The Philadelphia Phillies saw two key players turn down lucrative one-year deals this offseason. Both slugger Kyle Schwarber and left-handed starter Ranger Suárez officially rejected the Phillies’ $22.025 million qualifying offers, choosing instead to test the open market.
What the qualifying offer means for the Philadelphia Phillies
By extending qualifying offers to both players, the Phillies protected themselves with draft compensation. If either Schwarber or Suárez signs elsewhere, Philadelphia will receive a supplemental pick after the fourth round of the 2026 MLB Draft.
That safety net gives the president of baseball operations, Dave Dombrowski, flexibility.
Mutual interest
Despite hitting free agency, neither player has closed the door on Philadelphia. Schwarber and Suárez have repeatedly voiced their affection for the city, teammates, and organization.
Dombrowski stated in October that he wants to bring back Schwarber, Suárez, catcher JT Realmuto, and center fielder Harrison Bader.
Kyle Schwarber’s form
At age 33 on Opening Day 2026, Schwarber is coming off the best season of his career. He led the National League with a career-high 56 home runs, paced MLB with 132 RBIs, and finished as runner-up in NL MVP voting behind Shohei Ohtani.
Since signing his four-year, $79 million contract before the 2022 season, Schwarber has averaged 46 homers and 108 RBIs per year in Philadelphia. Beyond the numbers, he’s become a clubhouse leader and community fixture.
Ranger Suárez’s form
Suárez’s situation is more complicated. The 29-year-old has spent his entire professional career in the Phillies organization after signing as an amateur in 2012. Over the last five seasons, he has developed into one of baseball’s better left-handed starters.
However, Philadelphia’s rotation is suddenly crowded. Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Cristopher Sánchez, Jesús Luzardo, and Taijuan Walker are all under contract for 2026, and top prospect Andrew Painter could debut early in the year, especially if Wheeler needs extra recovery time after thoracic outlet surgery.
The Broader qualifying offer scenario
Across MLB, only four of the 13 players who received qualifying offers accepted them, including Brandon Woodruff (Brewers), Shota Imanaga (Cubs), Trent Grisham (Yankees), and Gleyber Torres (Tigers). Seven others, including Zac Gallen, Kyle Tucker, and Framber Valdez, joined Schwarber and Suárez in becoming unrestricted free agents.
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