Jarred Vanderbilt hoping for an opportunity to help Lakers on defense

Lakers forward Jarred Vanderbilt, sitting between teammates LeBron James, left, and Jake LaRavia, rarely has played in the last 10 games, but with Austin Reaves injured, the defensive specialist might be an option to join the rotation. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

Perhaps Jarred Vanderbilt and his ability to defend can help the Lakers and their reeling defense.

Perhaps Vanderbilt can return to the rotation to help the Lakers’ defensive woes while guard Austin Reaves is out for approximately a week because of a mild left calf strain.

And perhaps Vanderbilt and the Lakers can get some immediate results for shoring up their defensive shortcomings when they face the Suns in Phoenix on Sunday afternoon.

The 6-foot-8 Vanderbilt is hopeful that his opportunity will come against the Suns and he turns that into a positive for the Lakers.

“Oh, yeah, I’m pretty eager,” he said after practice Saturday. “I mean, obviously, I think a lot of the stuff we lack, I think I can help provide on that end.”

In the last 10 games, Vanderbilt had only a three-minute stint against the Philadelphia 76ers because Jake LaRavia took a shot to the face that loosened a tooth.

Read more:Lakers look to sharpen defensive focus for Suns; Austin Reaves sidelined by injury

The return of LeBron James and Vanderbilt’s offensive deficiencies left him out of the rotation. During much of that time the Lakers were winning, which meant Vanderbilt spent time on the bench.

In 15 games, Vanderbilt is three for 10 (26.6%) from three-point range. He was asked how he has been handling things.

“Good,” Vanderbilt said. “Controlling what I can control. Keep showing up to work, doing my part, supporting the team.”

Vanderbilt was asked if coach JJ Redick or any assistants have spoken to him about his role.

“Kind of here and there, I guess,” Vanderbilt said.

Vanderbilt was seen after practice Saturday working with an assistant coach on his shooting, just like he did after practice Friday and like he has done while not playing.

Read more:Lakers’ Austin Reaves to miss at least a week because of calf strain

Redick said Reaves, who played against the San Antonio Spurs on Wednesday night, wasn’t sure when the calf became an issue, and “we’re obviously gonna be cautious with it.”

“It’s a mild strain, Grade 1, and he’ll be out for a week,” Redick said, adding, “I would venture to say every player is a little bit different, but players now are becoming more cautious — to use that word again — more cautious when they get those diagnosis with the calf. Everything looks clean. It’s not in the deep part.”

The Lakers have looked at the last 10 games during the film sessions as a barometer for their defensive problems. But in reality, the Lakers have not been very good on defense all season while producing a 17-7 record because of their stellar offense.

“It’s been a trending thing even when we was winning, so I think like you said, the defense still wasn’t there, but we was just outscoring everybody,” Vanderbilt said. “So, I think obviously during the loss, it’s an appropriate time to address certain things just so it won’t keep lingering and get worse.”

The Lakers are 18th in the NBA in points given up (116.8), 22nd in opponents’ field-goal percentage (48.1%) and 27th in opponents’ three-point shooting (38.2%).

They will face a Suns team that defeated them Dec. 1 at Crypto.com Arena. The Lakers were unable to stop Collin Gillesipie, who had 28 points and was eight for 14 from three-point range, and Dillon Brooks, who had 33 points.

It hasn’t gotten better in the ensuing days. The Spurs loss was the Lakers’ third in the last five games.

“Nobody likes to go watch film after you get your ass kicked,” guard Marcus Smart said. “It’s tough because the film never lies. And it exposed us a lot, which we already knew. We were just winning a lot of games. So it was mitigated that way, but it was straight to it: We have to be able to guard.

“The scouting report against us is we’re not guarding people. And if we want to be great in this league and do what we’re trying to do, you have to be able to guard, especially in the West. These guys are no joke, and they’re coming. And especially [if] you got the Lakers across your jersey. They’re definitely coming with everything they have. So you can’t be expecting any surprises. And that’s what it was. It wasn’t no sugarcoating anything. It was, ‘This is what we got to do.’ We’ve been asked. Let’s fix it.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Cavaliers’ Evan Mobley out 2-4 weeks after suffering left calf strain

Cleveland Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley will miss 2-4 weeks with a Grade 1 calf strain, team announced on Saturday.

