Reds, Chase Burns Agree To Seven-Year Extension

The Reds and breakout righty Chase Burns are in agreement on a seven-year, $105MM contract extension, reports Jon Morosi of MLB Network. The Vayner Sports client was already under control via arbitration through the 2031 season. The deal begins next season and runs through 2033 with no option years, per ESPN’s Jeff Passan. That means the Reds are picking up an additional two years of club control over the former No. 2 overall draft pick.
Still just 23 years old, Burns has broken out as one of the best pitchers in baseball. The former Wake Forest standout has started 18 games, totaled 102 2/3 innings, and pitched to a pristine 2.54 earned run average in his first full season at the big league level. He’s punched out 28.6% of his opponents against a 9% walk rate. Burns is a fly-ball pitcher in a homer-friendly park, but he’s managed to avoid hard contact nicely and surrendered an average of only 1.05 homers per nine frames this year.
Listed at 6’3″ and 210 pounds, Burns has a prototypical starter’s frame and the sort of high-octane arsenal required to front a big league rotation. He’s averaged a blazing 97.8 mph on his heater this season, pairing the pitch with a devastating slider that sits 90.5 mph and a show-me changeup with similar velocity that he’s only thrown at a 5.7% clip this year.
Burns’ four-seamer and slider are his bread and butter. He could use a more effective changeup to help him keep lefties off balance, but southpaw hitters haven’t exactly lit him up. They’ve batted .214/.307/.409. He’ll run into some occasional trouble against lefties — 10 of the 12 long balls he’s surrendered have been versus left-handed opponents — but they haven’t posed any sort of egregious problem thus far. Meanwhile, right-handed opponents should hardly even bother stepping into the box. They’re hitting just .195/.230/.286 in 161 plate appearances this season.
Cincinnati selected Burns with the No. 2 overall pick back in 2024. He was in the majors less than a year later, making his debut on June 24, 2025. He didn’t dominate in 2025 but held his own, logging a 4.57 ERA with a gaudy 35.6% strikeout rate in 43 1/3 innings during that debut campaign. Burns finished the 2025 season in relief as Cincinnati monitored his workload, but the signs of a potentially dominant arm were there. He fanned 10 opponents four times despite never topping six innings in an appearance, and he closed out the year with only three runs allowed and a 22-to-4 K/BB ratio over his final 16 frames.
Burns’ contract is the largest ever signed by a pitcher with fewer than four years of major league service. The mere fact that it’s a precedent-setter illustrates the risk-averse approach teams take to signing young pitchers. Top position prospects like Colt Emerson ($95MM), Konnor Griffin ($140MM) and Kevin McGonigle ($150MM) received massive paydays this season with barely any major league experience at all (literally none, in Emerson’s case). Pitchers, on the other hand, rarely receive weighty long-term contracts.
A look at MLBTR’s Contract Tracker shows that prior to today’s deal, the largest contract extension for a pitcher with fewer than four years of service was Logan Webb‘s five-year, $90MM deal, which he signed in April 2023. He’s just the ninth pitcher ever to sign a $100MM+ contract prior to accruing six years of service and reaching free agency.
More to come.




