Pete Alonso, who has spent his entire 7-year MLB career with the New York Mets, has signed a 5-year, $155 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles,
It should be noted that Alonso wasn't the O's first choice. They wanted Kyle Schwarber and offered him $150 million over five seasons but Schwarber opted to stay in the City of Brotherly Love for the same money.
But Alonso was just fine with being a Plan B. After all, the Mets did not see fit to make him an offer after he opted out of a 2-year deal he signed before last season. While it was strongly rumored that Alonso could sign with the Boston Red Sox the team was wary of the fact that he just turned 31 on Sunday and offered him fewer years and far less money. Alonso also talked with the Chicago Cubs, but it appeared to have been little more than conversation. Under the circumstances, who would blame Alonso for signing with Baltimore?
Yes, any free agent signing is a risk. Just ask the Los Angeles Angels with Anthony Rendon. Yet it must be said that Alonso has proven to be a durable player. He played all 162 games for the past two seasons. Needless to say, the Orioles are far less averse to signing a 31-year-old first baseman who can knock it out of the park.
Let us remember that Alonso is the Mets' all-time HR leader having passed Darryl Strawberry back in August. I lived in New York during Alonso's rookie season in 2019. Here was someone who was not expected to make that ballclub and then proceeds to set an MLB rookie record for HRs with 53. Alonso made himself the face of the franchise. Yet the Mets never entirely accepted him in that role and tried to unload him several times including to the Cubs in 2023 for Pete Crow-Armstrong as well as to the Milwaukee Brewers that same season.
Alonso will enter the 2026 season with 951 career hits for a lifetime batting average of .253 with 264 HR and 712 RBI with NL Rookie of the Year honors in 2019, 5 NL All-Star Team selections, 2 HR Derby championships along with a Silver Slugger. After a disappointing 2025 season following back-to-back post-season appearances in 2023 and 2024, Orioles fans will have a lot to cheer about when he steps up to the plate at Camden Yards for the first time. Of course, O's fans are hoping there will be a lot at bats, a lot of HRs and their first World Series in over 40 years to cheer about. So, no pressure, Pete.