The Orioles’ Samuel Basallo deal looks better every time another young star cashes in.
That became even clearer yesterday, when the Cardinals announced an eight-year extension for rookie second baseman JJ Wetherholt worth $112.5 million, with bonuses that can push it to $132 million. Deals like that are a win for the player, the club, and the fan base - Wetherholt gets life-changing money, St. Louis gets a long-term piece to build around, and Cardinals fans get a jersey they can wear for years.
For Baltimore, though, every new extension around the league only sharpens the contrast. Last fall, the Orioles locked up catcher Samuel Basallo on an eight-year, $67 million contract with a ninth-year team option worth another $18 million.
That means Baltimore has Basallo for roughly the same length of time as St. Louis has Wetherholt, but potentially for about $45 million less over the first eight seasons.
And Wetherholt isn’t the only recent example. Earlier this season, the Tigers extended Kevin McGonigle for $150 million over eight years, starting next year.
Konnor Griffin got a nine-year, $140 million deal that begins this year. A few weeks before Basallo signed, the Red Sox gave Roman Anthony an eight-year, $130 million contract that starts this year and includes a team option for 2034 worth $30 million.
Those deals all have the chance to look team-friendly if the players stay healthy, and depending on options, they should all run through the 2034 season. But from Baltimore’s perspective, Basallo’s number stands out. The Orioles got in early, and they got him cheaper.
There were a few reasons that happened. Basallo was willing to talk extension, which matters.
A lot of Baltimore’s other young core players are represented by Scott Boras, who has a reputation for steering clients away from these pre-arbitration deals. His approach is to push players toward free agency, where they can get paid what they’re worth.
That helps explain why Gunnar Henderson, Jordan Westburg, and Jackson Holliday haven’t seriously entertained extension offers.
Timing mattered too. The Orioles struck before Basallo had established himself at the major league level.
When he signed, he had only five big league games under his belt. If Baltimore had waited a year, let him stack up more at-bats, and then tried to do the deal after he’d proven he was a bona fide major league slugger, the price would have climbed fast.
That’s part of why the Wetherholt, Anthony, and McGonigle contracts landed where they did - those players had already shown all-star-level production, at least in part.
Basallo’s earlier signing bonus also shaped the negotiation. Griffin and Wetherholt each had bonuses above $6 million in 2024.
Anthony and McGonigle both received more than $2.5 million in the 2022 and 2023 drafts. Basallo’s bonus, by comparison, was $1.3 million in 2021.
That’s not nothing, but it put him in a different financial position when the extension conversation came around.
The result is a deal that should pay Basallo about $85 million before he reaches free agency at 29, when he can cash in again. That part of the story still has a happy ending for him.
And for Orioles fans, there’s the simpler part: Basallo is fun to watch. He plays with joy, celebrates his homers with a two-handed bat chuck and a huge grin, and gave Baltimore another bright moment last night with a game-winning shot. Even in a tough season, he’s been the kind of player fans can hang onto.
As more of these young-star extensions pile up, the numbers will keep shifting. Maybe one or two of the other nine Basallo peers will end up with a better WAR total over the next eight or nine years. But on pure value, the Orioles may already have the best bargain of the bunch.
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