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Like Thanos and the Infinity Stones, Kyle Schwarber re-signing with the Phillies felt inevitable.
It was a matter of when, not if, Schwarber would re-sign with the Phillies, as President of Baseball Operations, Dave Dombrowski said in his End-Of-Year Press Conference. “We’d love to bring Kyle Schwarber back. It’s a priority for us. He knows it,” Dombrowski matter-of-factly said.
Schwarber is back in Philadelphia on a 5-year, $150M deal that keeps the Phillies left handed slugger in town through the 2030 season. And while it’s a SIGNIFICANT pay increase from his initial contract with the Phillies in 2022 (4-year, $79M), it’s a deserved raise for the rejuvenated DH who has been in the Top 10 in every statistical category listed below:
- 2nd in HR (187)
- 4th in RBI (434)
- 5th in runs scored (429)
- 4th in BB% (15.2%)
- 6th in Hard Hit % (41.9%)
Schwarber also finds himself in rare company, seemingly getting better as his career progresses. He’s become a more complete hitter, erasing his early-career struggles against left handed pitching. His metrics have grown in a category listed as ELITE across MLB, finishing in the 98th% or better in average exit velocity, barrel rates, hard hit % and walk %. And the thing that separates Schwarber from most hitters in the game today: his bat speed has maintained into his mid-30’s.
Replacing Schwarber would have proven a difficult, if not almost impossible, endeavor in 2026. While a fifth year may be questionable for some Phillies fans, the $30M AAV was right on point to what we projected throughout the offseason. In fact, it’s actually LESS than what we assumed ($32.5M AAV). That number was projected over four years, with a total of $130M, but it remained in the ballpark estimation that we’ve had all Winter.
To get a further breakdown on the deal, the PHLY Phillies Podcast reacted with an EMERGENCY POD link here:
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