← NewsAll
Pete Crow-Armstrong's history sealed his Cubs extension
Summary
Pete Crow-Armstrong agreed to a six-year, $115 million extension with the Chicago Cubs, and he described the decision as tied to family, mentors and his connection to the organization.
Content
Pete Crow-Armstrong signed a six-year, $115 million extension with the Chicago Cubs and spoke about how his personal history influenced the choice. He is 24 and reflected on memories from youth baseball through his high school and minor-league years. The contract announcement at Wrigley Field included family, agents, coaches and senior club executives. Team leaders said the deal reflected mutual interest in keeping him long term.
Key details:
- Crow-Armstrong signed a six-year, $115 million contract extension with the Chicago Cubs.
- He is 24 and publicly thanked his parents, Matt and Ashley, as part of the announcement.
- He was selected 19th overall by the New York Mets in 2020 and was acquired by the Cubs in the Javier Báez trade in 2021.
- Early in his pro career he missed a COVID-19 intake check after oversleeping, an episode cited as a learning moment by a team official who later joined the Cubs.
- Hitting instructors who worked with him in the minors, including Dustin Kelly and John Mallee, joined the Cubs' major-league staff and were at the press event.
- Senior club figures attended the news conference, and the article notes Crow-Armstrong has marketing partnerships with Gatorade, New Balance, Corona and Southwest Airlines.
Summary:
The extension secures Crow-Armstrong's place with the Cubs and underscores the club's interest in continuity and his role with the organization through 2032. Undetermined at this time.
