Terms of San Francisco’s proposal are not clear. However, Feinsand reports that the former Cy Young winner is looking for a deal that would at least match the 5MM guarantee which Stephen Strasburg received from the Nationals over the 2019-20 offseason. (The net present value of Strasburg’s contract actually checked in around 9MM after accounting […]
Terms of San Francisco’s proposal are not clear. However, Feinsand reports that the former Cy Young winner is looking for a deal that would at least match the 5MM guarantee which Stephen Strasburg received from the Nationals over the 2019-20 offseason. (The net present value of Strasburg’s contract actually checked in around 9MM after accounting for deferrals.) The pre-deferral guarantee is the third-largest pitching investment in MLB history, trailing Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s 5MM contract with the Dodgers and the 4MM Gerrit Cole deal with the Yankees.The one question has been a recent dip in swing-and-miss. Burnes fanned upwards of 35% of batters faced between 2020-21. That dropped to roughly 30% in 2022. It has continued to trend down over the past two seasons, falling to a slightly above-average 23.1% rate this year. Even the “diminished” strikeout rate essentially matched Fried’s 23.2% rate, though, so Burnes isn’t at a disadvantage in that regard.
It’s unsurprising that Burnes and agent Scott Boras are shooting for Strasburg money in this market. MLBTR predicted Burnes to land seven years and 0MM in early November. Essentially every starter who has signed so far has equalled or beaten those (and most other) predictions. Max Fried was the biggest beneficiary. He landed an eight-year, 8MM contract at the Winter Meetings. That beat MLBTR’s prediction by two years and MM. Fried landed an extra season and MM than Aaron Nola received last winter.
The Giants relinquished their second- and fifth-highest draft picks and MM from their ’26 international amateur bonus pool to sign Adames. They’d surrender their third- and sixth-highest selections and another 0K from the international pool if they were to land Burnes, who declined a qualifying offer from Baltimore.
Corbin Burnes is the remaining headliner of the free agent class. The top starting pitcher is still unsigned despite the generally robust and quick-moving rotation market.
San Francisco might offer the best blend of spending capacity and need for an ace. Logan Webb is a legitimate #1, but the Giants haven’t replaced the production they lost when Blake Snell walked. Beyond Webb, San Francisco’s rotation consists of upside plays with questions about their durability and/or performance track records (i.e. Robbie Ray, Jordan Hicks, Kyle Harrison, Hayden Birdsong).
Virtually every prognostication had Burnes above Fried. That makes something in the 0MM range feel like the former’s floor. Creating a notable separation would push Burnes close to or beyond Strasburg money. Burnes is nine months younger than Fried. He hasn’t had any injuries of note. That differentiates him from Fried, who missed three months in 2023 because of a muscular flexor strain in his forearm. Burnes has also reached bigger heights, winning the National League ERA title and Cy Young in 2022.
Most of the recent chatter regarding Burnes has centered on some combination of the Blue Jays, Giants, Red Sox andOrioles (albeit to a lesser extent in Baltimore’s case). Mark Feinsand of MLB.com writes that San Francisco has had a standing offer on the table, though he notes that the Giants could elect to move on to other targets if there continues to be no resolution on Burnes’ part.
That’ll be weighed against the question of which teams still have the willingness to offer a deal well north of 0MM. The Yankees would’ve been an obvious Burnes suitor if they hadn’t landed Fried. They’re probably out of the mix now. The Mets seem unlikely to make a massive commitment to a starting pitcher. The Sox have already acquired Garrett Crochet and agreed to terms with Walker Buehler on a one-year deal, adding significant upside to their rotation. They might have the payroll room to remain involved on Burnes, but they’re no longer facing the same sense of urgency to add an impact arm.
The Giants have made two nine-figure investments in recent months. They extended Matt Chapman for 1MM in September before adding Willy Adames on a seven-year, 2MM free agent deal. RosterResource calculates their luxury tax number at approximately 8MM, which puts them around MM shy of the base threshold. Their actual salary commitments sit around 7MM. That puts them almost MM below last year’s spending level. It’s not clear if ownership is willing to again push beyond 0MM in Opening Day payroll, but they could theoretically add Adames and Burnes without a significant spike in relative spending.