A viral tweet recently brought renewed attention to contract drama brewing in Detroit: according to Jon Heyman, the Tigers and ace pitcher Tarik Skubal are reportedly more than $250 million apart in their extension negotiations. The gap is so wide it risks becoming one of the most glaring standoffs in recent MLB history.
What does this mean for both sides and how likely is a deal, trade, or clean break? Let’s dig in.
The Tigers and Tarik Skubal are reportedly over $250 million apart in negotiations on an extension, per @JonHeyman pic.twitter.com/44VyeAbnbv
— 𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔇𝔢𝔱𝔯𝔬𝔦𝔱 𝔗𝔦𝔪𝔢𝔰 📰 (@the_det_times) October 16, 2025
Over the last two seasons, Skubal has firmly entered the elite-ace conversation. He’s posted sub-3.00 ERAs, dominated strikeout rates, and has built real Cy Young credentials. In January 2025, he sidestepped arbitration with a one-year, $10.15 million deal with Detroit. But that short-term arrangement only delays the bigger question: whether Detroit can or will secure him long term.
Detroit is no stranger to investing in their homegrown talent, but this looks different. If the reported $250 million gap is accurate, it suggests that the Tigers’ offer is well below what Skubal’s camp thinks the market should bear especially for a front-end starter. Sources suggest Skubal’s camp may be eyeing a contract in the $400–420 million range, which would dwarf many top pitching deals. Meanwhile, Detroit has reportedly offered “well less” than the $170 million deal given to Garrett Crochet.
When two sides are that far apart, it’s rarely just one variable at play. Here are several forces that could be compounding the disconnect:
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Length vs. annual value: Perhaps Detroit wants shorter term with lower average annual value (AAV), while Skubal wants years and guarantees.
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Back-loaded structure & deferrals: Skubal’s agents may push for rising increments or deferred money — inflating the headline number.
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Risk premium: Pitchers carry injury risk, so Detroit may be discounting future seasons heavily.
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Agent leverage / media positioning: With Scott Boras involved, leaks or arbitration of narratives are part of the negotiation dance.
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Market precedent: Skubal’s side will point to top-of-market arms (e.g. Cole, Scherzer) to justify pushing past what Detroit is comfortable with.

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