Outfielder Cody Bellinger has decided to remain with the Cubs, opting in for another season, a source confirmed on Saturday.
The decision wasn’t obvious at the end of the season – the first of a three-year, $80 million deal that includes two opt-outs. By opting in, he’s set to collect a $27.5 million salary in 2025.
“When we signed that deal in late February, we knew that if he had a good year, he would have a lot of options,” Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said at his end-of-season news conference last month. “And he had a good year, and so I think he’ll have options.”
Bellinger made it clear in late September that he would wait until after the season to mull the decision with his wife and dig into his options with his agent Scott Boras.
Going through free agency last offseason, when he was coming off a 2023 NL Comeback Player of the Year performance on a pillow contract with the Cubs, helped Bellinger think through his priorities, he said.
“What matters – definitely have more of an understanding, even this year,” Bellinger said as the season wound down. “Honestly, it’s in the back of my mind, but I truly haven’t really thought about what I want to do until the season’s over and I have time to sit down and really weigh things, and obviously talk with Scott.”
This time around, Bellinger’s raw offensive numbers don’t jump off the page the same way they did a year ago. But the 29-year-old still had a case for a lucrative long-term contract. Even Hoyer outlined some potential talking points.
“When you look at the totality of the year he had,” Hoyer said, “he had a roughly .800 OPS on the road; his home OPS was .200 points lower than last year, and that’s kind of how Wrigley played. So I expect him to have a lot of options.”
To be exact, Bellinger had a .797 OPS on the road. To put it into context, if Bellinger had replicated that kind of production at home as well, that OPS would have landed him at No. 12 among qualified outfielders, between Baltimore’s Anthony Santander (.814) and Cleveland’s Steven Kwan (.793).
At Wrigley Field this year, Bellinger posted a .700 OPS, down from .902 last year. Though several factors likely played into that dip, Hoyer’s allusion to how the park “played” is backed up by Statcast’s park factor. In 2024, only Seattle’s T-Mobile Park suppressed offense more than Wrigley. The year before, Wrigley Field played as the ninth-friendliest to hitters among MLB team’s home ballparks.
Bellinger also played through pain to shorten his time on the IL for broken ribs and a broken finger. And while he and Boras could have used those talking points in free agency, they’re also reasons to believe Bellinger could put together a stronger platform season next year, with the option to hit free agency after the 2025 season.