IA’s Sign Tyler Soderstrom To Seven-Year Extension

Jan. 5: More details on the split were provided by Jon Heyman of the New York Post. Soderstrom receives a $3MM signing bonus and a $1MM salary in 2026. His salary then jumps to $6MM, $10MM, $12MM, $16MM, $17MM and $19MM in subsequent seasons. The 2033 club option is worth $27MM with a $2MM buyout. His salary for 2032 and 2033 could jump by $1MM or $2MM based on an MVP finish, though the details of those steps have not been reported. There should also be other steps up, considering Passan’s report that the deal could top $131MM. Soderstrom also receives limited no-trade protection for 2032 and 2033, though details were also not reported in that department.
December 29: The Athletics have officially announced the extension.
December 25: Athletics does not take a holiday. They agree with the outfielder Tyler Soderstrom a seven-year, $86MM extension, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports. Passan added that there is a club option for 2033 and an escalator that could push the contract value by another $45MM if the option is exercised. The deal buys out at least three free years and a fourth, keeping him under team control through his age-31 season. Soderstrom is represented by Paragon Sports International.
Soderstrom becomes the latest core piece the A’s lock up to a long-term deal. They expand Brent Rooker again Lawrence Butler at $60MM and guarantees of $65.5MM last winter. Soderstrom topped that by a respectable margin, becoming the biggest contract in team history in the process. Their three-year, $67MM free agent deal Luis Severino before it was that flood sign.
[Related: Largest Contract in Franchise History for Each MLB Team]
The left-handed hitting Soderstrom was a first-round pick in 2020. He has been a standout offensive lineman since high school. The big question is where he will fit on the other side of the ball. When Soderstrom was drafted as a catcher, most scouts felt he would need to move from the position. That’s already happening, as only 15 of his MLB starts behind the plate came in his 2023 rookie season. Backing up poor defensive catchers is often first base, and that’s where Soderstrom spent the first half of his major league career.
Soderstrom struggled in a 45 game sample as a rookie. His .233/.315/.429 hitting in 213 plate appearances in 2024 was a significant step forward but he still didn’t rank with Rooker, Butler and Shea Langeliers as distinct members of A’s essence. Soderstrom entered this year with little pressure in the form of the 2024 fourth overall pick Nick Kurtza college first baseman who was expected to reach the majors very quickly.

While Kurtz was about to do that, Soderstrom’s breakout ’25 campaign ensured the A’s couldn’t move him off the roster. The 24-year-old has been one of the league’s best hitters in the first few weeks of the season. He connected on nine home runs with a .284/.349/.560 slash before the end of April. Soderstrom was tied for fourth in MLB (only behind Aaron is the judge, Raleigh again Eugenio Suarez) in homers in the first month of the season. When Kurtz forced his way to the finals on April 21, Soderstrom was locked in the middle of Mark Kotsay’s hitting streak.
That presented the A’s with a status problem. Rooker is an everyday designated hitter. The 6’5″, 240-pound Kurtz couldn’t play anywhere other than first base. Despite his early catcher/starter background, Soderstrom is a solid player and regular runner. OA threw him in left field on the fly even though he didn’t have much experience there. They probably expected to live with growing pains on defense to keep his bat in shape.
Soderstrom has surprisingly exceeded expectations. He scored 10 runs better than the left fielder in Defensive Runs Saved average. Statcast graded him five games above average. Soderstrom finished the season a Gold Glove finalist in a position he hadn’t played in five months earlier. He joins Butler as an outfield piece, a tandem corner flanking defensive specialist. Denzel Clarke in the middle of nowhere.
The increase in defensive responsibility didn’t affect Soderstrom’s rhythm at the plate. He struggled between May and June but rebounded with a .305/.359/.530 showing over the final four months of the season. Soderstrom finished with a .276/.346/.474 batting line while ranking fourth on the team with 25 homers. He improved his contact rate by six percentage points and held his own against same-handed pitching (.270/.315/.423) while coming off righties (.278/.356/.491). The breakout was also not a product of the A’s playing half of their games at the much-loved Sutter Heath Park. Soderstrom had an OPS north of .800 both at home and on the road.
As recently as this past summer, there was speculation about the A’s potentially trading Soderstrom for a controllable first baseman. The extension takes you firmly off the table and ensures you’ll sit alongside Kurtz, Rooker, Butler and more Jacob Wilson in a very good attacking team. The first three are signed by at least 2029. Kurtz and Wilson have been under team control for five seasons. Langeliers has two more seasons of arbitration eligibility.
Soderstrom had already been under the club’s control for four seasons. He was closer to free agency than Butler at the time of his extension, which explains why the price was a little over $20MM higher. Soderstrom is raising $57.5MM guaranteed in the Royals third baseman Michael Garcia acquired in the same service class, but that contract only extended KC’s control window by two seasons.
IA’s reloaded extensions for Rooker and Butler, with the highest salaries associated with their move to Las Vegas in 2028. The salary split in Soderstrom’s deal has not been reported. The A’s had about $87MM in cap space before today, as calculated by RosterResource. That’s $12MM above where they opened the ’25 season. General manager David Forst told MLB.com’s Martín Gallegos last week that the team was looking to improve a rotation that ranked 27th in ERA and 25th in slugging percentage.
Photo courtesy of Charles LeClaire, Imagn Images.



