MLB Rumors: Blake Snell, Dodgers Agree to 5-Year, $182M Contract After Giants Stint

The Los Angeles Dodgers have agreed to a five-year, $182 million contract with left-handed starting pitcher Blake Snell, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan and...

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The Los Angeles Dodgers have agreed to a five-year, $182 million contract with left-handed starting pitcher Blake Snell, according to ESPN's Jeff Passan and Jorge Castillo. According to The Athletic's Fabian Ardaya, the deal includes some deferred money. Snell himself teased his signing with the Dodgers on Instagram before ESPN's report, posting a photo of himself in the team's uniform with the caption, "LA đź‘€.

" Snell signed a two-year, $62 million deal with the Giants last offseason. The contract included a $38.5 million player option for 2025, but the southpaw declined it to become a free agent, per USA Today's Bob Nightengale .



Snell went 5-3 with a 3.12 ERA (1.05 WHIP) and 145 strikeouts in 104 innings.

Two stints on the injured list due to a left adductor strain and a groin injury held him to 20 starts. The year before, Snell won his second Cy Young award, going 14-9 with an MLB-best 2.25 ERA for the San Diego Padres.

He struck out 234 batters over 180 innings (32 starts). At his best, Snell is a strikeout machine and one of the best starters in baseball. The biggest knock on him is that he doesn't go deep into games, notably averaging just over five innings per start last year.

But he's usually fantastic when out there, and he keeps his team in ballgames. So Snell is a clear asset. If he's able to stay healthy and post 30-plus starts, another Cy Young candidacy isn't out of the question either.

Jon Heyman of the New York Post reported on Nov. 14 that Los Angeles was "looking into" free agent pitchers including Snell, Corbin Burnes and Max Fried. This was in addition to the Dodgers' chase for prized Japanese ace Roki Sasaki.

"Word is that assuming they land Sasaki, they'll try for one more big pitcher," Heyman wrote. Well, Snell's now aboard, and the defending World Series champions even further cement their status as the Fall Classic favorites. The Dodgers had a litany of starting pitching injuries last year, and the team plans to use a six-man rotation in 2025.

So it makes perfect sense that they'd go after someone like Snell. Unsurprisingly, the deep-pocketed Dodgers were able to land him, making Los Angeles much more dangerous going into 2025..