Mobley left Friday’s 130-126 win over the Washington Wizards after feeling tightness in his left calf and underwent an MRI to determine the severity of the injury. Hehad recorded 23 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists in over 36 minutes before exiting the game.

The Cavaliers will now add Mobley’s name to a lengthy injury list that includes Jarrett Allen (finger), Sam Merrill (hand), Larry Nance Jr. (calf), and Max Strus (foot).

The 24-year old Mobley leads the Cavaliers in rebounds (9.3 per game) and blocks (1.6) and is second in scoring (19.1) behind Donovan Mitchell through 25 games.

Entering Saturday, the Cavaliers are 15-11 and sit in seventh place in the Eastern Conference, just behind the Toronto Raptors in a play-in game place.

Cavaliers’ Evan Mobley out 2-4 weeks after suffering left calf strain

Cleveland Cavaliers forward Evan Mobley will miss 2-4 weeks with a Grade 1 calf strain, team announced on Saturday.

Mobley left Friday’s 130-126 win over the Washington Wizards after feeling tightness in his left calf and underwent an MRI to determine the severity of the injury. Hehad recorded 23 points, 13 rebounds and 6 assists in over 36 minutes before exiting the game.

The Cavaliers will now add Mobley’s name to a lengthy injury list that includes Jarrett Allen (finger), Sam Merrill (hand), Larry Nance Jr. (calf), and Max Strus (foot).

The 24-year old Mobley leads the Cavaliers in rebounds (9.3 per game) and blocks (1.6) and is second in scoring (19.1) behind Donovan Mitchell through 25 games.

Entering Saturday, the Cavaliers are 15-11 and sit in seventh place in the Eastern Conference, just behind the Toronto Raptors in a play-in game place.

Pitching prospect Jonah Tong ‘highly coveted’ in Mets’ trade talks: report

Mets pitching prospect Jonah Tong is reportedly a top player to know as New York navigates the trade market.

The New York Post’s Jon Heyman reported Saturday that the 22-year-old right-hander “is highly coveted in trade talks” with the Mets valuing Tong “highly” but “listening.”

Fellow right-hander Nolan McLean, meanwhile, “is viewed as off-limits” with outfielder Carson Benge “close to that,” Heyman added.

McLean and Benge are the highest-ranked prospects in Joe DeMayo‘s offseason top 30 for SNY. Tong is fourth behind infielder/center fielder Jett Williams.

Tong went 2-3 with a 7.71 ERA in five starts this past season. He rose through the Mets’ farm system, starting the year with Double-A Binghamton before elevating to Triple-A Syracuse in August and New York by the end of the month.

Tong’s MLB debut on Aug. 29 against the Miami Marlins was a 19-9 win for the Mets. He allowed four runs (one earned) on six hits while striking out six and walking none.

His next four starts were mixed. Tong’s final outing, a 10-3 loss at the Chicago Cubs, saw him last two innings while surrendering five runs on seven hits with two walks to one strikeout.

“Tong could use a little more minor league time, but with improvement in command and refinement of a third and maybe fourth pitch, the sky’s the limit,” DeMayo wrote. “Without that development, there is a non-zero chance for some reliever risk.”

Tigers agree to a 1-year, $11M contract with relief pitcher Kenley Jansen

More relief pitching is on the way for the Detroit Tigers. 

The team reportedly signed Kenley Jansen to a one-year, $11 million contract pending a physical, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan. The contract includes a club option. 

Jansen, 38, played for the Los Angeles Angels last season. His 29 saves were tied for ninth in MLB. He is the second reliever the Tigers have signed this offseason, after the Tigers re-signed Kyle Finnegan to a two-year deal at the winter meetings.

The Tigers acquired Finnegan from the Washington Nationals at last season’s trade deadline. The 34-year-old Detroit native posted a 1.50 ERA and 0.72 WHIP with four saves over 16 games for the Tigers.

The Tigers also traded rookie right-handed reliever Chase Lee to the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday. This move helped clear a spot on the 40-man roster for Finnegan. Lee, 27, had a 4.10 ERA, 36 strikeouts and a 4–1 record in 2025. The Tigers received 24-year-old left-hander Johan Simon from the Blue Jays in exchange for Lee.

