Garrett Crochet Reportedly Signs Record-Breaking Contract for Pitchers With Red Sox in Unprecedented Extension

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The price of power in baseball has never been higher. Pitching is an unpredictable art—one day, you’re an unhittable force; the next, you’re sitting in the dugout with an ice pack on your elbow. Teams know this. And yet, every offseason, they roll the dice, throwing massive contracts at arms they believe will define their future.

And now, another high-stakes bet has been placed. A team has just handed out a record-breaking deal to a pitcher with fewer than 250 career innings. The gamble? That his power is worth more than his limited track record.

Jeff Passan from ESPN said, “left-hander Garrett Crochet and the Boston Red Sox are in agreement on a six-year, $170 million contract extension, sources tell ESPN. The deal starts in 2026 and includes an opt-out after 2030. By far the largest deal ever for a pitcher with 4 years of service”.

Such contracts don’t come around often, especially for someone with Crochet’s history. When the team traded for the star this offseason, the front office saw a legend in the making. The Red Sox think Crochet is someone who could guide their rotation for years. However, the reality is that Garrett Crochet is far from a conventional workhorse.

The lefty has just 224 career innings under his belt. Most teams would hesitate to commit long-term money to a pitcher with so little mileage. But Boston isn’t paying for what he’s done; they’re paying for what he could become. With a 100-mph fastball and a filthy cutter, Crochet flashed ace potential last season, striking out 209 batters in 146 innings. It’s enough to justify a bet—but a $170 million one? That’s a different level of confidence.

 

BREAKING: Left-hander Garrett Crochet and the Boston Red Sox are in agreement on a six-year, $170 million contract extension, sources tell ESPN. The deal starts in 2026 and includes an opt-out after 2030. By far the largest deal ever for a pitcher with 4+ years of service.

— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) April 1, 2025

And then there’s the durability issue. Tommy John surgery wiped out his 2022 season, and before 2024, he was used more as a reliever than a starter. Paying top dollar for a pitcher is always risky, but betting this much on one with so little starting experience? It’ll either look like a stroke of genius in five years or a cautionary tale teams study for decades.

The Red Sox’s big gamble and the transforming market

This deal is not just related to Garrett Crochet—it is related to the Red Sox finally deciding they have had enough of mediocrity. The team did not just pay their new lefty ace; they paid a $120 million contract for Alex Bregman. In addition, the team added Walker Buehler on a one-year deal and revamped their roster in ways that make one thing clear: they are preparing to win now.

And they’re not alone. The market for elite arms is reaching absurd levels, with teams betting big on upside. The Yankees just gave Max Fried $218 million despite him entering his 30s. The Dodgers handed Blake Snell $182 million at age 32. The trend is clear—teams are no longer waiting for long résumés before shelling out mega-deals.

So the question is simple—will this risk pay off? Or will the Red Sox join the long list of teams burned by a pitching bet gone wrong?

Boston has made its choice. They believe Crochet isn’t just an ace—he’s the ace they need to turn their fortunes around. Maybe they’re right. Maybe they’re dead wrong. But one thing is certain: they’ve just redefined what teams are willing to pay for power.

Do you think this deal will go down as a masterstroke?

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