Twins agree to one-year deal with Josh Bell

The Minnesota Twins have agreed to a one-year, $7 million contract with free-agent first baseman and designated hitter Josh Bell, including a mutual option for 2027. The deal addresses a key need at first base for the team. Bell brings veteran power after a solid 2025 season with the Washington Nationals.

The Minnesota Twins filled a significant gap in their lineup by agreeing to terms with Josh Bell on Monday. The contract is for one year at $7 million, with a mutual option for 2027, according to sources. The Twins have not yet confirmed the agreement. This move adds a switch-hitting slugger to a position where Minnesota lacked production last season.

Bell, who played for the Washington Nationals in 2025, posted a .237/.325/.417 slash line across 140 games, resulting in a 110 OPS+. He hit 22 home runs, tying his highest total since 2021, and achieved a .747 OPS, his best full-season mark since 2022. His 47% hard-hit rate was the highest since 2021, and his .497 expected slugging percentage topped his figures since 2019. Bell also showed strong on-base skills with a 10.7% walk rate, above the league average of 8.4%, and a 16.5% strikeout rate, well below the 22% league mark.

He finished the year hot, batting .339 with six homers and a 1.083 OPS in his final 20 games, including a standout four-hit, two-homer, six-RBI performance against the Miami Marlins on September 8. As a switch-hitter, Bell was far more effective from the left side (.804 OPS) than the right (.552 OPS). He appeared mostly as a designated hitter, starting 32 of 33 games at first base.

Minnesota's first basemen struggled in 2025 with a .240/.307/.371 line and .678 OPS, ranking 25th in baseball. The team cycled through starters recently: Miguel Sanó in 2022, Joey Gallo in 2023, Carlos Santana in 2024, and Ty France in 2025. France, signed to a non-guaranteed deal last winter, was traded to the Toronto Blue Jays at the deadline, with Kody Clemens filling in afterward. Bell's signing likely shifts Clemens back to a utility role.

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Cody Bellinger signing his new five-year contract with the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium press conference.
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Yankees finalize five-year, $162.5 million re-signing of Cody Bellinger

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The New York Yankees have finalized a five-year, $162.5 million contract with outfielder Cody Bellinger, their biggest offseason move. The frontloaded deal includes $85 million over the first two years, opt-outs after 2027 and 2028, a $20 million signing bonus, and a full no-trade clause, solidifying the outfield with Trent Grisham and Aaron Judge while raising questions about prospects like Jasson Domínguez amid roster needs and a projected $320 million payroll.

The Minnesota Twins have agreed to a two-year, $14 million contract with catcher and first baseman Victor Caratini, pending a physical examination. The 32-year-old switch-hitter joins the team after two seasons with the Houston Astros. This move adds left-handed versatility to the Twins' lineup behind the plate and at first base.

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Negotiations between the New York Yankees and free-agent outfielder Cody Bellinger have reached an impasse, with the team now operating under the assumption that he will sign with another club. The Yankees have offered a five-year deal worth at least $150 million, but Bellinger seeks a longer commitment of up to seven years. As talks stall, the Yankees are exploring alternatives like Kyle Tucker and Bo Bichette.

As the New York Yankees refuse to escalate their five-year, $160 million offer to free agent outfielder Cody Bellinger—who hit .272 with 29 home runs in 2025 for them—the Toronto Blue Jays see an opportunity to upgrade their roster and weaken an AL East rival. Following earlier reports of short-term Mets interest, Toronto's potential pursuit adds fluidity to Bellinger's market.

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The New York Mets and Yankees are both pursuing free agent outfielder Cody Bellinger amid a shifting MLB free-agent market. After the Mets signed Bo Bichette following a failed bid for Kyle Tucker, sources indicate New York teams see Bellinger as a key addition. Contract talks remain stalled over years, with Bellinger seeking seven while the Yankees offer five.

The New York Mets' hopes of signing top free agents Alex Bregman and Bo Bichette have dimmed as negotiations stall over contract length. With a payroll already at $277.3 million, the Mets appear reluctant to commit to the multi-year deals sought by the right-handed hitters. Meanwhile, the broader MLB free agency market has seen several high-profile signings, leaving Tucker as the top unsigned prize.

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The New York Yankees are intensifying their offseason efforts to bolster the roster for 2026, with re-signing Cody Bellinger as the top priority. Interest in free-agent infielder Bo Bichette serves as a potential fallback, though positional fits remain uncertain. Concerns over the starting rotation's health drive trade explorations.

 

 

 

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