After a hot start to the season, the Tigers finished 87–75 and narrowly avoided a second-half collapse before losing to the Seattle Mariners in the ALDS.

While adding to the bullpen will certainly help the Tigers, the future of Tarik Skubal looms over the franchise. The AL’s back-to-back Cy Young winner finished the season with a 13-6 record in 31 starts, posting a 2.21 ERA with 241 strikeouts and ranking second in Major League Baseball in both categories.

With the 29-year-old’s deal set to expire after the 2026 season, trade speculation has surrounded the ace. Nearly every contender has been, or will be, linked to Skubal this winter.

Mets reach 2-year deal with infielder Jorge Polanco after losing Pete Alonso

The New York Mets have agreed to a two-year deal with veteran infielder Jorge Polanco, a person with knowledge of the agreement told The Associated Press on Saturday.

The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the deal was pending a physical and had not been announced.

Polanco hit .265 with 26 home runs and 78 RBIs this year for the Seattle Mariners. It was the 32-year-old’s second season with Seattle after a decade with the Minnesota Twins.

Polanco’s arrival comes after the departures of outfielder Brandon Nimmo, closer Edwin Díaz and first baseman Pete Alonso left New York without three of its fan favorites. Polanco’s deal is worth a reported $40 million.

Last year, Polanco was mostly a designated hitter and also played second base, but New York’s biggest current need in the infield may be at first after Alonso’s exit. The Mets acquired second baseman Marcus Semien in a trade for Nimmo, and Francisco Lindor is a fixture at shortstop.

Polanco was an All-Star in 2019 for Minnesota, and he hit a career-high 33 home runs in 2021. He had surgery in October 2024 to repair his left patellar tendon, and the Mariners declined his $12 million option for the 2025 season. But they brought him back for $7 million, and he produced one of his best offensive seasons.

Yankees re-signing Amed Rosario: reports

The Yankees are re-signing Amed Rosario, according to multiple Saturday reports.

YES Network’s Jack Curry first reported the deal, which is a one-year contract.

The pact is reportedly for $2.5 million. The New York Post’s Jon Heyman and The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal were among those to report the salary terms.

Rosario can earn another $250,000 in incentives, according to ESPN’s Jorge Castillo.

Rosario, 30, slashed .303/.303/.485 with one home run and five RBI in 16 regular-season games for the Yankees this past season.

He especially crushed left-handed pitching, slashing .302/.328/.491 with four home runs and 15 RBI in 52 games across two teams.

Rosario is “likely to get reps” behind third baseman Ryan McMahon, against left-handed pitching and elsewhere, Curry added.

New York landed Rosario before the 2025 MLB trade deadline in a July 26 deal with the Washington Nationals.

He signed a one-year, $2 million contract with the Nats last January and slashed .270/.310/.426 with five home runs and 18 RBI in 46 games for Washington.

Rosario’s career started with the Mets. He played for New York from 2017-20 before stints with Cleveland (2021-23), the Los Angeles Dodgers (2023) and Tampa Bay (2024), Cincinnati (2024).

Mets, Padres ‘engaging’ in trade talks: report

The Mets and Padres are “engaging” in trade talks, according to a report Saturday by The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal, Dennis Lin and Will Sammon.

Right-handed starting pitcher Nick Pivetta, outfielder Ramón Laureano and three relievers — right-handers Jeremiah Estrada and Mason Miller and left-hander Adrian Morejon — are San Diego’s reported players in discussions with New York.

The Padres, meanwhile, are reportedly inquiring about the Mets’ younger MLB players and all top prospects.

The Mets hadsubstantial” trade talks with the Athletics about Miller, whom the Padres ultimately landed at the 2025 deadline in a July 31 deal.

Miller was a 2024 All-Star with the Athletics. In his 22 regular-season games with the Padres this past campaign, he allowed two runs on seven hits (one homer) while striking out 45 and walking 10 across 23.1 IP. The 27-year-old is under club control through the 2029 season.

Meanwhile, Pivetta, 32, signed a four-year, $55 million contract with the Padres after splitting his career’s first leg on the Philadelphia Phillies (2017-20) and Boston Red Sox (2020-24).

In his 31 regular-season games this past campaign, Pivetta went 13-5 with a 2.87 ERA over 181.2 IP. He had a career-high 5.3 WAR and personal-best 0.985 WHIP.

