The New York Yankees have finalized a five-year, $162.5 million contract with outfielder Cody Bellinger, their biggest offseason move. The frontloaded deal includes $85 million over the first two years, opt-outs after 2027 and 2028, a $20 million signing bonus, and a full no-trade clause, solidifying the outfield with Trent Grisham and Aaron Judge while raising questions about prospects like Jasson Domínguez amid roster needs and a projected $320 million payroll.
The Yankees completed the deal earlier this week after prolonged negotiations, following their initial five-year offer and pending a physical. Bellinger, traded from the Chicago Cubs in December 2024 (with the Cubs covering $2.5 million of his 2025 salary), had a strong debut season in New York, batting .272/.334/.480 with 29 home runs, 98 RBIs, 13 steals, and 5.1 bWAR over 152 games. He excelled at Yankee Stadium (.302/.365/.544) and showed versatility across outfield spots.
The 30-year-old former NL MVP (2019, Dodgers) expressed excitement about staying: “I had an unbelievable time putting on this uniform... It’s such a fun group.” Manager Aaron Boone added, “Who wouldn’t want a player like that?” while GM Brian Cashman called him an "impactful player." Bellinger slots into left field, with Grisham in center and Judge in right, potentially spelling first base.
This pushes the CBT payroll to around $320 million, exceeding the $304 million threshold despite owner Hal Steinbrenner's desire to cut spending post-2025's $319 million. The 94-win team, which led MLB in run differential but lost the ALDS to Toronto, plans to run back the core, awaiting Gerrit Cole (May/June) and Carlos Rodón (April/May).
Prospects face challenges: Jasson Domínguez (22, turning 23) had limited late-2025 action (110 AB post-All-Star, one postseason double) but offers upside as a bench option or trade chip amid Stanton's injuries. Spencer Jones (No. 4 prospect, 35 HR, .933 OPS in minors) is "exciting but unproven," per Cashman, drawing trade buzz. Additions like Ryan Weathers bolster the rotation.
Priorities remain bullpen help (23rd in 2025 ERA, lost Leiter Jr., Weaver, Williams) via targets like Robertson, Wilson, Jax, or Romero, and right-handed bats to balance the lefty-heavy lineup (third-most LH plate appearances). Anchored by Bednar, Doval, and Hill, tweaks could shape the 2026 campaign, with Boone optimistic: “We’re pretty good here.”