The New York Mets have made several additions this offseason, most overshadowed by the signing of Juan Soto. One of their risky additions could open the door for an in-house option to succeed if things do not work out.
Clay Holmes was the Yankees' closer last year. Now he's a starting pitcher for the Mets. He doesn't view the two teams as rivals.
The last time Clay Holmes started a major league game came at the end of the 2018 season, his rookie year with the Pirates.
After spending six years in the bullpen, Clay Holmes is confident he can become an effective starting pitcher for the New York Mets and he's excited about the change.
New Year, new Clay Holmes. The Mets’ newest pitching acquisition is already undergoing a transformation of sorts with his new team. Tuesday afternoon on a Zoom call, the right-hander was ...
Holmes was introduced Tuesday as a member of the New York Mets -- as a starting pitcher, not a reliever -- after signing a three-year, $38 million contract with a $12 million player option for the third season in 2027.
After the Mets signed free-agent Clay Holmes to a three-year deal, Juan Soto followed shortly after, and that's what Holmes was hoping for.
After hitting free agency, Clay Holmes will realize his hope of returning as a starter with the Mets after signing a three-year deal.
The New York Mets landed the big fish of free agency, signing superstar outfielder Juan Soto to a 15-year, $765 million contract. While that move alone has made
Sean Manaea and the New York Mets have finalized a $75 million, three-year contract that keeps one of the team’s best pitchers last season at the front of a remodeled rotation.
Much like his former Yankees teammate Luis Severino did a year ago, Clay Holmes was bearded for his introductory Zoom press conference with members of the Mets media last week.
Beyond Kodai Senga, the Mets don't currently have any pitchers with number-one starter potential. They appear uninterested in spending big money to find such an arm in free agency