• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Cincinnati Sports News

Cincinnati Sports News

Cincinnati Sports News

  • Bengals
  • Reds
  • FC Cincinnati
  • Colleges
    • Ohio University
    • Univ of Cincinnati
    • Univ of Kentucky
    • Xavier

What could the Reds contract offer to De La Cruz have looked like?

January 18, 2026 by Red Leg Nation

Late on Friday night a report came out from C. Trent Rosecrans of The Athletic that the Cincinnati Reds had offered shortstop Elly De La Cruz a contract that could have made him the highest paid player in franchise history. As you now know, it was turned down by De La Cruz. There’s a lot of things going on here that deserve talking about.

In the first sentence of the story it says that De La Cruz’s offer from the Reds would have eclipsed that of Joey Votto’s 10-year, $225,000,000 extension. But the quote provided from Nick Krall, the team’s president of baseball operations was “we made Elly an offer that would’ve made him the highest-paid Red ever,” and I do think there’s things worth noting with the two things here.

A lot of the offers to players of the Elly De La Cruz variety in recent years that have signed big extensions have done so for a whole lot of guaranteed money, but also had incentives built into the contract that would bump things up anywhere from a little bit to a whole heck of a lot. Look no further than Hunter Greene, for example – his deal was for six years and $53,000,000, but that doesn’t include a $21,000,000 team option in the 7th year or that he could have earned over $20,000,000 more in various performance bonuses. There’s a pretty big difference between $53,000,000 and $95,000,000 but technically the Reds did offer Greene $95,000,000, give or take, in his contract. He won’t get that because he’s missed some of the bonuses already (he had bonuses for Cy Young placements and All-Star games). So the question is – was the offer for more money than Votto made all guaranteed money, or was it a contract built like Greene’s where a lot could be earned through things like MVP placement and All-Star games?

Let’s take it at face value, though, and say it was a guarantee for more money than what Joey Votto got out of his deal. That would mean that the deal would top $225,000,000. What would that kind of contract probably look like? I used some back of the napkin math to try and lay it out and here’s what I came up with:

Year Salary Details
2025 $2,000,000 Year 2 in MLB
2026 $5,000,000 Year 3 in MLB
2027 $10,000,000 Arb 1
2028 $17,000,000 Arb 2
2029 $22,000,000 Arb 3
2030 $30,000,000 FA
2031 $30,000,000 FA
2032 $30,000,000 FA
2033 $30,000,000 FA
2034 $30,000,000 FA
2035 $30,000,000 FA
Total $236,000,000

The offer was made in the spring of 2025. That’s a pretty important note when trying to compare it to what Joey Votto got because Elly De La Cruz was just entering his second season in terms of his “pay scale” as it relates to service time. Votto signed his deal during his 5th full season, which was after he had already been paid for both his 1st and 2nd years of arbitration (the 5th year’s arbitration number was scrapped and replaced by the 1st year of his contract extension). De La Cruz was going to be making the league minimum of $760,000 in 2025 and in 2026 he would get the league minimum of $780,000 before finally reaching arbitration where he would get a significant raise but still one that was peanuts compared to what he could get in actual free agency. And the same holds true for both 2028 and 2029’s salary, too. Votto’s deal had to basically pay him free agent money far sooner in his 10-year deal, where with De La Cruz the escalation to free agent money would take a lot longer.

You can probably rearrange a little more money to the front end of the deal to take off a little at the back end of it if you’d like. Teams don’t usually do that for a lot of reasons, but hey, you can give that a shot. But it’s probably not going to change much overall here in that the deal would probably have to be 11 years or more and pay De La Cruz $30,000,000 a year for a bunch of those years in order to top the Votto deal.

What that would mean is that Elly De La Cruz wouldn’t reach actual free agency until he was 34-years-old. And that means that this would be the only time he could land a “big” contract (big is relative here, but since we’re comparing it to his peers and not us normal folks….). So then you get the question of, do you just take the gamble that you can get a free agent contract heading into your age 28 season that can be worth more than whatever $236,000,000 minus what you guess you would make going through the normal league minimum and arbitration systems before free agency?

Let’s math that one out a little bit. De La Cruz is going to make roughly $1,600,000 for 2025 and 2026 combined. But then he hits arbitration. Let’s just use the numbers above as a guide and say in 2027-2029 he will get $45,000,000 through the arbitration process. De La Cruz is then betting on himself being able to get a free agent deal in 2030 that would net him more than $189,000,000. For his part that seems like a good bet when you look around at how much money guys are getting paid (and let’s remember that when the offer was declined we did not have any of the recent signings of this offseason).

If we take the words of Nick Krall in the literal sense (the more money than Votto got was all guaranteed) and not the hypothetical sense (that if he earned all of his performance bonuses then he would have made more than Votto), then it doesn’t seem outrageous to say that they made a good offer. That offer just wasn’t quite good enough. Sometimes two things can be true at the same time. It’s possible that the Reds made a competitive and good offer and that Elly De La Cruz made a good choice in turning it down.

The post What could the Reds contract offer to De La Cruz have looked like? appeared first on Redleg Nation.

Filed Under: Reds

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • It’s early, but mock drafts are already locking the Bengals into one prospect
  • Kenny Brooks just exposed the NCAA’s new ‘Speed dating’ disaster
  • Reds rumors connect Brady Singer to trade talks but only at a steep price
  • Reds Roster Expectations: Starting Pitchers Edition
  • Reds Receiving Trade Interest In Starting Pitchers

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • Cincinnati Enquirer
  • 247 Sports
  • Bleacher Report
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today

Baseball

  • MLB.com
  • Last Word On Baseball
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • Blog Red Machine
  • Red Leg Nation
  • Red Reporter

Football

  • Cincinnati Bengals
  • Bengals Gab
  • Cincy Jungle
  • Bengals Wire
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Pro Football Focus
  • Stripe Hype
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Bengals

Soccer

  • Last Word on Soccer
  • MLS Multiplex

College

  • A Sea Of Blue
  • Banners On The Parkway
  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • Cincy On The Prowl
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Forgotten 5
  • Kentucky Sports Radio
  • Nation Of Blue
  • Saturday Blitz
  • Southbound And Down
  • Wildcat Blue Nation
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2026 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in