It wasn’t long ago that infielder Ha-Seong Kim looked like a strong bet to land a nine-figure deal in free agency. Last September, Kim was wrapping up a season in which he had hit .233/.330/.370, good for a league average wRC+ of 101. He combined that with strong defense at shortstop and 22 steals on the base paths, and it was actually the weakest of his last three seasons in the majors. Since the start of 2022, Kim had hit .250/.336/.385 with 72 steals, a 17.9% strikeout rate, and a walk rate of 11.0% with 13.0 bWAR and 10.5 fWAR accumulated.
A player who was consistently worth three to five wins per season entering his age-29 season looked like a slam dunk for a sizable deal, but that was derailed when he underwent shoulder surgery 364 days ago. He wound up signing a $29MM guarantee with the Rays that spanned the 2025 and ’26 seasons, though it gave him the opportunity to opt out of the final year and $16MM of that deal if he so chose. Kim’s campaign this year was not an especially robust one, as he appeared in just 48 games and hit .234/.304/.345 in 191 plate appearances. The Rays were concerned enough about the possibility of having Kim on payroll in 2026 that they exposed him to waivers last month, at which point he was claimed by the Braves.
On paper, that might make the decision to opt in and try to bounce back next year an easy one for Kim. It’s hard to say that a 191 plate appearance sample size where he posted an 82 wRC+ with middling defensive grades would improve his stock in free agency much, after all. With that being said, it may not be an entirely foregone conclusion. Kim did manage to look much more like his former self down the stretch with Atlanta, hitting .253/.316/.368 (91 wRC+) with a 16.3% strikeout rate and some of the strongest expected numbers of his career. His overall production remained below average due in part to a BABIP of just .271, but it suddenly became much easier to see Kim returning to the average to slightly above average bat he once was after his performance in the Braves organization.
Of course, that time in Atlanta represents just 98 plate appearances, which makes it difficult to draw any significant conclusions. The Braves themselves certainly appear satisfied with Kim’s progress, though, as president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos has made no bones about his desire to keep the infielder in the fold for next season. With a relatively barren market for shortstop-caliber players outside of Bo Bichette, it’s not hard to imagine other teams seeing Kim’s upside and being willing to spend a good bit more than the $16MM guarantee Kim would be opting out of, even if that would come in the form of a similarly short-term, opt-out laden arrangement as the one he signed last winter.
There’s certainly risk in opting out of a guaranteed $16MM payday coming off an injury-marred season, and it would be entirely understandable if Kim preferred to simply stick with the Braves and hope to bounce back enough in 2026 that he puts himself in line for a lucrative contract next winter. With that being said, it must be considered that Kim is represented by the Boras Corporation, and agent Scott Boras is known for preferring his clients to test free agency when possible. That’s not a hard-and-fast rule, however; Boras clients Cody Bellinger and Gerrit Cole both had the opportunity to test free agency via opt outs last winter and ultimately declined to do so, though Cole did initially opt out before mutually agreeing with the Yankees to remain in the organization on the terms of his original contract.
How do MLBTR readers expect Kim to handle his impending option? Will he test free agency and try to take advantage of a weak shortstop class, or is he more likely to stick with Atlanta on his current deal? Have your say in the poll below:
To certain idiots on this site:
He’s not going to the Dodgers
Man, no kidding. It’s the same any time some crappy AAAA pitcher gets the DFA, and the lames on here all start chiming in with “going to the Rays”. They stay beating those dead horses.
In defense of the Rays, they are very good at turning in AAAA pitchers and even some hitters, into productive MLB players.
He’s going to the dodgers
There are a number of people that think he is already on the dogers.
Dodgers don’t need him. They can sign Rojas as a backup again for a good glove.
Admittedly I’m a rather big Kim fan. I thought he should’ve won a platinum glove with San Diego. That being said, he really can’t hit and is not a $15M+ per year player in my book. In my world, you always take a guarantee over a maybe. Opt in and then see what ’27 may bring.
I like him at 10 milllion or less a season.
He can easily beat that with yearly opt outs on a 2 or 3 year deal. I bet he could find a slightly better contract than his current deal.
i believe it will take some sort of extension from braves for kim to not opt out
Lol no.
