The Cincinnati Reds may be sitting last in the NL Central, but their latest move gives fans something real to hang onto.
Cincinnati has agreed to a seven-year, $105 million contract extension with Chase Burns, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan. The deal keeps the 23-year-old right-hander in Cincinnati through 2033, and it comes with no club options.
"Right-hander Chase burns and the Cincinnati Reds are in agreement on a seven-year, $105 million contract, sources tell ESPN," Passan reports. "Burns, 23, was an All-Star this season and one of the best young pitchers in baseball.
No club options. A straight deal that will run through 2033."
For a franchise that usually isn’t throwing around this kind of money, the size of the commitment says plenty. Burns has been a bona fide Cy Young contender, and the Reds are paying like they know exactly what they have.
The deal also lands at a time when Cincinnati’s young core is starting to take shape. Elly De La Cruz has looked great, Sal Stewart was an All-Star and appears to be a cornerstone piece, and now Burns is locked in for the long haul.
That matters because the next question is obvious: what comes next for De La Cruz and Stewart? There has been some concern about whether the Reds could get extensions done for the rest of their young talent. But if Cincinnati is willing to commit this kind of money to Burns, a 23-year-old All-Star and one of the best young pitchers in baseball, that has to be encouraging for the rest of the roster.
The $105 million figure also matches the biggest pitching contract in franchise history, tying the deal the Reds gave Homer Bailey. That alone shows how strongly the organization believes in Burns.
And for Reds fans, that’s the real takeaway. Even with the standings looking bleak this season, the front office just made a clear statement about the future. Burns is part of it, and Cincinnati is showing it’s ready to keep building around its young stars.
In Other News...
Cubs Fans Cant Believe What Live TV Caught At Wrigley
A routine Cubs-Twins game at Wrigley Field turned into an unexpected social media detour when a fan in the crowd was caught on live TV wearing a shirt with a provocative message. The image flashed across the broadcast during Chicagos 5-2 loss to Minnesota, and it did not take long for viewers to notice what was on display.
The screenshot soon spread online, where the reaction was immediate and plenty of people weighed in with jokes and commentary. For a night that was already going poorly on the field, the fans shirt became the sort of offbeat Wrigley moment that can overshadow the baseball for a while, at least until the next pitch or the next viral clip comes along. [Read more 🡒]
Cubs Prospect Rankings Suddenly Feel Much Deeper After The 2026 Draft
ESPNs latest Cubs prospect update after the 2026 MLB Draft gives the farm system a very different look, one shaped as much by the draft as by the players who have already been in the pipeline. Jefferson Rojas, Josiah Hartshorn and Jaxon Wiggins still anchor the group, but the list now has a noticeably newer feel, with recent additions joining the mix and pushing the organizations depth into a more crowded, more interesting place.
Cade Townsend and Caden Sorrell are part of that surge, and Myles Bailey also cracked the top 10 as the Cubs prospect picture keeps shifting. The bigger takeaway for Chicago is how quickly the balance has changed, with several familiar names no longer sitting where they once did and the system now asking which of these recent picks can turn draft-day promise into something that lasts. [Read more 🡒]
Jed Hoyer Just Made Another Familiar Cubs Pitching Move
The Cubs dipped back into a familiar name on the pitching market, bringing Aaron Civale back into the organization after a deal with the Athletics. Chicago sent right-hander Aiden Moffett the other way, and the move fits the kind of short-term, practical bullpen fix the front office has leaned on when the staff starts to thin out.
Civale is expected to give the Cubs innings out of the bullpen, a useful role with Daniel Palencia and Hoby Milner both on the injured list and the deadline still ahead. His arrival also points to more roster shuffling to come, and a corresponding move will likely follow as Chicago continues to piece together its pitching staff. [Read more 🡒]
