The Detroit Tigers have signed rookie infielder Kevin McGonigle to an eight-year contract extension worth a guaranteed $150 million. The deal, announced Wednesday, begins next season and runs through 2034. McGonigle has impressed early, hitting .311/.417/.492 in his first 17 major league games.
The Detroit Tigers announced Wednesday an agreement with 21-year-old rookie Kevin McGonigle on an eight-year extension valued at $150 million guaranteed. The contract starts in 2027 and extends through 2034, including a $14 million signing bonus and performance escalators that could raise the total to $160 million. Annual salaries begin at $1 million in 2027, climbing to $23 million from 2032 to 2034, with a $5 million assignment bonus if McGonigle is traded to another team. Tigers president of baseball operations Scott Harris called McGonigle a special talent with rare gifts and determination to maximize them. McGonigle, the No. 2 prospect per MLB Pipeline and drafted 37th overall in 2023, earned his Opening Day roster spot with a strong spring training and has continued hitting .311 with a .417 on-base percentage and .492 slugging line over 17 games, drawing 11 walks against eight strikeouts. He also hit his first major league home run recently, saying it meant everything in front of Detroit fans. At the press conference, ace Tarik Skubal, posing as a reporter, asked McGonigle if he planned to take teammates to dinner during upcoming day games against the Red Sox in Boston. McGonigle smiled and confirmed, noting travel director Abe Silvestri would arrange it. McGonigle expressed loyalty to the Tigers, stating he wants to stay in one place and win a World Series. The extension follows similar deals for prospects like Colt Keith with Detroit and Konnor Griffin with the Pirates, locking in McGonigle through age 29 as part of the Tigers' contention plans.