Paul Skenes didn’t need long to show how little he thought of the latest round of speculation about his future.
At Monday’s All-Star media availability in Philadelphia, the Pirates ace was in the middle of answering one reporter’s question at Citizens Bank Park when another voice cut in with a line that stopped the moment cold: “Just got the best interview of all time with Paul Skenes. Future Yankee.”
Skenes, who was representing Pittsburgh at the All-Star Game and is already one of the biggest names in the sport, turned toward the comment with a look of clear confusion. His response was short and blunt.
“Who’s that?” a baffled Skenes said, smiling.
That was the extent of it. No follow-up, no long answer, just a reaction that made the whole exchange even more awkward.
The reporter who made the comment has not been identified, though a woman’s voice can be heard saying it. The moment came during a day when All-Star media sessions are already known for odd questions and loose talk, but this one landed a little differently.
The chatter around Skenes’ future has been there since he arrived, and it isn’t going away anytime soon. He is still a long way from free agency, with that date set for after the 2029 season, meaning he remains under Pirates control for three more years beyond 2026.
His path to that timeline has already been shaped by the rules. Skenes was called up in May 2024 and would have been under team control through 2030 if not for his Rookie of the Year win in 2024, since a top-two finish under current rules gives a player a full year of service time.
That reality is part of why his name keeps popping up in speculation. The Pirates have rarely been a team that hands out huge contracts, and for a pitcher of Skenes’ caliber, the concern is obvious: at some point, the price could get too steep.
And if Pittsburgh ever decides it wants value back before free agency arrives, the conversation would have to turn to a trade well before the fall of 2029.
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