Chris Young is nearing the end of his deal with the Rangers, as the executive VP and general manager will be out of contract once the season is over. The team is taking steps to keep Young in the fold, however, as owner Ray Davis outlined in a statement to Kevin Sherrington of the Dallas Morning News.
“Chris Young and I have been meeting over the last couple of months to discuss a contract extension beyond the 2024 season. I absolutely want him to continue overseeing baseball operations for the Texas Rangers for many years to come,” Davis said. “I admire and respect CY’s leadership and vision very much and will always be grateful for the important role he played to help bring a World Series championship to Arlington for the first time. While there is no final resolution at this time, we will continue to work towards coming to an agreement. CY and I agree that our immediate focus is the 2024 season and defending our title.”
Davis’ final sentence implies that the two sides could be putting talks on the back burner until closer to the end of the season, or perhaps even until after the Rangers have completed their 162 games and whatever might await of another postseason run. In technical terms, most executive contracts that expire “after the season” usually have an official end date at the end of October or the start of November, rather than the literal end of a team’s final game.
Assuming this situation exists with Young’s contract, the Rangers would have some extra time in their exclusive negotiating window to finalize a new deal before Young officially hits the open market. It also isn’t uncommon for some front office heads (the Yankees’ Brian Cashman and the Dodgers’ Andrew Friedman are recent examples) to stay in their positions beyond the official end of their prior contracts, as it is understood that the executives will be staying even it might take weeks or even months into the offseason before a new deal is officially finalized or announced.
Davis’ statement plainly outlines the Rangers’ interest in retaining the 45-year-old Young, though the GM might have interest in testing the market to see what other opportunities await…or, to see what offers are on the table to provide more leverage in negotiations with Texas. Baseball operations leadership jobs don’t come available too often, but among known contract situations within front offices, Angels GM Perry Minasian is entering the last year of his deal, and the Twins’ duo of chief baseball officer Derek Falvey and GM Thad Levine. Speculatively speaking, it seems possible that Blue Jays GM Ross Atkins or Padres president of baseball operations A.J. Preller could be on the hot seat if their teams don’t reach the playoffs.
This season’s results could also obviously lead some unexpected positions opening up in the coming months. After all, Young’s elevation to the top job in Texas in August 2022 was itself something of a surprise after the club parted ways with longtime president of baseball operations Jon Daniels. Young had been working as Daniels’ chief lieutenant since December 2020, and he suddenly became tasked with getting the Rangers back into contention after a big spending spree in the 2021-22 offseason led to another losing record in 2022.
Needless to say, Young’s first full season running the front office was a roaring success. Texas went 90-72 and narrowly missed out on the AL West crown by losing a tiebreaker to the Astros, but then caught fire in the playoffs en route to the World Series title. The long list of contributors to the Rangers’ championship included trade deadline pickup Jordan Montgomery and offseason signing Nathan Eovaldi, to cite two of the many moves Young made to add the final touches to the title-winning roster.
The follow-up hasn’t been as strong, as the Rangers carry a modest 30-33 record into today’s action. The club has been hampered by injuries to almost every member of the starting rotation, though the pitching staff has somewhat remarkably still managed to post respectable numbers even in these short-handed circumstances. The lineup, however, has disappointed — staples like Adolis Garcia and Jonah Heim have been average at best, highly-touted rookies Evan Carter and Wyatt Langford haven’t broken out, and Josh Jung has spent almost the entire season on the injured list.
The returns of injured players could help Texas dig out of this hole, and naturally there’s still well over half the season yet to be played. Still, it hasn’t been the follow-up the organization wanted to its championship run, even if Young’s hands were somewhat tied by budgetary restraints during the offseason. Since the Rangers don’t have a TV contract beyond the 2024 season to the ongoing Diamond Sports Group bankruptcy proceedings, ownership cut back on the spending last winter, so Texas didn’t see anything close to the mega-deals that landed Corey Seager, Marcus Semien, or Jacob deGrom.
It could be that this overarching broadcasting uncertainty also factored into Young’s own contractual situation, if ownership wanted a better sense of its future revenues before locking up Young. It isn’t known if Young received any kind of a raise after being promoted to the top job in 2022, so with both a promotion and a championship ring now on his resume, Young certainly has a strong case for a very lucrative new deal. Young might also conceivably be given the title of president of baseball operations and another exec could become the new GM, depending on how the Rangers want to officially set the hierarchy of their baseball ops group.
One of the few former players currently acting as a Major League front office boss, Young tossed 1297 2/3 innings over 271 career games with the Rangers, Padres, Mets, Mariners, and Royals from 2004-17. His 13 seasons in the bigs included such highlights as an All-Star nod with San Diego in 2007, and another ring as a member of Kansas City’s World Series team in 2015. After retiring, Young spent three years working in a variety of roles with Major League Baseball itself before becoming the Rangers’ general manager.