Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsThursday, July 9, 2026

Royals, Alcides Escobar Agree To Extension

Surprise, AZ, USA; Kansas City Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar (2) throws Texas Rangers catcher Mike Napoli (not pictured) out at first during the fifth inning at Surprise Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jake Roth-US PRESSWIRE
Surprise, AZ, USA; Kansas City Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar (2) throws Texas Rangers catcher Mike Napoli (not pictured) out at first during the fifth inning at Surprise Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jake Roth-US PRESSWIRE
Surprise, AZ, USA; Kansas City Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar (2) throws Texas Rangers catcher Mike Napoli (not pictured) out at first during the fifth inning at Surprise Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jake Roth-US PRESSWIRE

There is something called The Royals Strategy now. Well, there always was, but it used to be a .gif of two people in a horse costume, repeatedly bumping into a door that reads "PULL." But now The Royals Strategy means something completely different: locking up young players through their arbitration years before they've proven anything in the majors. From MLB's official Twitter feed:

OFFICIAL: Royals lock up SS Alcides Escobar through 2015 with club options for 2016 and 2017.And via two different tweets from Robert Ford, we have the details:

Alcides Escobar's contract breakdown: $1 mil in '12, $3 mil in '13, '14 & '15, so $10 mil guaranteed over 4 years …

Alcides Escobar's club options are for $5.25 mil in '16 & $6.5 mil in '17. $500,000 buyouts both years. So, could be worth $21.75 mil/6 yrs

You might think this is actually The Rays Strategy, but it's a slight variation. Whereas the Rays have done preemptive extensions for Matt Moore and Evan Longoria before they were established, both of those players were super-prospects. The Royals Strategy is different, in that the players they've targeted -- Escobar and Salvador Perez -- have been players whose future is much more uncertain. Escobar was once a top prospect, but he now has 1183 at-bats in the majors with a .294 on-base percentage. That's pretty ugly.

But he’s young, just 25, and his last season in AAA was fairly promising. He was 22, and he increased his walk rate and dramatically cut down on his strikeouts, despite advancing a level. It hinted at a player who might someday be more than just a slick-glove, no-hit type, which he certainly is right now.

The Royals are now committed to paying Escobar an average of $2 million more per season than someone making the major-league minimum over the next four years. That’s the risk. The possible reward is that if Escobar breaks out in some way -- or at least becomes an average-hitting shortstop -- the Royals will have him for well below market value. It’s a good risk, and if this (and the Perez deal) works out, you’ll probably see a lot more extensions for young players who don’t exactly project to be stars.

See More:

More in General

From SBNationExternal Link
LeBron, Jaylen, and more offseason news and opinion in the NBA Feed!LeBron, Jaylen, and more offseason news and opinion in the NBA Feed!
From SBNationExternal Link
News, analysis, opinions to get ready for this weekend’s British Grand PrixNews, analysis, opinions to get ready for this weekend’s British Grand Prix
GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
An SB Nation New Yorker needs our helpAn SB Nation New Yorker needs our help
GeneralFromPosting and Toasting
General
Sabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world recordSabastian Sawe breaks 2-hour barrier, shatters marathon world record
General

The mythical two-hour mark was broken at the London Marathon.

By Bernd Buchmasser
A Huge Dog
THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1THE HISTORY OF CHARGING THE MOUND, EPISODE 1
Play
General
Super Bowl 60 coin toss resultsSuper Bowl 60 coin toss results
General

The Seahawks and Patriots will open the Super Bowl with the coin toss to determine who starts with the ball. We have the full coin toss results for Super Bowl 60.

By David Fucillo