Major League Baseball has been experimenting with the Automatic Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system in some spring training games. The technology has been used in the minors and, like everything in life,
Aaron Boone is experimenting with the New York Yankees lineup and his latest comments about a potential leadoff option shouldn't make fans feel at ease.
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Aaron Boone’s new deal for the Yankees is, in effect, a three-year deal through 2027, as they bumped his pay this year to $4.5M and added two years at $5M and $5.5M, making it $15M over three years, The Post has learned. So about $10.5M over two years was added, moving him closer to the upper echelon of manager pay.
New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone has made a surprising lineup decision following Giancarlo Stanton’s injury. How will this change impact Aaron Judge and the team’s World Series aspirations? Find out here.
Aaron Boone may not always get the respect of a top MLB manager from fans or analysts, but now the New York Yankees skipper is getting paid like one. Boone's contract extension, which effectively gives him a new three-year deal, catapults him into the top three highest-paid managers in baseball.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone weighed in on MLB's automated ball-strike challenge system that will be tested during spring training games this year.
The New York Yankees announced on Saturday that Giancarlo Stanton will begin the 2025 season on the injured list. Stanton not being ready for Opening Day appeared to be an inevitable outcome as he hasn't been able to participate in spring training due to tendinitis in both of his elbows.