Left-handed pitcher Ranger Suárez has agreed to a five-year, $130 million contract with the Boston Red Sox, marking the team's first major free-agent signing this offseason. The 30-year-old departs the Philadelphia Phillies after a distinguished tenure that included key postseason contributions. This move bolsters Boston's rotation following their loss of Alex Bregman to the Cubs.
Ranger Suárez, a Venezuelan native signed by the Phillies at age 16 in 2012, established himself as a reliable front-end starter over the past four seasons. In 2025, he posted a 3.20 ERA with 151 strikeouts in 157 1/3 innings, earning a 4.7 WAR. His postseason record stands out, with a 1.48 ERA across 11 appearances, including the pennant-clinching out in the 2022 NLCS. Suárez relies on command and a six-pitch mix, including effective offspeed offerings, averaging 91.3 mph on his fastball while leading MLB starters in hard-hit rate at 31.1% last season.
The deal, confirmed by sources and lacking deferrals, opt-outs, or a no-trade clause, comes after Suárez declined Philadelphia's $22.025 million qualifying offer, netting the Phillies a compensatory draft pick after the fourth round in 2026. For Boston, chief baseball officer Craig Breslow pivoted from failing to re-sign Bregman, reallocating funds to strengthen the rotation. Suárez slots behind ace Garrett Crochet, alongside recent trade acquisitions Sonny Gray and Johan Oviedo, with Brayan Bello rounding out the core. Depth includes Kutter Crawford, Patrick Sandoval, Kyle Harrison, and prospects Connelly Early and Payton Tolle, potentially enabling trades for infield help, with Marcelo Mayer eyed at third base.
Philadelphia, prioritizing re-signing Kyle Schwarber (five years, $150 million) and J.T. Realmuto while pursuing Bo Bichette, views their rotation as robust with Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Cristopher Sánchez, Jesús Luzardo, and prospect Andrew Painter—contingent on health recoveries. Suárez's departure, though anticipated, leaves a void in a staff aiming for World Series contention. As the top lefty free agent to sign ahead of Framber Valdez, Suárez's contract underscores a market valuing command over velocity, positioning Boston for run prevention dominance in 2026.