Within the last four years, Luis Robert, Eloy Jimenez, Evan White, and Scott Kingery all signed their first multi-year Major League contracts before even debuting in the Show, as clubs began to increasingly explore the idea of the “pre-career” extension. The logic is simple — if a team thinks it has a can’t-miss prospect, signing that prospect to an extension before his service clock begins can give the team both cost-certainty over the player’s arbitration years, as well as control over at least a few free agent years via club options.
Robert’s six-year, $50MM pact with the White Sox (that could be an eight-year, $88MM deal if Chicago exercises a pair of club options) in January 2020 represents the high-water mark for pre-career deals, yet it is worth noting that the Astros were something of a pioneer with this tactic. Jon Singleton signed a five-year, $10MM contract in June 2014 before playing his first MLB game, and Houston also notably explored such a contract with George Springer prior to the future All-Star’s big league debut. This period overlaps with Mike Elias’ time (2012-18) in the Astros’ front office, and now that Elias has since moved on to run his own team as the Orioles’ executive VP and general manager, it is worth wondering if Elias might attempt locking up his own blue-chip prospect.
Adley Rutschman is widely expected to not only make his MLB debut in 2022, but also get the bulk of playing time as Baltimore’s starting catcher. Jacob Nottingham and Anthony Bemboom were recently signed to minors deals to provide at least some Major League experience in the team’s catching ranks, but either will just be a placeholder until Rutschman gets the call to the big leagues. Whether this debut happens on Opening Day or a few weeks into April may hinge on whether or not the service-time manipulation issue is addressed in the next Collective Bargaining Agreement, but an extension for Rutschman would make that question moot, and guarantee that Baltimore fans will get to see Rutschman as soon as possible.
The first overall pick of the 2019 draft, Rutschman has done nothing but reinforce that pedigree during his brief pro career. Rutschman already received two promotions up the ladder (to A-ball) in his first season in 2019, and after working out at the Orioles’ alternate training site in 2020 due to the canceled minor league season, he tore up the farm system in 2021. The catcher hit .285/.397/.502 with 23 home runs over 543 combined plate appearances with Double-A Bowie (358 PA) and Triple-A Norfolk (185 PA).
An argument can be made that Rutschman could use a bit more seasoning at the Triple-A level, particularly since he’ll be taking over a position that requires so much extra work in terms of pregame preparation and working with pitchers. However, as noted in Baseball America’s scouting report, Rutschman may be a bit ahead of the curve in this respect, due to his time spent with veteran pitchers, catchers, and Major League coaches at the 2020 alternate training site. Plus, Rutschman was already seen as a strong defender even in his college days at Oregon State, and BA now gives him a strong 60 grade on the 20-80 scouting scale (to go along with an eye-popping three 70 grades in hitting, power, and throwing arm.) Both BA and MLB Pipeline rate Rutschman as the best prospect in all of baseball.
In short, Rutschman seems like the kind of cornerstone prospect that any team would covet, especially an Orioles club that has been grinding through a top-to-bottom rebuild during Elias’ entire tenure. The O’s already see Rutschman as the next face of the franchise, and an extension would only cement that status. Given that the Orioles have almost literally no money on the books beyond the 2022 season, there’s plenty of payroll space to commit to a hefty contract for the burgeoning star.
For Rutschman and other star prospects presented with pre-career extensions, the question is simple. Does the player feel comfortable in taking a big payday now and locking in at least one eight-figure fortune from his baseball career, or does the player feel like betting on himself to perform as expected in the majors? The latter route carries more risk, but potentially sets the player up for even more money down the road, either through rising arbitration salaries, bigger free agent money once he hits the open market, or even a later extension with his current team.
From a pure dollars perspective, Rutschman has already achieved some solid financial security, via his $8.1MM signing bonus from the draft. This isn’t necessarily an indicator that he would be less open to an extension — Robert, for instance, already had a $26MM international signing bonus in the bank prior to his extension with the White Sox.
The added wrinkle in this case is Rutschman’s position. No catcher has ever signed a pre-career extension — expanding the list to players with less than a year of service time, the Royals’ February 2012 deal with Salvador Perez represents the earliest pact ever given to a backstop. Needless to say, Rutschman won’t be signing for a contract similar to Perez’s five years and $7MM in guaranteed money, though Perez did end up doing much better in two subsequent extensions with Kansas City.
