9:46AM: Hays will earn $5MM in salary in 2026, and there is a $1MM buyout on a mutual option for 2027, The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal writes. Another $375K is available for Hays in incentive bonuses based around plate appearances.
8:42AM: The White Sox have agreed to a deal with outfielder Austin Hays, ESPN’s Jesse Rogers reports. The one-year deal will pay Hays $6MM, according to Jon Heyman of the New York Post, and the contract will be official following a physical. Hays is represented by the MAS+ Agency.
Earlier today, Heyman reported that Hays was “said to be deciding this weekend” about his next landing spot. Heyman listed the White Sox, Cubs, Padres, Tigers, and Rangers as teams who had showed some level of interest in Hays at some point during the offseason. These five clubs were new to Hays’ market, as previous reports this winter linked the Royals, Reds, Mets, Yankees, and Cardinals to the 30-year-old outfielder. The Athletic’s Zack Meisel also wrote that the Guardians “put out feelers on” Hays’ services.
Playing time was an apparent priority for Hays, as Meisel wrote that the outfielder was looking for “a situation in which he could play every day.” That didn’t come in Cleveland since the Guardians didn’t want to block any of its up-and-coming younger outfielders, but Hays will now land with another AL Central team that has plenty of at-bats on offer. Hays figures to step right into at least semi-regular duty in right field, and he might also get time in his regular left field position depending on how the White Sox approach Andrew Benintendi’s playing time. Brooks Baldwin, Derek Hill, Tristan Peters, Everson Pereira, and Jarred Kelenic are among the names in Chicago’s outfield mix, plus Luisangel Acuna is likely to get a lot of time in center field.

It was almost exactly one year ago that the Reds signed Hays to a one-year, $5MM guarantee, which broke down as $4MM in salary and a $1MM buyout of a $12MM mutual option for the 2026 season. As with virtually all mutual options, Hays was cut loose following the 2025 campaign, though he had a respectable .266/.315/.453 slash line and 15 homers over 416 plate appearances for Cincinnati.
On a team that struggled to generate consistent offense, Hays’ 105 wRC+ was the third-highest of any Reds player who had at least 111 trips to the plate. Though Hays was again hampered by injuries, it was least a step upwards from the uncertainty of the kidney infection that plagued him for much of the 2024 campaign, and cratered his numbers altogether after a deadline trade to the Phillies.
Since Opening Day 2021, Hays has a 106 wRC+ over 2348 PA, and he played in basically an everyday role with the Orioles from 2021-23. Despite the decent production, Hays has never walked much or made a lot of hard contact, and his strikeout rates have shot upwards over the last three seasons. Hays’ viability for an everyday role will probably hinge on how much he can hit right-handed pitching, as his splits have made him look like most of a lefty-masher in recent years.
The Reds hung onto Hays last summer both because they needed him for their own playoff push and probably in part because his injuries hurt his trade market, but it certainly seems possible the Sox could shop Hays at the upcoming deadline. The focus remains on the future for the rebuilding White Sox, and plenty of teams would figure to have trade interest in a veteran bat who has a 160 wRC+ against left-handed pitching over the last two seasons.
The Hays signing is the latest intriguing move for a White Sox team that is planning to be more competitive in 2026, even if a full-fledged run at a playoff berth remains at least a year away. Trading Luis Robert Jr. to the Mets freed up $20MM in payroll space, and the Sox reinvested that money into a two-year, $20MM deal for Seranthony Dominguez to become Chicago’s next closer.
Since Dominguez is only getting $8MM of that money in 2026, the White Sox have now been able to sign Hays and ostensibly still have $6MM more to spend from the $20MM hole Robert left in the team’s budget. A pitching addition may be more likely than another position-player add given Chicago’s needs in the rotation and bullpen.
Inset photograph courtesy of Mark J. Rebilas — Imagn Images

Have to say, I did not see this one coming. The white Sox are swooping in on a lot of players this offseason who really aren’t making their team much better
Potential trade deadline sell offs
OF and bullpen their huge weaknesses. Short term vets like this 1/6mil + incentives and Seranthony make sense.
Given who they were projected to trot out in the OF, Hays makes their team quite a bit better.
Man. The White Sox are cooking
Hmmm. Will the Mets sign Mark Canha or _______ to hold down an OF spot until Benge is ready?
Trade for nootbar and jojo remero
I like Benge as a corner outfielder with A.J. Ewing representing the future centerfielder. I think it is optimistic for the Mets to view Benge as potential 2026 fixture, as both could use another year or two in the farm. Though A.J. Ewing has yet to reach AAA, Benge basically got there early to struggle. Seems equal footing where both will begin the year at AAA. A.J. Ewing might reach majors earlier as his skillset should allow a quicker climb.
NYMETSHEA:
I agree. If Benge isn’t ready and needs a little more time in AAA, it would be nice to have a backup plan or a guy who could start semi regularly in left field. I don’t really see a guy like that right now on the roster. If Baty can handle left field, that would be a good stop gap but I don’t know if he can play that on a regular basis. I would just like a guy who can kind of hold things down in the meantime.
Its ok. A good amount of strikeouts to very little walks. Did we investigate Jesse Winker? Look at his walk to k. I would have had Winker and Arraez wrapped up already. Make that Naylor Winker and Arraez.This is just mediocre.
Winker is seemingly a prik. The last thing a team full of young players needs. If he were more consistent that would be more understandable but his bat is a big gamble and he’s not worth it for a rebuilding club.
You’ll end up liking Hays; he’s a real ‘plays-with-his-hair-on-fire’ type, but quick with grin and got jokes. Clubhouse guy, gamer, makes baseball-y plays, high in-game IQ. A Baseball rat (in all the right ways).
