USA TODAY US Edition

Machado will opt out of $300M deal after season

- Gabe Lacques

With $352 million in salary commitment­s this offseason, the good times never seem to end for the San Diego Padres.

Yet they are something of a baseball paradox, because even as they guaranteed Xander Bogaerts $280 million to play shortstop until 2033, their window as a superteam is actually narrowing.

The club was reminded of that Friday when All-Star third baseman Manny Machado reported to spring training and confirmed to reporters he will opt out of his contract after this season.

Machado and Bogaerts will comprise the best left side of an infield in baseball, arguably one of the greatest in the game’s modern history. Yet we are reminded they’re only guaranteed to be together this year.

Bogaerts, the great Juan Soto and Machado in the middle of the lineup? At best that’s a two-year guarantee, what with Soto headed for free agency after 2024 and aiming to get back on track for a $400 million payday.

But it is Machado who is ninth among all position players with 11.9 WAR the past two seasons, who has posted a .855 OPS and 136 adjusted OPS since joining the Padres in 2019, with secondand third-place finishes in MVP voting two of the past three seasons.

It’s also Machado whose 10-year, $300 million contract (which he did not sign until after spring training began in 2019) has now become grossly outdated. And Machado whose representa­tion wisely stuck an opt-out clause into that deal after this season.

And here we are.

“I’ve expressed that I will be opting out after this year,” Machado told reporters, noting his focus remains on this year and taking the Padres a step further than their stirring run to the National League championsh­ip series in 2022. “There’s gonna be a lot of noise in the Padres stadium, but also around the league with a lot of different things.”

The Padres can quiet that noise.

Will San Diego extend Machado?

Machado declined to comment on the effort to extend his deal before this season begins or whether such talks exist.

The Padres aren’t shy about spending money.

Machado is wildly valuable to them, that even as Fernando Tatis Jr. generated more buzz, it was Machado who was reliably consistent, healthy, MVP-caliber in his play and not running afoul of MLB’s policy on banned substances.

And it is Machado whose agent, Dan Lozano, is not averse to hammering out massive extensions for his clients but he also does not get shortchang­ed.

With that backdrop, it’s clear what Machado would command: His $300 million deal is now tied with Trea Turner for 11th among active players, lighter in both total and average annual value than Rafael Devers’ 10-year, $313.5 million extension signed with the Boston Red Sox last month. Devers is in his prime but also not as accomplish­ed at this point.

But consider that a starting point of sorts.

A new contract: Length or value?

Are the Padres willing to have two 40-year-olds under contract a decade from now? Or be willing to exceed a higher tier of the luxury tax threshold, which they would if Machado’s AAV jumps appreciabl­y from its current $30 million?

That’s their choice at the moment. The Padres are reportedly just under the second, $273 million threshold that would trigger a 42.5% penalty over that amount. Theoretica­lly, their payroll could drop, say, if and when Soto leaves as a free agent.

Realistica­lly, wild-eyed general manager A.J. Preller and owner Peter Seidler apparently can’t stop, won’t stop adding and retaining (Yu Darvish, $108 million extension) elite players.

The next response will likely come from the Padres’ checkbook.

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