Shane McClanahan and the Tampa Bay Rays head into the 2025 season hopeful of doing better than their 80-82 finish last year.
After missing most, if not all, of their 2024 seasons, these pitchers have a great chance to make their recent injuries a thing of the past.
Former New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback and current FOX broadcaster Tom Brady has now ventured into the world of team ownership.
Spytek will be hired as the Raiders general manager, reuniting the Bucs assistant GM with Brady, who is a minority owner of the Las Vegas club but a big voice in this decision. For the past nine seasons, Spytek played a significant role in the personnel decisions, both in the draft and free agency, by Bucs general manager Jason Licht.
In disappointing news, former Tampa Bay Rays stars Fernando Rodney and Ben Zobrist have fallen off the ballot for the National Baseball Hall of Fame. While Ichi
The Rays will not go to any arbitration hearings this year, as they agreed on Wednesday to a one-year deal with shortstop Taylor Walls that includes a club option for the 2026 season. Walls will earn $1.
While the vast majority of attention this off-season has been placed on Tropicana Field, the Tampa Bay Rays still have a baseball season to prepare. With pitchers and catchers reporting to their spring site in Port Charlotte in just over one month,
The Tampa Bay Rays, who finished 80-82 last season, have long been known to capitalize on the trade value of players on expiring contracts. Consistently at the bottom of the league in payroll, the Rays must be deliberate in assessing their players’ current and future values.
This story was excerpted from Adam Berry's Rays Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
As Andrew Berry and the Browns get ready for the 2025 NFL Draft, which may be the most consequential of his tenure as Cleveland’s general manager, we’re looking back at each of his previous five drafts to see how he’s done.
This story was excerpted from Adam Berry's Rays Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.
The Rays demand Tropicana Field be repaired and ready for opening day of the 2026 season. In response, leaders with the City of St. Petersburg say their agreement doesn't include a "deadline" for the repairs.