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    NEWS: Jed Hoyer Agrees to Extension with Cubs

    In a fairly shocking turn of events, the Chicago Cubs have signed president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer to a multi-year contract extenion, days before the 2025 MLB trade deadline. No longer is Hoyer a potential lame duck; the ramifications could be enormous.

    Matthew Trueblood
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    The Chicago Cubs and president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer agreed to a multi-year contract extension Monday, according to multiple reports. It's a seismic moment, as much because of the timing as based on the news itself. Hoyer is working hard to upgrade the Cubs roster he built in the shadow of this Thursday's MLB trade deadline, and this news changes the context of his pursuits.

    Sahadev Sharma of The Athletic broke the news on Twitter.

    Last fall, much was made of the fact that Hoyer would be out of contract at the end of the 2025 campaign. For most fans (and even many throughout the ranks of other front offices and the baseball industry, writ large), Hoyer's status has been viewed as a microcosm of that of the team in general. Given the tenor of his own comments about his lack of an extension heading into last offseason—and given the aggressive offseason he then orchestrated—the assumption had been that the ownership group would move on from Hoyer if the team didn't make the playoffs this year.

    Now, apparently based on the fact that the team is in good position to do that (but without any guarantee that they actually will, in a competitive National League and an NL Central race that is currently tied), the team has jumped the gun on that decision. Presumably, this alleviates some pressure on Hoyer to make trades that might not have been in the best long-term interests of the team, and encourages him to focus on winning both now and in the future. For many, though, it will also read as an early declaration of a victory not yet won—and a questionable demonstration of faith in an executive whose track record as the top decision-maker on the baseball side of the organization is somewhat uneven.

    Under Hoyer, the Cubs have unloaded the remnants of their 2016 World Series-winning core. In their 2021 fire sale, they did acquire some very valuable pieces, including not only Pete Crow-Armstrong, but Kevin Alcántara and Daniel Palencia. They've signed several free agents to deals that panned out well, and under new scouting director Dan Kantrovitz, they've enjoyed more success in the MLB Draft. Their reputation in that area is improving. Hoyer made perspicacious trades to land Michael Busch and Kyle Tucker over the last two offseasons and has succeeded with forays into the Japanese market with the signings of Seiya Suzuki and Shota Imanaga. He also landed the biggest managerial free agent in baseball history when he signed Craig Counsell away from the Brewers in November 2023.

    On the other hand, struggling often to manage upward and somewhat stubborn in his evaluations of players, Hoyer has allowed himself to be unduly limited by the budgets set by the Ricketts family. At their whims, he non-tendered Kyle Schwarber, and has failed to land the elite free agents who might have put either of the last two iterations of this team over the top. His signature is a certain baseline conservatism that does not always serve the club well.

    The thinking in striking this deal now must trace in part to Hoyer's conversations with rival executives about trades that would ship out some of the key players who make up the farm system he tried to strengthen over the last few years. Not only are his incentives and the team's no longer misaligned, but he can now avoid having any negotiating partner try to use his own contract status as leverage against him. If Hoyer (as, based on his personality, we might well imagine he would) would feel unduly guilty about trading a haul of prospects for a high-impact, short-term piece, that internal conflict is now resolved, too.

    Chicago's pitching development has improved under Hoyer's stewardship. So has their farm system. Yet, they haven't won anything of note under his leadership, and his mistakes in roster building have been major factors in that failure. Ownership has liked his way of doing things enough to decide to re-up with him. Now, based on what he does over the next few days and what his team does over the next few months, fans will get to render their own judgments about that choice.

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    Outshined_One

    Posted

    1 hour ago, gflore34 said:

    Was thinking along the same lines, why not go rentals?  Kelly, Soroka, Castro will not cost any of the top prospects and improve the Cubs chances, seems like a win-win to me.

    It does, but the fact that none of those guys have been traded and most (not all) trades have involved guys on the periphery tells me that potential sellers are making life miserable for buyers right now.

