Cincinnati Reds shortstop Elly De La Cruz rejected the club's extension offer this week, leaving the franchise without cost certainty on its highest-ceiling asset and sending front offices across baseball into spreadsheet mode. The exact structure of the Reds' proposal has not been disclosed, but market analysts briefed on comparable frameworks suggest De La Cruz's camp is calibrating for a free-agent deal exceeding $1 billion when he reaches unrestricted status after the 2028 season.
De La Cruz, 22, posted a .850 OPS across 160 games in 2024, combining power (25 home runs), speed (67 stolen bases), and defensive range that maps to a 4.5 WAR profile. The Reds control him through three arbitration cycles before he reaches free agency at age 26—precisely the age at which Fernando Tatís Jr. signed his $340 million extension with San Diego in 2021, and two years younger than Juan Soto will be when he hits the market this winter. Soto's deal is projected in the $600-700 million range by agents who have reviewed term sheets. De La Cruz's camp, led by Greg Genske of The Genske Group, appears to be betting that a clean bill of health through 2028, plus continued production, positions him as the first position player to approach the $700 million threshold Shohei Ohtani's deferred structure nominally touched.
The rejection carries second-order consequences for Cincinnati's roster planning. The Reds deferred $75 million in payroll obligations when they traded Luis Castillo to Seattle in 2022, banking flexibility for this exact scenario. They now face a decision tree: extend De La Cruz before arbitration escalates his annual cost above $20 million, or hold him through his peak years and risk a 2028 bidding war with six teams carrying $300 million+ payrolls. The comparable the front office fears most is not Tatís—whose extension bought out free-agent years before his age-27 season—but Ronald Acuña Jr., who signed for $100 million in 2019 and is now regarded as a structural underpay. Acuña's agent, Genske's colleague at Genske Group, has since recalibrated how he values players with 70-grade speed and power.
Cincinnati's owner, Bob Castellini, has authorized payrolls above $130 million only twice in his 18-year tenure. The Reds' current $105 million Opening Day figure ranks 22nd in MLB. If De La Cruz reaches arbitration in 2026, his projected awards—$8 million in year one, $15 million in year two, $22 million in year three—consume the salary band the club typically reserves for two starting pitchers. The alternative, a trade before arbitration, would command a return comparable to the Padres' haul for Juan Soto: three top-100 prospects and a major-league-ready starter. Cleveland's front office has already begun modeling packages.
Three items to track over the next 18 months: whether De La Cruz maintains his stolen-base efficiency above 80% through 2025, which would cement his case as the game's only true five-tool shortstop; whether Cincinnati's front office pivots to a trade before the 2026 deadline, when his arbitration clock starts and controllable value peaks; and whether any club—Seattle, the Mets, or the Dodgers—begins setting aside balance-sheet reserves for a 2028-29 bidding cycle that now includes De La Cruz, Soto's next contract, and Baltimore's Gunnar Henderson.
The Reds return to extension talks after the season. By then, Soto's deal will be public, and the $1 billion threshold will either look prescient or mistimed by exactly one contract cycle.
The takeaway
De La Cruz's rejection forces Cincinnati to choose: extend before arbitration triples his cost, or trade him at peak controllable value by 2026.
elly de la cruzcincinnati redscontract extensionmlb free agencygreg genske
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