Plus: The top milestones we saw in 2022
We've seen all kinds of strange trades in baseball.
We've seen teams swap managers. We've seen a broadcaster traded for a player. We've seen two guys dealt for each other between games of a doubleheader. We've seen the likes of John McDonald, Dickie Noles and Harry Chiti traded for ... themselves (they turned out to be the "player to be named" in deals that had briefly shipped them elsewhere).
The strangest trades, though, are when human players are dealt for animals, food or inanimate objects. With that as the theme, here are 10 of the strangest trades the sport has ever seen. | |
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| For the final MLB Pipeline Inbox of 2022, Jim Callis must choose between two -- and sometimes three -- prospects submitted by readers. | | |
| Only a select group of players can spend their entire Major League careers with a single franchise. And even fewer can accomplish that feat while also producing at an elite level. | | |
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| Look back at players who made their mark when it mattered most at 1 and 5 p.m. ET on MLB Network Countdown. | | |
| Who has hit the longest walk-off homer tracked by Statcast (introduced in 2015) so far? | |
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