Pivetta has an opt-out clause after the 2026 season, and a player option following the 2027 campaign.

The Baltimore Orioles originally signed Laureano, 31, last February on a one-year, $4 million contract with a team option for the 2026 season. The Padres landed him in a July 31 trade and exercised his club option in early November.

Laureano logged 50 regular-season games with the Padres this past year, slashing .269/.323/.489 while adding nine home runs and 30 RBI. He totaled 24 home runs, 76 RBI and a /.281/.342/.512 slash line in 132 games (82 with Baltimore).

Morejon, 26, was a 2025 All-Star and has been with the Padres for the past decade. He defected from Cuba in October 2015 and signed with San Diego the following July, working through the minor leagues before making his MLB debut July 21, 2019.

In 75 regular-season games this past year, Morejon totaled a career-best 2.08 ERA and 0.896 WHIP across 73.2 IP.

Estrada, 27, has been with the Padres since they claimed him off waivers in November 2023. In two seasons with the Padres, he has a 3.22 ERA and 1.119 WHIP over 139 games (134 IP).

MLB Free Agent Tracker 2025-26: Mets adding Jorge Polanco, Tyler Rogers heads to Blue Jays

MLB’s Hot Stove is here, and you can track all of the activity from the 2025-26 MLB offseason with our convenient free agent tracker.

The tracker, which is based on Matthew Pouliot’s Top 100 MLB free agents, covers each of the big names and the information you need to know.

Once a player signs with a team, or a decision is made about an option, the relevant contract information is added along with a link to a blurb write-up from Rotoworld.

Bookmark this page and check back throughout the MLB offseason! We’ll keep track of it all.

Don’t forget: Check out theRotoworld player news feed for all the latest news, rumors, and transactions as MLB’s Hot Stove gets underway!

RELATED: Breaking down Edwin Díaz’s deal with the Dodgers

Who are the top MLB free agents for 2025-26?

