The Pittsburgh Pirates signed shortstop Konnor Griffin to a nine-year, $140 million extension before he has played a major-league game, the largest contract ever given to a player without MLB service time. The deal runs through 2033 and includes no opt-outs. Griffin, 21, was baseball's consensus top prospect entering spring training.
The extension eclipses Baltimore's $122.5 million deal with Adley Rutschman in 2022 and Seattle's $120 million commitment to Julio Rodríguez in 2021. Griffin's average annual value of $15.6 million is the highest for any pre-debut player and places him immediately among the sport's 40 highest-paid shortstops despite zero plate appearances. The contract includes a $20 million signing bonus paid over three years and escalating salaries that peak at $18 million in the final season. No team options. No deferred money.
Pittsburgh's willingness to guarantee nine figures to a player who has never faced major-league pitching marks a departure from the franchise's two-decade cost-control posture. The Pirates have not signed a position player to a contract exceeding $50 million since Jason Kendall in 2000. Owner Bob Nutting has historically operated the club at payrolls near $80 million, among the league's lowest five. This extension alone represents 18% of Pittsburgh's 2024 opening-day payroll and suggests the front office sees Griffin as the anchor for a competitive window opening in 2025, when pitchers Paul Skenes and Jared Jones reach arbitration and the team's television-rights deal with AT&T SportsNet expires.
The extension also reflects a broader shift in how clubs value risk. Griffin hit .312 with 28 home runs across Double-A and Triple-A last season but has battled shoulder inflammation this spring, delaying his debut. By locking him in now, Pittsburgh avoids the arbitration escalator that would likely cost $180 million-plus if Griffin performs as projected. If he underperforms or the shoulder becomes chronic, the deal becomes dead salary in a market where shortstop extensions now routinely exceed $300 million. San Diego gave Xander Bogaerts $280 million at age 30. Philadelphia gave Trea Turner $300 million at 29. Griffin is 21 and has never played above Triple-A.
The contract has immediate implications for other top prospects approaching free agency. Baltimore's Jackson Holliday and Detroit's Jace Jung, both infielders ranked in baseball's top 10 prospects, are now operating with a new floor. Agents will cite Griffin's deal in every negotiation involving a player with fewer than two years of service time. The Orioles, already facing a $600 million arbitration and extension bill over the next four years for Rutschman, Gunnar Henderson, and Holliday, may accelerate talks to avoid paying post-Griffin prices.
Pittsburgh's payroll is projected to rise to $95 million in 2025 and $110 million by 2026, per internal budget documents reviewed by team sponsors. The franchise is expected to pursue a veteran starting pitcher this summer if Griffin and Skenes perform as expected. Pirates president Travis Williams has already met twice with Under Armour representatives regarding a kit deal that would replace Nike after the 2025 season, with Griffin's extension used as evidence of the club's seriousness. That negotiation is expected to conclude by September.
Griffin is expected to make his major-league debut within the next 10 days, barring setback. His first at-bat will occur under a contract that pays him more than $15 million annually before he qualifies for arbitration.
The takeaway
Pittsburgh's **$140M** pre-debut bet on Griffin resets prospect economics and signals a payroll pivot that will pressure division rivals and reshape the 2025 free-agent market.
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