Cincinnati's Elly De La Cruz turned down the Reds' extension offer this week, the first formal rejection in what front-office sources expect will become a $1 billion career negotiation spread across three contracts and two teams. He is 22. He has 197 major-league games. His agent already has the Juan Soto timeline printed.
The Reds proposed a deal in the $100M-$150M range over eight years, according to two people briefed on the structure. De La Cruz's camp declined without a counter. The calculus is clean: he reaches arbitration after 2027, free agency after 2030, and his age-30 season in 2032. If he stays healthy and maintains even 85% of his current production—30 stolen bases, 25 home runs, plus-defense at short—he enters free agency during the same winter as Gunnar Henderson and Bobby Witt Jr. That market will reset the position. The Reds are offering to pay him before he is expensive. He is choosing to become expensive first.
De La Cruz is the seventh player since 2019 to reject a nine-figure extension before reaching arbitration. Six of the seven signed larger deals later. The exception was a pitcher who needed Tommy John surgery. De La Cruz plays shortstop, the sport's second-most-expensive position after starting pitcher, and he has elite speed, which ages better than power in the data. His OPS+ last season was 107. Trea Turner signed for $300M at age 29 with a 113 OPS+ and comparable defensive metrics. Wander Franco was heading toward $200M+ before his legal issues. The floor is already visible.
What makes this rejection unusual is the timing. Most players wait until after their first All-Star season to decline an offer. De La Cruz is moving faster. His agent, Ballengee Group's Rex Ballengee, also represents Kumar Rocker and has a reputation for late-stage bidding wars, not early bundling. The Reds wanted to lock him in before he becomes Fernando Tatis Jr.—the Padres gave Tatis $340M after 143 games. Cincinnati is a $150M payroll market trying to think like a $250M market. De La Cruz is thinking like he will finish his career somewhere with $350M to spend.
The Reds now face a three-year window. They control him through 2027 at near-minimum salary, roughly $2M-$8M total depending on arbitration raises. If he performs, they either extend him in 2026 at a higher number or trade him in winter 2027 before losing him for a draft pick. The trade return would be similar to what San Diego received for Juan Soto: three top-100 prospects and a major-league regular. The Reds have not traded a franchise player for prospects since they sent Ken Griffey Jr. to the White Sox in 2008. They have also not signed a position player to a deal over $100M since Joey Votto in 2012. Something will break.
De La Cruz's next leverage point is May 2025, when contract extension talks typically resume. If he posts another 4-5 WAR season and stays healthy, the price moves past $200M. The Reds' decision will depend on whether ownership approves crossing into Dodgers-style risk. They have $48M coming off the books after 2025, mostly from Nick Senzel and expiring veteran deals. De La Cruz could eat all of it in year one of a long-term deal.
Watch the Reds' draft spending in July. If they stay under slot, ownership is saving for an extension. If they go over, they are preparing to trade him and rebuild the farm. Watch also whether Cincinnati hires a new head of baseball operations before spring training. The current front office built around De La Cruz. A new regime might prefer to cash out and start fresh. De La Cruz's camp will be watching the same thing.