The Phillies haven’t yet broached the subject of a contract extension with either catcher J.T. Realmuto or first baseman Rhys Hoskins, the two players told reporters (including Philly.com’s Scott Lauber and Jim Salisbury of NBC Sports Philadelphia). The duo each expressed interest in remaining with the Phillies over the long term, and neither seemed perturbed by a lack of negotiations.
Realmuto can become a free agent after the 2020 season, though despite mutual interest in an extension from both the catcher and the team, Lauber writes that “neither side feels urgency to rush into anything” since Realmuto only joined the Phillies in February. It stands to reason that the Phils will wait until the winter to really delve into contract talks, though obviously another All-Star caliber season from Realmuto will only raise his asking price. There’s even less of a rush to extend Hoskins, as the slugging first baseman is under team control through the 2023 season and isn’t even arbitration-eligible until the 2020-21 offseason.
Looming over this whole discussion, of course, is the state of free agency, as the last two offseasons of slowed activity have resulted in an incredible number of contract extensions signed over the last two months. The Phillies themselves have already been a part of that action, inking Aaron Nola to a four-year extension worth $45MM in guaranteed money. The extension flurry has seen both established stars (like Realmuto) and younger pre-arb players (like Hoskins) taking a payday now rather than test what has become an increasingly unfriendly free agent market to veteran players.
Realmuto will turn 30 in March 2021, while Hoskins will turn 31 prior to the 2024 season. In Hoskins’ case, he stands to make some solid money during his arbitration years if he continues to hit, as the arb process rewards traditional counting stats like home runs and RBI. A pricey multi-year deal, however, could be harder to come by unless the next collective bargaining agreement between MLB and the players’ union (the current deal expires in December 2021) changes the free agent climate.
“I think all of us players have noticed [what’s happened in free agency],” Hoskins said. “Obviously we hope stuff like that flips by the time that we get there. I don’t know if it will ever get back to where it was, but hopefully it starts trending in the opposite direction of where it is right now. I think a lot of those questions are going to be answered after [2021].”
According to Salisbury, the Phillies previously tried to extend Hoskins prior to the 2017 season, before he had even made his Major League debut. Philadelphia used a similar approach with another top prospect in Scott Kingery last year, signing Kingery to a six-year, $24MM deal that gave the Phils club options over three of Kingery’s free agent years.
Hoskins’ camp declined those earlier offers, though Hoskins has since changed representation to the Boras Corporation. As much as Scott Boras is known for taking his clients into the open market, Hoskins reiterated that his agent is perfectly willing to negotiate extensions if they make sense for the player. It should be noted that Boras has a number of noteworthy extensions on his record, including Xander Bogaerts’ new pact with the Red Sox from just a couple of weeks ago.
Brixton
Hoskins is already controlled through his age 30 season, don’t see a huge need to lock up a 1B into his 30s 5 years out.
JTR is different, throw him something slightly above Martin/McCann’s deals and hope he bites.
spinach
He isn’t a free agent (and won’t be this offseason) and the free agent market is way less robust than it used to be. Both things suggest maybe their offer ought to be less. Though I agree Realmuto is quite good.
brandons-3
Let’s hypothetically assume all options are picked up:
Kingery: 9/66
Albies/ 9/49
Yeti
Lol. Almost no chance the Phillies pick up those options. Kingery isn’t even on the team if not for his contract. The Albies signing made the Phillies look even more ridiculous!
DarkSide830
The reason Kingery got what he did was because he was not on the 40 man. if he was he’d probably not have gotten extended or even debuted by now. Comparing the two doesn’t make the Kingery extention look bad, it just shows how much of a bargain Albies’s is.
spinach
This makes no sense. Him not having been on the 40-man means that he was even further from the majors which means that he was even further from arbitration and free agency, which would lower the value of any extension (or not change it more likely as a player good enough for an extension isn’t going to spend the max amount of time prior to being put on the 40-man…it really has nothing to do with anything.)
Yankeedynasty
When did Kingery get extended
DarkSide830
prior to the 2018 season. same idea as the Eloy extention.
Philliesfan4life
Hoskins will be tough to lock up since he is a boras client, but they can give Realmuto an extension since they don’t have to worry about Trout coming.
DarkSide830
id hold off on extending Hoskins until he proves he’s worth the extra years.