    I'd be more aggravated if we'd seen other teams making a bunch of moves, but that simply hasn't been the case.

    • Like 1
    Bertz

    Posted

    15 hours ago, Derwood said:

    If Theo was making the moves when Hoyer was the GM, and Hoyer is making the moves when Hawkins is the GM, then what exactly does a Cubs' GM do?

    My understanding is it's 3 things:

    1. The GM is a consigliere.  I remember Theo telling a story that during the Arrieta deal Jed basically pounded the table to have Theo ask for Strop too

    2. The GM usually has a specialty area they came up from, and might continue to own that area.  So like Hawkins was a player development guy in Cleveland, so I'd imagine most of the coaches and minor league staff have their work flow up to Carter rather than Jed

    3. The GM usually owns smaller transactions, especially during busy periods.  For instance at these past winter meetings the Tucker trade and the Carson Kelly signing happened pretty close to each other.  I suspect Jed took the Tucker deal and Carter took the Kelly signing.  Right now it might be Jed owning the SP and bat searches while Carter owns the RP search

     

    • Like 2
    cubfansince77

    Posted (edited)

    11 minutes ago, Outshined_One said:

    It does, but the fact that none of those guys have been traded and most (not all) trades have involved guys on the periphery tells me that potential sellers are making life miserable for buyers right now.

    I'd be more aggravated if we'd seen other teams making a bunch of moves, but that simply hasn't been the case.

    I couldn't agree more. Sellers are totally in the driver's seat right now and although I've been critical of Hoyer in the past, I can't complain about him this time around. It's been reported that teams are asking astronomical prices, specifically for starting pitchers who are under control for multiple years. 

    Also, I've never been a fan of rentals like Suarez who probably won't re-sign with us next season. WOTS is we won't give up any top prospects for a rental....sure hope not. 

    Edited by cubfansince77
    squally1313

    Posted

    I mean, people work at companies where there are multiple people on a team but there is an understood top boss. This isn't an unusual concept. 

    • Like 3
    Rcal10

    Posted

    2 hours ago, squally1313 said:

    To clarify, which Urias are we talking about here?

    Either. Guess the one in the Orioles would be easier. They will be here on 8/1. Trade for Morton and Urias and they can just come to the home clubhouse. 

    squally1313

    Posted

    5 minutes ago, Rcal10 said:

    Either. Guess the one in the Orioles would be easier. They will be here on 8/1. Trade for Morton and Urias and they can just come to the home clubhouse. 

    sorry, further clarification. When I type in 'Urias' into FG, I see Ramon from Baltimore (who kinda just looks like Jon Berti), Luis (who also kinda just looks like Jon Berti), and Julio, who I saw on here was just reinstated (who I want absolutely no part of, for obvious reasons).

    Intention here isn't to get into the debates of the relative merits of the Ramon and Luis Urias' of the world, but more to confirm you weren't talking about Julio. 

    Rcal10

    Posted

    9 minutes ago, squally1313 said:

    sorry, further clarification. When I type in 'Urias' into FG, I see Ramon from Baltimore (who kinda just looks like Jon Berti), Luis (who also kinda just looks like Jon Berti), and Julio, who I saw on here was just reinstated (who I want absolutely no part of, for obvious reasons).

    Intention here isn't to get into the debates of the relative merits of the Ramon and Luis Urias' of the world, but more to confirm you weren't talking about Julio. 

    I just said Urias because I know a few by that name are available. I was using him as an example of someone not as coveted as Castro. So really any Urias would do. (Exclude Julio). I could have just as easily picked Kiner-Falefo as an example, but wasn’t sure I spelled his name right. Still not sure. Urias was easier to spell. 

    • Like 1
    Tryptamine

    Posted

    On 7/28/2025 at 3:33 PM, Tryptamine said:

    Seems weird to extend a guy who has never made the playoffs. Though unlikely, if they somehow bombed and missed the playoffs this year wouldn't that be incredibly awkward that he was just extended.

    Well horsefeathers, I might have spoken that into existence.




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