San Diego Padres pitcher Michael King signs three-year, $75 million contract extension at Petco Park.
San Diego Padres pitcher Michael King signs three-year, $75 million contract extension at Petco Park.
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Padres re-sign Michael King to three-year, $75 million deal

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The San Diego Padres re-signed right-hander Michael King to a three-year, $75 million contract despite interest from AL East teams, bolstering their rotation after Dylan Cease's departure to Toronto. The deal includes opt-outs after 2026 and 2027. The 30-year-old, who declined a $22.025 million qualifying offer, aims to help San Diego win a championship.

On Friday, the Padres announced the re-signing of starter Michael King, filling a key rotation gap after Dylan Cease signed a seven-year, $210 million deal with the Toronto Blue Jays nearly three weeks prior. Acquired in the 2023 Juan Soto trade from the Yankees, the 30-year-old agreed to $75 million over three years: a $12 million signing bonus, $5 million salary in 2026, $28 million in 2027 (with a $5 million buyout if opting out), and $30 million in 2028.

After drawing pursuit from AL East clubs like the Orioles, Red Sox, and Yankees following his qualifying offer rejection, King opted to stay in San Diego. Since transitioning to a starter role with the Padres, he posted a 3.10 ERA over 46 appearances (45 starts), with a standout 2024 (2.95 ERA, 201 strikeouts in 173 2/3 innings, seventh in Cy Young voting) marred by 2025 injuries (shoulder nerve issue, knee problem; 3.44 ERA in 73 1/3 innings). "Injuries stink," King said at Petco Park. "I was not happy with my lack of innings. We have unfinished business—I want to be part of a championship."

GM A.J. Preller called King a 'top priority' amid rotation holes. With Yu Darvish out for 2026 (elbow surgery) and Cease gone, the core could feature Nick Pivetta, King, Joe Musgrove (post-Tommy John), Randy Vásquez, and JP Sears. The move may ripple through the pitching market.

Ce que les gens disent

Reactions on X to the San Diego Padres re-signing Michael King to a three-year, $75 million contract with opt-outs are predominantly positive, with fans and analysts calling it a huge move that stabilizes the rotation post-Cease. High-profile journalists quickly confirmed the deal details. Some expressed surprise over the opt-outs and AAV, while others highlighted King's elite performance and motivation from playoff atmosphere. Official team accounts celebrated the return enthusiastically.

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Illustration of free-agent pitcher Michael King on the mound with AL East team logos in the sky, representing his team decision.
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Équipes de l'AL East courtisent l'agent libre Michael King

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Le lanceur droitier agent libre Michael King a réduit ses options à trois équipes de la Ligue Américaine Est : les Baltimore Orioles, Boston Red Sox et New York Yankees. L'ancien lanceur des Padres âgé de 30 ans, qui a refusé une offre de qualification de 22,025 millions de dollars, devrait prendre une décision sous peu au milieu de l'intérêt de son ancienne division. Le marché de King est influencé par sa forte performance en 2024 et les préoccupations liées aux blessures en 2025.

Les Toronto Blue Jays ont conclu un contrat de sept ans et 210 millions de dollars avec le lanceur droitier agent libre Dylan Cease, ont indiqué des sources à plusieurs médias. Cet accord, le plus important jamais signé par un agent libre dans l'histoire de la franchise, ajoute un partant de tête de rotation à une équipe venant de remporter le drapeau de la Ligue américaine. Cease, qui fêtera ses 30 ans en décembre, apporte de la durabilité et un talent pour les retraits sur prises malgré une VITESSE de 4,55 en 2025 avec les San Diego Padres.

Rapporté par l'IA

Les Toronto Blue Jays auraient conclu un contrat de sept ans et 210 millions de dollars avec le lanceur agent libre Dylan Cease, marquant la plus grosse affaire d’agent libre de l’histoire de la franchise. Le droitier, sortant d’une saison à 4,55 ERA avec les San Diego Padres, renforce une rotation qui a atteint la Série mondiale en 2025. Des reports sont attendus pour abaisser la valeur annuelle à environ 26 millions de dollars.

The Detroit Tigers have signed veteran pitcher Justin Verlander to a one-year, $13 million contract for the 2026 season, reuniting the future Hall of Famer with the franchise where he began his career. The deal includes $2 million in base salary and $11 million deferred starting in 2030. Verlander joins a strong rotation led by Tarik Skubal and Framber Valdez as the team aims for a third consecutive postseason appearance.

Rapporté par l'IA

As the MLB offseason heats up ahead of the 2026 season, the Seattle Mariners are prepared to offer top prospects for St. Louis Cardinals utility player Brendan Donovan. Meanwhile, the Detroit Tigers remain lukewarm on free agent Alex Bregman, and the Baltimore Orioles have re-signed pitcher Zach Eflin. Other notable developments include interest in Japanese star Kazuma Okamoto and Andrew Heaney's retirement.

The Los Angeles Angels and Anthony Rendon have restructured his final contract year, deferring the $38.57 million owed for 2026 over three to five years, as first reported December 30. The move provides team flexibility and likely concludes Rendon's injury-marred Angels tenure after he missed 2025 due to hip surgery.

Rapporté par l'IA

Right-handed reliever Kirby Yates has agreed to a one-year, $5 million contract with the Los Angeles Angels, according to reports. The 38-year-old veteran joins a bullpen bolstered by recent signings of Jordan Romano and Drew Pomeranz. While the team has not confirmed the deal, it marks another bounce-back opportunity for Yates after a challenging 2025 season with the Dodgers.

 

 

 

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