After a quiet winter, the San Diego Padres made a move at the beginning of spring training.
Former Boston Red Sox starting pitcher Nick Pivetta has agreed to a four-year, $55 million free agent contract with San Diego, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan. The deal reportedly contains opt-outs after its second and third season.
BREAKING: Right-hander Nick Pivetta and the San Diego Padres are in agreement on a four-year, $55 million contract that includes a pair of opt-outs, pending physical, sources tell ESPN.
— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) February 13, 2025
Because Pivetta rejected a qualifying offer from the Red Sox, the Padres will pay draft pick compensation to Boston.
Pivetta, ranked No. 26 on Yahoo Sports’ free agent big board, was one of the last remaining significant free agents. While one of MLB’s top starters in recent years when it comes to accruing strikeouts and staying healthy, Pivetta hasn’t stood out when it comes to preventing runs.
He has never posted an ERA below 4.00 in his career, and even when adjusting to the hitter-friendly environment of Fenway Park with the ERA+ stat, he’s never been more than 13% better than MLB pitchers as a whole.
Still, the Padres needed arms. Their rotation has one of the better top 3s in MLB with Dylan Cease, Yu Darvish and Michael King, but the depth behind them was lacking, hence why a guy with stuff and durability like Pivetta might be a good fit for a team with a history of getting more out of their arms.
However, it’s quite possible this addition is the presage to a subtraction.
Until Wednesday, the only major-league deal the Padres had signed this offseason were one-year deals for Jason Heyward, Connor Joe and Elías Díaz. Pivetta is their first multi-year deal.
There was a reason for that.
After years of spending like a big-market club and trying to out-muscle the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West, the Padres have been reported to be cutting payroll after the death of controlling owner Peter Seidler.
Because of a plethora of big contracts extending into next year and beyond, that has limited the options for the team to improve. Roki Sasaki would have been a godsend, but the Dodgers were the ones who landed the Japanese phenom on an outrageously below-market deal, leaving the Padres to figure out how to salvage their season on hard mode.
Not helping matters is a very public ownership battle taking place between Seidler’s widow and brothers.
It’s unclear just how low the Padres need to keep their payroll — a recent report indicated they plan to stay in the top 10 of MLB, while sitting at No. 9 — but trade rumors have popped up around Cease and King, both pending free agents, as well as closer Robert Suarez and first baseman Luis Arraez. Such moves would also help fill out a Padres farm system depleted by promotions and trades over the past few years.
So when the Padres are agreeing to pay a starting pitcher more than $10 million per year, it’s reason to believe there might be another significant move to come. Or they’re just going all in on 2025 in a stacked NL West, with the Dodgers looking better than ever, and planning to figure it out later.
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