When Eugenio Suárez chose to reunite with the Cincinnati Reds on a one-year, $15 million deal, it wasn’t just another free-agent loss for the Pittsburgh Pirates. It was a referendum.
Because this time, the Pirates didn’t get outbid. They matched the AAV, according to MLB.com's Alex Stumpf. They were willing to go higher. They were even open to a multi-year commitment.
And yet, Suárez still picked Cincinnati — a division rival — because of familiarity, a more favorable ballpark, and the clean psychology of a prove-it year where he already knows the streets.
For years, the Pirates’ defense for missing on impact bats was simple: We can’t win the bidding war. This time, there was no bidding war to lose. There was only a choice — and Suárez didn’t choose Pittsburgh.
So now, the clock starts.
For the second time this winter, the Pirates fall just short of an elite power bat.
— Alex Stumpf (@AlexJStumpf) February 1, 2026
For what it’s worth, I didn’t think they had much of a shot with Suarez a couple weeks ago. But close is only good for horseshoes and hand grenades. Lineup has gotten a boost, but could use more. https://t.co/XTvI0PBGww
If Pirates were willing to go higher for Suárez, they have no excuse not to continue adding to payroll
The Pirates sit just under $92 million in payroll. They effectively put $15 million on the table for Suárez and watched him walk down I-71. That money didn’t evaporate. It didn’t get spent. It didn’t turn into production. It's still sitting there, and that's the problem.
Because when a player turns down your money — equal or better — what he’s really telling you is that the roster, the park, and the competitive trajectory didn’t move him enough. That’s not a knock on Suárez. It’s an indictment of the environment.
Ben Cherington and the Pirates can’t respond to that by shrugging and pivoting to “internal options.” Not after this. Not after making it clear they were willing to spend this particular $15 million.
If you can allocate $15M to a 34-year-old third baseman on a prove-it deal, then you can allocate $15M to something else that materially improves the team – a legitimate middle-of-the-order bat, a multi-year commitment that signals stability, or multiple upgrades that turn weaknesses into competence.
What the Pirates can’t do is pocket the savings and call the offseason “aggressive.” Because the sting here isn’t just that Suárez will now be hitting in Great American Ball Park against Pirates pitching. It’s that the Pirates showed their hand — and now fans know the money exists.
This isn’t about “losing” Eugenio Suárez. It’s about accountability. You offered the money. You were willing to go higher. You didn’t get the player anyway. That’s baseball.
But if the roster that breaks camp looks the same, if that $15 million never turns into tangible help, then this wasn’t a missed opportunity — it was a broken promise.
The Pirates just told everyone they could afford to try. Now they owe fans proof that they still are.