Rutschman is enough of a top-tier prospect that the Orioles probably won’t have much concern over guaranteeing a big long-term deal to a catcher. From Rutschman’s perspective, taking a big contract now might have some appeal as a hedge against potential injury, simply because catchers inevitably receive so much wear and tear (even if the DH or a potential move to first base down the road can help). Plus, unless the next CBA adjusts when players are eligible to reach free agency, it will be quite some time before Rutschman can hit the open market. He turns 24 in February, so if his debut is indeed pushed off to mid-April for service-time reasons, Rutschman won’t be scheduled for free agency until he is entering his age-31 season.
So while there are some valid reasons why Rutschman might be open to an extension early in his career, that doesn’t necessarily mean he would take a deal before his career gets underway. It can be assumed that a Rutschman extension would top Robert’s record, and yet Rutschman might have eyes on a bigger target — such as the 11-year, $182MM deal Wander Franco just signed with the Rays in November.
Since Joe Mauer is the only catcher to sign a deal worth more than $182MM, Rutschman won’t top Franco’s number. Plus, Franco is both younger (turning 21 in March) and plays shortstop, so he is more of a safer long-term play for an extension, even for a lower-payroll club like the Rays. However, while Rutschman and his representatives likely wouldn’t be aiming to top Franco’s contract, the deal does serve as a reminder of the greater riches that can await a star prospect if he exhibits even some of that early promise at the MLB level. While no reports surfaced whether or not Tampa explored a pre-career extension with Franco, had he inked such a contract, it would have been worth much less than his eventual $182MM guarantee.
Obviously, matching Franco’s excellent 2021 performance is no small feat for any player, especially a rookie like Rutschman. But, just staying on the field and performing pretty well in 2022 would represent a nice showcase for Rutschman, and give the Orioles even more confidence in committing a major sum closer to the $100MM mark than simply a bump over Robert’s $50MM pact with the White Sox.
Given Rutschman’s status as an elite prospect, it is quite possible an extension akin to Robert’s deal could be on the table next winter anyway even if he doesn’t quite hit the “performing pretty well” threshold. Barring a major injury or an unusual amount of struggles at the MLB level, the Orioles would likely still have interest in extending Rutschman prior to his sophomore year, considering all of his widely-touted potential.
A Rutschman extension would also have no small amount of symbolic value for the franchise. Simply promoting Rutschman might have that same galvanizing effect on the long-suffering Baltimore fans, so Elias and the front office don’t necessarily need to rush into things just yet. However, officially planting the financial flag on a new era of Orioles baseball would set a clear direction that the rebuild is almost over, and the organization will again start spending and looking to play some competitive baseball.
astros_fan_84
Almost certainly a better investment than Chris Davis.
Please, Hammer. Don't hurt 'em.
He definitely is. I think Rustchman will be a generational talent.
Side question: How high should Rustchman be drafted in a very deep keeper or dynasty league? Super high? If he turns into the best hitting catcher in baseball having him for his entire career would be huge.
Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid
You should take him with the first pick. Really show your confidence in the guy.
Bruin1012
I agree on Adley he is a special talent.
As a Red Sox fan I am extremely jealous and the guy is a winner he has won at every level. He seems to make those around play better. At a minimum the moment he takes the field he is one of the 5 best catchers in baseball right away especially defensively. I know the one knock on this guy is he struggled for about a month while adjusting his swing a little but was pounding the ball again right after that lull. I have been watching a lot of the minor league games thanks to the Milb app. His hitting approach is excellent he doesn’t chase takes a lot of walks and hunts pitches to do damage on. I am really excited to see how this plays out he is extremely intelligent from all accounts and he is about as can’t miss it comes. Baltimore has a keeper on their hands and if they can extend him early then this the kind of guy to take that risk on.
paddyo furnichuh
@Hammer….He’s still on my roster in a 12 team ML points league. Similar position for me, keeping him or Baz are both risky, high upside keepers. Rutschman has more value in points league with his history of high OBP.
A big part of your strategy should include league size (how deep?), scoring system, and keeper options.
Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid
Give him the deal, you literally have nothing to lose. If he flops, the rebuild flops. So go all in on him.
Rsox
The O’s biggest problem is pitching and the lack there of at the MLB level. If the young arms develop and produce it won’t matter if Rutschman is Johnny Bench or John Marzano. A team cannot build its hope around player who’s position requires him to be out of the lineup 30-40 games per season. I don’t think he’ll flop but i do think the O’s success is not solely contingent on him either
DarkSide830
I imagine he’ll DH several days he doesnt catch.
gorav114
Good thing the birds also have the best pitching prospect in baseball! Grayson Rodriguez FTW
warnbeeb
Rutschman certainly banked millions of $$$ with his #1 signing bonus. He can afford to wait. If I were his agent I would say, “hang on, you got time on your side”.
Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid
If you were my agent, I’d fire your ass.
vtadave
how manty hours a day do you spend on this site? Not judging or anything.
Ron Tingley
As many as you to notice apparently.. nerd
BasedBall
That’s what agents do Chipper jr.
I think the orioles would be smart to lock the kid up but every agent should run away from signing their players with Baltimore.
A good agent would steer their player to a winning team. Or where they’ll be happiest.
The Orioles aren’t exactly yearly contenders. Losing is contagious, no one wants that stench on them.
Prospectnvstr
Adley is the top positional prospect AND Grayson Rodriguez is the TOP pitching prospect. The Cleveland INDIANS were TERRIBLE for years. In the early ’90s they finally got the right people in place. They came up with a plan and (most importantly) stuck with the plan. They were competitive for over a decade and went to the World Series in ’95 & ’97.
Juiced Balls
Was coming on here to say the same, warnbeeb. When you get that kind of bonus slot, you wait it out.
1984wasntamanual
Wouldn’t you need to know what was offered before coming to any conclusion?
king beas
10 years 125 million and since there’s no money on the books currently why not front load it so when the team gets better and is willing to spend more his salary would be getting smaller instead of bigger
BasedBall
I like front loaded contracts from the payroll perspective and the Orioles would be a prime candidate to do it. I’d worry about giving young kids so much money so early. Money changes our motivation. Some get more motivation but many have less after getting the big check.
Juiced Balls
Hmm, maybe. I’d say it takes a lot of passion to get through the grind of making it that far, though. And I can’t imagine any players willingly wanting to fail at the sport they grew up with at the highest level.
Rsox
Five examples given and only two have actually been productive (coincidentally on the same team)
Personally i think the O’s should see what they have in Rutschman before committing long term guaranteed money. However an extension would probably mean Rutschman breaks camp as the starting Catcher, whether he’s ready or not.
Chipper Jones' illegitimate kid
You also have to look at Tatis, Soto, Vlad and all the other kids who didn’t sign a deal until its too late to get them cheaply.
Rsox
And that there is an interesting aside to all of this. The players union complaining the young players need to be paid but then complaining when players like Albies and Acuna sign very team friendly long term deals.
Oddvark
@Rsox
Of course, the issues are connected. Players are incentivized to sign team-friendly deals early precisely because they’d otherwise get paid so much less for the first several years under the current structure — 3 years at league minimum-ish + 3 years of arb salaries which rarely come close to market value. If the system didn’t suppress pay for good young players, those players wouldn’t agree to such team-friendly deals and could get paid more in line with their market value.
So it’s completely consistent for the MLPBA to complain both about the relatively low pay over the first few years of MLB service and to be concerned about young players signing long-term deals that are too team-friendly.
LordD99
Matt Wieters, another can’t-miss Orioles catching prospect, was also the #1 prospect in the game pre 2009.
mike156
Wieters had a career BWAR of 18.2, which isn’t terrible and was an All-Star 4 times, so not a total bust. Made about $60M. Also, not terrible. Peaked at 26, gravitated back towards injured and eh.
Yankee Clipper
Do you guys find it ironic how people talk about Yankees fans overvaluing prospects and two players who nearly won rookie-of-the-year, when Adley hasn’t played in the MLB at all, save for a brief call-up? He’s a “generational talent” and they should lock him up for years to come? He literally hasn’t played in the majors, at all.
