

Major League Baseball’s financial ceiling continues to rise, sharply.
Over the past two offseasons, a series of jaw-dropping contracts have reset the standard for what elite players can expect to earn.
Shohei Ohtani gets rare comment from Donald Trump at the White House
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is reshaping MLB contracts
First, Shohei Ohtani made headlines with his 10-year, $700 million deal with the Dodgers, a historic contract structured with heavy deferrals.
Then Juan Soto topped that with a $765 million, 15-year deal with the Mets.
Now, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has entered the conversation with a massive extension of his own, and it may be the clearest sign yet that baseball’s first billion-dollar contract is inching closer to reality.
Guerrero’s new 14-year, $500 million deal with the Toronto Blue Jays comes with an unusual twist: a reported $325 million portion labeled a “signing bonus,” to be paid in installments across the life of the contract.
Unlike Ohtani’s deferment strategy, which helped the Dodgers reduce their luxury-tax burden, Guerrero’s structure appears to prioritize immediate earnings, while still keeping Toronto’s financial flexibility intact. It’s a fresh take on creative compensation, and it could be a preview of what’s to come.
The ripple effect is already visible.
Younger stars like Jackson Merrill and Garrett Crochet have also secured large-scale extensions, suggesting that teams are eager to lock up emerging talent before prices climb even higher.
Merrill’s 9-year, $135 million pact with the Padres and Crochet’s 6-year, $170 million deal with Boston could look like bargains a few seasons from now if this trend holds.
But it’s Guerrero’s contract that’s raised eyebrows, and expectations.
Experts now believe that a billion-dollar deal is no longer a fantasy.
With names like Kyle Tucker reportedly eyeing north of $500 million in their next contracts, the race to $1 billion could begin sooner than expected.
According to former executive Jim Bowden, today’s record deals could look modest by 2030.
At the heart of this financial leap is a new kind of strategy, one that blends family legacy with sharp negotiation.
Guerrero Jr., following the guidance of his Hall of Fame father, was advised to “get the last penny.”
That mentality paid off.
His record-setting contract doesn’t just reflect his on-field value, it marks a broader shift in how business is done in baseball.
This news was originally published on this post .
Be the first to leave a comment