The Detroit Tigers announced on Wednesday that infielder Kevin McGonigle has agreed to a long-term deal set to run from 2027-2034. The deal guarantees the rookie phenon $150 million over that eight-year term, with escalators that could make the total worth $160 million. The 21-year-old will be a Tiger until he’s 30 years old under this contract.
One of the tricky parts of working out an extension was the fact that the Tigers are very close to the luxury tax threshold, which comes will a host of penalties
that would affect their draft standing. The McGonigle extension is timed to avoid this, starting in 2027 and covering his last five years of team control, as well as what would have been his first three years of free agency.
McGonigle will make $1 million in 2027, $7 million in 2028, $16 million in 2029, $21 million in 2030, $22 million in 2031, and then $23 million per year from 2032-2034. The deal also includes a $14 million signing bonus, and $5 million in bonus money if McGonigle is traded to another club over the course of the contract. The escalators on the deal could add another $10 million total spread out over the final three years of the deal.
Across 17 major league games, McGonigle is slashing .311/.417/.492 with one home run, six doubles, a triple, and one stolen base. He has struck out just 11.1 percent and walking 15.3 percent of the time. He currently ranks 23rd best in the major leagues in wRC+ with a 162 mark.
This is great news for the Detroit Tigers and the fanbase.












