionplu­s. His agent, University High product Nez Balelo, didn’t travel to the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center, preferring to stay away.

While Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts acknowledg­ed meeting with Ohtani at Dodger Stadium before heading to Nashville, other teams were mum. Some fans tried to use f lighttrack­ing programs to determine Ohtani’s whereabout­s, and Toronto General Manager Ross Atkins sparked speculatio­n of a get-together at the team’s spring training facility in Dunedin, Fla., when he switched a media availabili­ty on Monday to Zoom.

Ohtani has not spoken with reporters since Aug. 9, two weeks before a pitching injury that required surgery and will keep him off a mound until 2025.

The Yankees made a rare trade with the rival Boston Red Sox late Tuesday, acquiring outfielder Alex Verdugo for right-handers Greg Weissert, Richard Fitts and Nicholas Judice.

“He’s actually been a guy that we’ve talked about now for, for a while,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said of Verdugo. “I feel like there’s an edge he plays the game with.”

Both the Yankees and Mets are among the teams seeking Yamamoto, a 25year-old right-hander who was 16-6 with a 1.21 ERA this season for the Orix Buffaloes of Japan’s Pacific League. The Yankees plan to meet with the pitcher on Monday in California, a person familiar with the planning told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because details were not announced.

Mets owner Steve Cohen and President of Baseball Operations David Stearns went to Japan ahead of the winter meetings to talk with Yamamoto and family.

“I think it demonstrat­es Steve’s commitment to do everything he possibly can to bring players to New York,” Stearns said.

In deals that did get finalized, Baltimore agreed to a $13 million, one-year contract with closer Craig Kimbrel, and World Series champion Texas signed veteran reliever Kirby Yates to a $4.5 million, one-year contract.

Agent Scott Boras, who represents Juan Soto along with free agents Cody Bellinger, Blake Snell, Jordan Montgomery and Jung Hoo Lee, held his annual winter meetings news conference filled with one-liners.

“As far as Bellinger, we know that the belly button has been pushed and there’s a lot of inners, more inners than outers no doubt,” Boras said. “So it’s been an aggressive campaign for elite talents in these winter meetings.”

Snell followed his 2018 AL Cy Young Award by winning this year’s NL honor. “When you flip the coin, it always comes up ... on both sides,” Boras said.

Teams stocked up on pitching in the big-league phase of the winter meeting draft of unprotecte­d players, taking pitchers with eight of the 10 selections — including three from the Yankees’ system.

The Yankees lost a pair of right-handers in the first two picks, with Oakland taking Mitch Spence and Kansas City selecting Matt Sauer.

Notable

Yadier Molina will remain with the St. Louis Cardinals as a special assistant to John Mozeliak, their president of baseball operations, after retiring in 2022.

Joe Castiglion­e, a Boston Red Sox radio announcer for 41 years, won the Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award for excellence in broadcasti­ng.

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Shohei Ohtani

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