I’m not asserting he won’t be good, or great, but wow, hypocrisy abounding.
BeforeMcCourt
When was the last yankee prospect that was the best prospect in baseball with 3 70 grades? I’ll wait
1984wasntamanual
The difference is that many people rank him very highly, not just yankees’ fans.
BlueGreatDane
@Yankee Clipper —Adley hasn’t had a brief call up, and anyone trying to honestly evaluate him should absolutely know that, as it’s critical to his career at this time. The *real* irony is you trying to talk down another teams top talent, and a consensus top-rated player, when you appear to have no idea about the player.
waldfee
Rutschman would have to be a complete imbecile to agree to some low-ball early extension. He’ll have to look no further than Ronald Acuña Jr. to see a young superstar athlete who threw away $150+ MM by signing an early offer.
His $8.1 MM signing bonus should last him long enough to patiently wait for his big payday, preferably with a contending franchise.
vtadave
yeah poor Acuna…
mlb1225
And yet Acuna had a massive injury half way through 2021 and is far from a guarentee to start in the 2022 OD line-up. Hopefully, the ACL tear doesn’t affect his future performance. Even if it does, he’s guaranteed nearly $100 million. There are no such things as guaranteed futures in baseball. If a team offers generational changing money to a player before they play even one major league game, they’re going to take that offer.
mike156
This is right. There are plenty of highly-valued prospects who just don’t pan out, and many who sustain injuries that either cost them years or some of their talent. If the dollars are big enough on the extension, you’d have to be a little short-sighted not to at least consider it. Jon Singleton probably doesn’t regret his.
BlueGreatDane
I know an imbecile when I see one, and Adley’s no imbecile.
mike156
Rutschman looks to me like a player who will definitely need a little seasoning…maybe some salt and pepper, a little garlic, olive oil, and marinate just long enough to gain another year’s control and push arb out. Once that occurs, amazingly ready-to-be-plated Rutschman will be served to O’s fans.
ArianaGrandSlam
The only thing that he wishes is that he gets traded to a better team, which is pretty much all other teams but his.
DarkSide830
speaking of better teams, when was the last time the Yankees won a legitimate championship?
BeforeMcCourt
Will take at least 90M I’d imagine, and if the deal is a 10 year Face Of the Franchise type contract… 125M+?
Don’t think it happens until he has a year in the majors, even if for more money.
gorav114
While this seems like a great idea, go ahead and name me the last player the Os signed an extension with. Go ahead, I’ll wait. JJ Hardy doesn’t count because it was day before free agency
BlueGreatDane
It’s almost like there’s a totally new front office running things, you know?
GETBUCKETS
Chris Davis…
mstrchef13
This is only really beneficial to the Orioles financially if the deal gets into his free gent years, say an 8 or 9 year deal. From a PR standpoint it would be a brilliant move.
GETBUCKETS
If I were Adley and O’s I would be in some sort of extension, but Adley’s perspective I wouldn’t take anything that goes past the arbitration in length, maybe a mutual option for 1 year longer.
He’s a little older, so don’t want to reach free agency in your 30s. Set yourself up for a big pay day, but also get some more money and bypass the arbitration headache.
Orioles FO create excitement, seem committed, and they don’t have to do with arbitration also and some of the negative effects that comes from that sometimes.
southern lion
The orioles owe it to Cedric Mullins, Trey Mancini, and Austin Hayes, not to mention their fans, to make a deal with this player NOW.
davemlaw
The O’s experience with Wieters will negate any chance of a long term deal, as it should.
There’s no telling how Adley will age and the risk for injury for a catcher is always high. Baltimore would do better to get 6 1/2 years out of him and see where they are at the end. Also, this kid is from Oregon and might not be too keen committing to a long term deal with an East Coast team.
fljay73
Aldey needs to wait a bit on signing a extension at such a young age. At least complete 1 season of MLB baseball to see if he can have a very good rookie season which will help him in extension negotiations. Unless the offer from the Orioles is over $75mil (for 5 to 6 years) he can find himself in a contract that will severely under pay him.
Logjammer D"Baggagecling
Players should NOT extended before they ever play a ML games. You just never know if that highly Touted prospect will be a complete bust. Like Matt Bush
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