Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Newsday
Newsday
Sport
Erik Boland

Yankees, Aaron Hicks agree to seven-year, $70-million extension

TAMPA, Fla. _ After extending Luis Severino's contract early in spring training, general manager Brian Cashman said the Yankees were "open for business" in terms of locking up some of their other young players.

The Yankees added one more Monday morning as center fielder Aaron Hicks agreed to a seven-year, $70-million extension, with a club option for 2026, that begins this season.

"I felt like it was a fair deal for both sides," said Hicks, who could have become a free agent after this season. "This is an organization I want to stay with. I feel like the team here is a team that I want to be with. I want to be on this team. I feel like it has a great future."

A future built around a core that, as much as he can, Cashman is trying to secure long-term.

"We've been very vocal that we've engaged a lot of players," Cashman said Monday afternoon.

He would not name anyone, but Dellin Betances, a free agent after this season, said last week his agent had held discussions with Cashman on an extension and there is chatter about something similar happening with Didi Gregorius, also a free agent after the season.

Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez are both arbitration-eligible next offseason and the Yankees if possible would love to lock them in long-term, to name two more players. The Yankees bought out Severino's remaining arbitration-eligible seasons and his first year of free agency with the four-year, $40-million deal they signed him to just before pitchers and catchers began working out Feb. 14.

"Sevy and Hicks' extensions are examples of those efforts," Cashman said. "It doesn't guarantee that we'll have conclusions with anybody else ... but we're excited. Excited about a player who came here that wasn't a finished product with a lot of upside. This is an example of a player who was coachable, was open-minded, was willing to put the work in and grow and adjust."

The 29-year-old switch-hitting Hicks was acquired from the Twins in exchange for backup catcher John Ryan Murphy in November 2015, and struggled in his first season, hitting .217 with a .281 OBP in 123 games. But he's steadily improved each season and is coming off a 2018 in which he posted career single-season highs in runs (90), hits (119), homers (27), extra-base hits (48), RBIs (79) and walks (90). Hicks, who arrived with the reputation as an underachiever _ he was picked in the first round (14th overall) of the 2008 draft _ also has turned himself into a good and at times spectacular defender.

"That's the storyline in this that I think is pretty cool," Cashman said. "There were a lot of people questioning if he'd ever cross into being the player that his draft card said he was capable of being. And he was hungry to prove otherwise and we were hungry to work with him on it. But the story's yet to be written. We placed a bet, and I talked to Aaron, I said, 'I'm betting on you,' and he's betting on himself at the same time."

Before Saturday's Grapefruit League opener in Fort Myers, Fla., against the Red Sox, Aaron Boone called Hicks "maybe the most underrated player in the game," citing his work on defense, power from both sides of the plate and ability to "control the strike zone." In their press release Monday, the Yankees highlighted Hicks being fifth in the majors with a 15.5 percent walk rate and a 20.9 percent chase rate (on balls out of the strike zone) as the seventh-lowest in the big leagues.

"There's a player with plate discipline, power, a cannon of an arm, so he's capable of impacting the game in a positive way on both sides of the ball," Cashman said. "I feel like we're fortunate to have him."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.