Player POS 2025 Team 2026 Team Contract info.
Kyle Tucker OF Cubs
Dylan Cease SP Padres Blue Jays Seven years, $210M
Bo Bichette SS Blue Jays
Alex Bregman 3B Red Sox
Framber Valdez SP Astros
Pete Alonso 1B Mets Orioles Five years, $155M
Cody Bellinger 1B/OF Yankees
Kyle Schwarber DH/OF Phillies Phillies Five years, $150M
Ranger Suárez SP Phillies
Tatsuya Imai SP Japan
Josh Naylor 1B D-Backs/Mariners Mariners Five years, $92.5M
Munetaka Murakami 1B/3B Japan
Edwin Diaz RP Mets Dodgers Three years, $69M
Michael King SP Padres
Eugenio Suárez 3B D-Backs/Mariners
Devin Williams RP Yankees Mets Three years, $51M
Brandon Woodruff SP Brewers Brewers One year, $22.025M
Lucas Giolito SP Red Sox
J.T. Realmuto C Phillies
Zac Gallen SP Diamondbacks
Merrill Kelly SP D-Backs/Rangers
Kazuma Okamoto 2B/3B Japan
Chris Bassitt SP Blue Jays
Shota Imanaga SP Cubs Cubs One year, $22.025M
Ryan Helsley RP Cardinals/Mets Orioles Two years, $28M
Harrison Bader OF Twins/Phillies
Gleyber Torres 2B Tigers Tigers One year, $22.025M
Robert Suarez RP Padres Braves Three years, $45M
Tyler Mahle SP Rangers
Trent Grisham OF Yankees Yankees One year, $22.025M
Jorge Polanco 2B Mariners Mets Two years, $40M
Ha-Seong Kim SS Rays/Braves
Raisel Iglesias RP Braves Braves One year, $16M
Ryan O’Hearn 1B/OF Orioles/Padres
Tyler Rogers RP Giants/Mets Blue Jays Three years, $37M
Max Muncy 3B Dodgers
Justin Verlander SP Giants
Luis Arraez 2B/1B Padres
Pete Fairbanks RP Rays
Brad Keller RP Cubs
Max Scherzer SP Blue Jays
Marcell Ozuna DH Braves
Cody Ponce SP/RP KBO Blue Jays Three years, $30M
Kenley Jansen RP Angels
Dustin May SP/RP Dodgers/Red Sox
Victor Caratini C Astros
Kyle Finnegan RP Nationals/Tigers Tigers Two years, $19M
Luke Weaver RP Yankees
Mike Yastrzemski OF Giants/Royals Braves Two years, $23M
Zach Eflin SP Orioles
Steven Matz SP/RP Cardinals/Red Sox Rays Two-years, $15M
Seranthony Domínguez RP Orioles
Adrian Houser SP White Sox/Rays
Emilio Pagán RP Reds Reds Two years, $20M
Cedric Mullins OF Orioles/Mets Rays One year, $7M
Drew Pomeranz RP Cubs
Anthony Kay SP Japan White Sox Two years, $12M
Nick Martinez SP/RP Reds
José Alvarado RP Phillies
Tomoyuki Sugano SP Orioles
Michael Soroka SP/RP Nationals/Cubs Diamondbacks One-year, $7.5M
Adolis Garcia OF Rangers
Danny Jansen C Rays/Brewers Rangers Two years, $14.5M
David Robertson RP Phillies
Zack Littell SP Rays/Reds
Foster Griffin SP Japan
Paul Goldschmidt 1B Yankees
Germán Márquez SP Rockies
Willi Castro UTIL Twins/Cubs
Starling Marte OF Mets
Josh Bell 1B Nationals
Jose Quintana SP Brewers
Nathaniel Lowe 1B Nationals/Red Sox
Miguel Rojas INF Dodgers Dodgers One-year, $5.5M
Tyler Kinley RP Rockies/Braves
Walker Buehler SP Red Sox/Phillies
Isiah Kiner-Falefa UTIL Pirates/Blue Jays
Patrick Corbin SP Rangers
Austin Hays OF Reds
Max Kepler OF Phillies
Michael Kopech RP Dodgers
Michael Lorenzen SP/RP Royals
Phil Maton RP Cardinals/Rangers Cubs Two years, $14.5M
Gregory Soto RP Orioles/Mets Pirates One year, $7.75M
Hunter Harvey RP Royals
Tyler Anderson INF Angels
Miles Mikolas SP Cardinals
Rhys Hoskins 1B/DH Brewers
John Means SP Guardians
Michael Conforto OF Dodgers
Rob Refsnyder UTIL Red Sox
Lane Thomas OF Guardians Royals One-year, $5.25M
Jordan Montgomery SP Diamondbacks
Martín Pérez SP White Sox
Pierce Johnson RP Braves
Luis Rengifo INF Angels
Chris Paddack SP/RP Twins/Tigers
Tommy Kahnle RP Tigers
Jonah Heim C Rangers
Kirby Yates RP Dodgers
José Leclerc RP Athletics
Miguel Andujar 3B/OF Athletics/Reds
Shawn Armstrong RP Rangers
Aaron Civale SP Brewers/White Sox/Cubs

Mets signing Jorge Polanco: reports

The Mets are signing veteran infielder Jorge Polanco on a two-year deal, according to multiple Saturday reports.

The Athletic’s Will Sammon first reported the agreement, which is worth $40 million, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan. The Mets “outbid” the Mariners for Polanco, who was “very torn” over whether to stay in Seattle or leave for New York, according to The Seattle Times’ Adam Jude.

Passan added that Polanco is expected to play first base and designated hitter.

Polanco, 32, slashed .265/.326/.495 with  26 home runs and 78 RBI in 138 regular-season games for the Mariners this past season.

“There’s also somebody like a Jorge Polanco, who I think is a creative choice actually,” Sammon said this week on SNY’s Baseball Night in New York. “Everybody thinks of that guy as a third baseman, maybe a second baseman in this market. I think he could play some first base, too. And that’s not really the name that jumps to people’s minds, but he’s a pretty good offensive player and I feel like his defense is a little bit underrated. I know he’s taken some groundballs at first base. It’s just a possibility.”

He rebounded from his 2024 campaign with Seattle in which he slashed .213/.296/.355 while adding 16 home runs and 45 RBI across 118 games.

Polanco spent the first 10 years of his career with the Minnesota Twins. He slashed .269/.334/.446 with 112 home runs and 447 RBI in 832 regular-season games.

The Twins originally signed Polanco, who is from the Dominican Republic, as an international free agent in 2009.

He made his MLB debut June 26, 2014.