After a protracted stare-down with the New York Yankees, Cody Bellinger is headed back to the Bronx on a five-year, $162.5 million deal. The pact, which makes Bellinger the team’s third-highest paid player on an annual basis, behind Aaron Judge and Gerrit Cole, contains a full no-trade clause and opt-outs following the second and third seasons.

The outcome itself is far from shocking.

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By Wins Above Replacement, only Judge provided more value to the 2025 Yankees than Bellinger. He was a great fit in the clubhouse and had zero problems handling the Big Apple pressure-cooker. No other team had a more obvious need for a well-rounded, high-contact corner outfielder. And Bellinger, by all accounts, thoroughly enjoyed his time in New York after arriving from Chicago via a salary-dump trade last winter. So at the winter’s outset, a reunion felt borderline inevitable.

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But the path to that conclusion was unexpectedly bumpy. Bellinger and his agent, Scott Boras, were clearly seeking a longer-term contract, but such a deal never materialized. The Yankees, as multiple reports indicated throughout the process, were unwilling to go beyond five years. GM Brian Cashman refused to budge, all but indicating that he was prepared to let Bellinger walk if the outfielder could find a more enticing deal elsewhere. That led to something of a stalemate, with contract details reaching the public at an unusually regular cadence.

As Bellinger and Boras searched for alternate offers — whether as legitimate landing spots or as negotiating leverage — potential big-budget suitors began pivoting one by one. The first major domino to fall was outfielder Kyle Tucker, the consensus top free agent on the market. When the 29-year-old agreed to a shocking, four-year, $240 million deal with the two-time defending champion Dodgers last week, it effectively took Los Angeles out of the Bellinger sweepstakes.

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It also prompted a change in direction for the New York Mets, who had made a competitive offer for Tucker’s services. New York swiftly inked infielder Bo Bichette to a three-year, $126 million contract. With the middle of the lineup now secure, president of baseball operations David Stearns then swung a trade with the Chicago White Sox for mercurial center fielder Luis Robert Jr. The 28-year-old Cuban still has a cathedral offensive ceiling, and he provides a high floor thanks to his snazzy glove.

That swap, struck late Tuesday night, appeared to provide the final blow to Bellinger and Boras’ hopes of pushing the Yankees’ offer skyward. With the Mets out of the running, Bellinger and Boras had no choice but to return to the deal Cashman had left on the table all along.

Financially, it’s a moderately disappointing haul. Coming off his most complete season since 2019, Bellinger was surely seeking a contract that would cover most of his 30s. But Boras’ hardball approach paid no extra dividends. That said, a pair of strong seasons could send Bellinger back to the open market two years from now at age 32, with a chance to cash in again.

For the Yankees, this is a prudent, if predictable, move.

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Bellinger provides uniquely excellent defense for a corner outfielder — a must in Yankee Stadium’s relatively expansive left field. The club’s backup plan was most likely Jasson Domínguez, the former über-prospect who has yet to establish himself as an impact player. Domínguez’s shortcomings are particularly glaring on the defensive side of things, where his Christopher Columbus-level routes to the ball proved to be the stuff of Yakety Sax lore.

Although overshadowed by their premature exit in the ALDS against the Toronto Blue Jays, the 2025 Yankees finished the regular season tied with Toronto for the most wins in the American League. As such, Cashman and Co. seem more than happy to run things back in 2026. Bellinger will rejoin a group helmed by back-to-back MVP Aaron Judge and supplemented by second baseman Jazz Chisholm, first baseman Ben Rice and DH Giancarlo Stanton. New York’s unit launched 30 more long balls than any other club last year and finished the season first in most offensive categories.

While it’s not the six- or seven-year pact Bellinger was perhaps dreaming of, this deal represents the culmination of a years-long crawl back to stardom for the 2019 MVP.

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After that historic campaign with the Dodgers, Bellinger’s production fell into a ravine. Los Angeles declined to tender him a contract following the 2022 season. He latched on with the Cubs, with whom he reinvented himself as a contact-oriented player. He parlayed a strong 2023 into an opt-out-laden, three-year pact with Chicago, which sent him to the Bronx in what was essentially a salary dump ahead of last season.

He rebounded immediately, solidifying himself once again as a winning player. Bellinger was lackluster in a small October sample, but that didn’t change the fact that he’d already entrenched himself as a key member of a quality club. Now, he’ll be paid as such for a long stretch of time.