He may not be elite at anything, but he’ll be focused at all times and never lacks effort or focus.
Wow they might win 70 games this year.
Such a gift to be in such a bad division. White Sox, if everything goes well, might even be playing meaningful games in September. Now think about rebuilding in one of the coastal divisions.
Not likely
FFS.
Clevelend and the Royals are pretty good
Not really. Cleveland’s infinite river of pitchers is drying up, and the Royals have no outfield and a bad farm system.
Do you mean golf games?
The cost is not posted uet, but i bet he ends up doing better than other ofers who signed for more. It will work out.
Cleveland might win 70 games next year, that lineup is garbage.
Jose Ramirez says “hold my beer”!
He has taken that team on his little shoulders for years. Scrappy Lil dude
Jose Ramirez can’t hit all 9 spots. They’re are 8 other guaranteed outs in the lineup
Wow, well good on them. I was already saying how this team was definitely more exciting and it’s just getting better. I mean not contender better, but watchable for sure!
$6 for one year, heck of a good deal. Sad the Yanks didn’t bring him back to the AL East.
Hays wanted to play every day though so I get this move right now.
I’ll be very interested to see where the Sox hover at the deadline.
Good platoon player/fourth outfield option. League average bat, which is more than what they’ve been throwing out there in recent years.
Good for the Sox, and good for Hays. The white Sox look to be rising out of the cellar, and at least trading places with the Twins.
Nice pickup.
They just set Baldwin back unless they move Montgomery to 1B.
Front office is dreaming of having a competitive team this season, I can applaud that, but Id of rather have seen them develop Baldwin in the OF with a full slate of at-bats.
Hays’ defense has taken a nose dive. Baldwin didnt post great marks but with consistent reps at one position, he could have improves to the point where he was posting positive values in DRS and OAA.
Its a snoozer if you ask me. Baldwin is an exciting young player. Hays likely to start everyday too.
I sure hope they move Montgomery to first and DH Murakami. Could open up a spot in the OF for Baldwin with Acuna taking over at SS. Baldwin can probably handle CF.
Would be the Sox best lineup:
(2B) Meidroth
(C) Teel
(LF) Benintendi
(DH) Murakami
(1B) Montgomery
(RF) Hays
(3B) Vargas
(CF) Baldwin
(SS) Acuna
Lee, Periera, Hill, Mead on the bench.
It seems like Sosa and Quero potentially on the block.
Beni is mainly DH and Acuna is playing CF. Colson is playing SS for now while 3B is his long term position. Baldwin can replace Hill on the bench
Hill should have been let go a long time ago. We should have kept Ramos
Ramos maybe depth option tbh. Seems like Getz isn’t high on him unfortunately as much as I love the kid.
Murakami is the best option at DH and I dont get why Montgomery wouldn’t move off short and take up first sooner than later with four years of control on Vargas.
Acuna can play SS, Meidroth can play some SS with Mead getting reps at second base when Acuna is out of the lineup.
Baldwin would be best holding down CF everyday. Sosa a nice bat off the bench backs up 1B/3B.
Could run a bench of Quero, Sosa, Mead, Periera – keep the bats on the bench and sacrifice some defense — Hill, Lee and Pereira all out of options.
I was hoping Baldwin would at lest develop into someone with a high OBP (something we badly need) like he had in the minors, but so far that isn’t the case. Regardless, anyone that they like as part of a winning team moving forward has to play every day, whether it’s at the show or in the minors.
To be fair last year they were toying with him playing 8 different positions to use him as a super utility SH. That’s pretty much his ceiling tbh.
Reds could have had him for that if they weren’t cheap. They seem to want to miss the playoffs again.
Interesting choice for him, but he will get regular playing time.
Even the White Sox want to win more now than ancient bOb, and his nepo baby son. All the lies have been fully exposed now
Since this soft and weak as …. site doesn’t allow swearing, I can’t come close to telling you what a piece of …. our owner in Cincinnati is
Unfortunately we all know and have the same opinion, outside the idol worshippers, that is.
I would not have minded him for the Mets as some outfield depth for left field in case Benge isn’t ready. I don’t know what the plan is in left field if Benge isn’t quite ready yet.
Baty
BCleveland3381:
Can he handle the position defensively on a semi regular basis for a couple of months if he needs to? I can’t answer that question. I don’t know how anyone can.
Meanwhile back at Progressive field, Guardians front office make themselves a sandwich and check out Craig’s List
Good move for both sides. A way for Hays to play himself onto a contender. Sox pay 6 mil and flip him at the deadline for a prospect.
I’m decidely not a fan of Reinsdorf, but hiring Getz to run things has been a good move in my opinion. Getz doesn’t panic, he refuses to make snap decisions and if he doesn’t get the return he wants,he won’t deal. Hays kills lefties, they’ll make good use of him.
Getz did make rookie type mistakes back in the 2024 trainwreck and it seems he somewhat learned from it 2 years later. He definitely deserves his fair share of criticism nevertheless.
Yeah I agree; any person new at their job is going to make stupid decisions, the question is whether they will learn from them or develop a stubbornness/insistence that they are doing things the right way despite bad results. One thing I like about Getz is that he’s willing to cut bait with things that aren’t working, such as the Ramos DFA.
if Hays stays healthy, I think he is a capable, average MLB OF who strikes me as professional. This move does not hurt ChiSox in any fashion and is something several ‘contenders’ should have considered more. Especially if hitting LHP is an issue. IMO
Are the White Sox going to be great no but they definitely have had a more busy offseason than I expected.
Sigh. Hays and his obsession with an every day role, despite being a platoon hitter and injury prone.
I’d say both the Pirates and White Sox have taken this offseason seriously.