I think he could top more than $16M guaranteed on a multi-year deal, but if I am him, I bet on myself, because if someone would give him, say, 2 years/$17M off his 2025 performance, he could get way more than 1 year/$1M in 2027 if he performs even marginally better in 2026, coming off a $16M salary.
Lets say he performs similarly in 2026. He gets 1 year/$5M or 2 years/$15M or something modest like that- that’s $21M or $31M guaranteed vs $16M or $17M guaranteed if he opts out.
He should get another $30M opting out.
He’s in a very similar situation as last year. No reason to think he wouldn’t get a very similar contract
He has a shot to do better since he has shown he can produce a little post injury. I thought TB overpaid at the time and was surprised they made that deal.
I would say no. 16m is a lot of money to leave on the table after not having played a full season in 2025.
I’m honestly surprised TB signed him to begin with the last off-season. They never spend money
His defense was probably a big factor.
They definitely overpaid.
“I’m honestly surprised TB”.. Tampa definitely overpaid and I was SHOCKED they signed Kim at that price point.
That being said, Tampa more or less admitted the mistake and got rid of him. Tampa is good at rectifying the very few contractual mistakes they do make.
Opts out only to take a 2 year deal with another opt out. 2 years for 20 million.
Only way he stays a brave is to sign an extension.
I would offer 2/$20 but I think he will get essentially the same deal as last year or closer to 2/$30
Big factor nobody talking about is that if he opts out now he is a free agent without a qualify offer. If he stays and has a solid season he is a free agent next off season most likely with a qualify offer.
If I was him I would opt out test the market; there aren’t a lot of quality shortstops out there. Worse case scenario he comes back to the Braves in January as I don’t see Atlanta having the shortstop spot fixed by than and gets the 16 million with an option year.
I don’t know what the shortstop market looks like next year but this year is weak so he should capitalize on it
Kim was one of many FA ppl were clamoring for Cashman to sign. He was criticized for being frugal. Cashman dodged a lot of bullets this past winter and hit upon a few gems along the way in Goldy, Fried and Grish.
@Knicks I have criticized Cashman for many years. However, this past trade deadline and last off-season, I thought he did a great job. I know Devin Williams didn’t work out but it was a good move
I don’t think Goldy was a gem. The others were good and he did well at the deadline
@Wade
It was a 1 year deal and he was better than the other FA options. What didn’t you like?
His production over the course of the season. I actually liked the guy the Astros signed but that turned into a stinker too. Easy to 2nd guess things now.
In the long run he did well long enough for Rice to replace him so not terrible. They just overpaid for the results over the full season.
I think he most definitely will.
Bichette is coming off a leg injury, and already considered a subpar defender at SS. Likely needing to transfer to 2B within a few years.
Kim is literally the only “true” SS, although he had some below average numbers this season defensively.
With those points and a few teams out there that could conceivably use an upgrade at SS, it’s not entirely out of the question that he could opt out and receive a solid payday. From big name teams down to even the Nationals (who could move Abram’s to 2B).
The thing is I don’t think Atlanta pays him anything more than like 4/60 and as a Braves fan I’m not ENTIRELY upset about that considering the red flags around his injury history and declining arm strength.
SS field is crap this year. He’ll opt out.
The Braves claiming him at all and talking about wanting to keep him in the fold for 2026 says him opting-out isn’t at all unrealistic. Especially with Boras as his agent and him returning to form after coming over to ATL. If they didn’t think he was worth $16m for 2026 they never would have claimed him at all. I doubt they are going to change their minds after he played well in that first month.
He was injured and not that great in 2025. He might be able to get a multi year deal but I feel like he could take the 16M and get a multi year deal at a higher AAV in the 2026-27 offseason after a stronger rebound year
If he matches $16M next year with an opt out laden deal he is still able to cash out later.
$16:M nothing to sneeze at, but he has to think he will get that and more on the FA market. Given the need for SS and the SS market in general, someone is going to take a chance on him for more than that.
Do I get to see the results if I vote this time?
I think Braves add on more option year, worth similar or more. Win-win for both sides…
He wouldn’t top 16 mill a year but definitely more guaranteed. Bet he could get 3/36.
If he hadn’t stunk up the joint the final couple weeks, he would have been a lock to opt-out. Now it’s a closer call.