SAN FRANCISCO — Matt Chapman, the most prolific free agent the Giants added last offseason, has agreed to a long-term extension to stay with San Francisco through 2030, the team announced Wednesday night.
Chapman, 31, agreed to a six-year, $151 contract with the Giants on Wednesday. He will earn $25 million each season from 2025 to 2030 and also receive a $1 million signing bonus in 2025.
Asked last month by this news organization about the possibility of a contract extension, Chapman expressed interest in staying in a Giants uniform.
“That’s not really my focus right now; my focus is on trying to get to the playoffs, Chapman said. “But the Giants, I love being here and they know I want to be here. They know I’m open to it. I’m just kind of waiting on them.”
Chapman has played in all but four games this season, with one of his absences being a late scratch on the night the club was announced. The four-time Gold Glover ranks 13th in MLB with a 4.5 Fangraphs WAR among position players this season.
The Giants committed nearly $400 million in guaranteed contracts this past offseason, including an $18 million deal for Chapman in March that included a player option for 2026 and a mutual option for 2027. The six-year extension tears all of that apart.
Chapman, a two-time Platinum Glove winner, leads all third basemen in 2024 with 13 defensive runs saved. He leads the Giants in home runs (22), runs (90), doubles (33), hits (126) and RBI (69).
Chapman’s new six-year extension is the richest contract manager of baseball operations Farhan Zaidi has completed. The team’s press release made no mention of options in his new deal.
The Orange County-raised Chapman played the first five years of his career with the A’s after being selected by Oakland in the first round of the 2014 draft out of Cal State Fullerton.
He was a 2019 All-Star with the A’s, slugged a career-high 36 home runs and finished sixth in American League MVP voting as a key member of a team in the middle of three consecutive playoff seasons. Oakland traded him to the Blue Jays during the demolition of that core in March 2022.
He played 295 of a possible 314 games in Toronto over two seasons, winning his fourth Gold Glove in 2022, before becoming a free agent and returning to the Bay Area this spring with the Giants.
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