The Orioles are locking up top catching prospect Samuel Basallo to an eight-year, extension that guarantees the youngster $67MM, as first reported by Andy Kostka of The Baltimore Banner. Kostka adds that the deal includes a club option for the 2034 season and maxes out at $88.5MM if all incentives and escalators are reached.
Basallo, who celebrated his 21st birthday just nine days ago, has now signed what ESPN’s Jeff Passan notes is the largest pre-arbitration extension for a catcher in MLB history just three games into his major league career. It’s a testament to Basallo’s status as one of the most impressive prospects in the entire league. He was a consensus top-15 prospect in the sport entering the 2025 season and has only improved his stock since then after slashing .270/.377/.589 (151 wRC+) in 76 games for Triple-A Norfolk this season with 23 homers and a 13.7% walk rate. He did all that while being the youngest qualified hitter in the International League this year.
That sort of sensational production left nothing for Basallo to prove at Triple-A in terms of his bat, and while his time in the majors has barely begun he’s already gotten off to a hot start by going 3-for-10 with a double, a run scored, five RBI, a hit-by-pitch and just one strikeout across his first 11 plate appearances in the majors. With that said, questions have been raised about his defensive ability behind the plate by outside prospect evaluation services. Even GM Mike Elias himself acknowledged that he felt Basallo’s skills behind the plate needed more work before he came to the majors back in June, though the fact that he’s not only been called up since then but has now inked a massive extension certainly suggests that Elias and the rest of the Orioles’ brass have liked what they’ve seen.
More to come.