Will the St. Louis Cardinals find a way to offload star third baseman Nolan Arenado's contract before Spring Training gets here? He has three years left on his
The St. Louis Cardinals are running out of options as they look to trade superstar third baseman Nolan Arenado to a team to which he's willing to be moved. Aren
St. Louis Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. provided some clarity on Nolan Arenado's ongoing trade-request drama.
In a YouTube video published on Monday, content creator Jim Riley of BALLCAP Sports proposed a hypothetical trade that would send Arenado and $8.5 million in cash considerations t
St. Louis Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak continues to make it known that he wants third baseman Nolan Arenado off his team. Over the weekend, he labeled the prospect of trading the veteran All-Star during the latter portions of MLB’s offseason as “priority one,
The Cardinals are looking to trade Nolan Arenado, and his friend, Lars Nootbaar says the third baseman "looks really good right now."
“John Mozeliak says trading Nolan Arenado remains ‘Priority 1, 2 and 3' but acknowledges the team remains in a holding pattern due to the FA market. He would like to add to the bullpen/maybe a RH-bat, but won’t before they have clarity on Arenado’s future,” Katie Woo of The Athletic wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
The Red Sox need a right-handed power hitter and have been connected to both third basemen. But both players are imperfect fits.
Post-Dispatch staff will provide rolling, and constantly updated coverage from the final day of the Cardinals' Winter Warm-up.
John Mozeliak says trading Nolan Arenado remains “Priority 1, 2 and 3” but acknowledges the team remains in a holding pattern due to the FA market. He would like to add to the bullpen/maybe a RH-bat, but won’t before they have clarity on Arenado’s future.
A blockbuster trade proposal has the Cardinals trading star third baseman Nolan Arenado to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Unsurprisingly, he touched on the team’s biggest offseason storyline: the Nolan Arenado trade discussions. Much of that is due to the no-trade rights of the Cards’ most expensive players.