That’s what made it matter.
With multiple years of club control still remaining, the organization moved Sunday to extend left-hander Cristopher Sánchez — not out of necessity, but out of conviction. It was a decision rooted less in obligation and more in belief: belief in the pitcher Sánchez has become, and the one they expect him to be for years to come.
The extension runs through the 2032 season, with a club option for 2033 — a commitment that could keep Sánchez in Philadelphia for the better part of the decade.
“We consider him one of the best pitchers in Major League Baseball,” president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. “He’s pitched tremendously for us, and we look forward to him continuing to do so.”
The timing only underscored the message.
Sánchez will take the ball Thursday at Citizens Bank Park as the Phillies’ Opening Day starter — a role that, not long ago, would have felt unlikely. Now, it feels inevitable.
In a sport increasingly defined by timing — when to buy, when to sell, when to wait — the Phillies chose to act early. Dombrowski acknowledged the club didn’t need to revisit Sánchez’s contract, but internally, the decision was straightforward.
“When we looked into the future, we kind of assumed years four and five were no-brainers,” Dombrowski said. “So we started talking beyond that. With somebody of Christopher’s stature, we’d rather get this done now.”
That phrasing — somebody of his stature — reflects how much Sánchez’s profile has changed.
Not long ago, he was fighting to establish himself in the rotation. Now, he’s not only a frontline starter — he’s the one setting the tone for the season’s first pitch.
Sánchez’s rise hasn’t been linear — it’s been accelerating.
In 2023, he was still finding his footing, posting a 3.44 ERA while working between roles. In 2024, he became a dependable presence in the rotation, logging 181 2/3 innings with a 3.32 ERA. And in 2025, he made the leap. Sánchez went 13-5 with a 2.50 ERA across 202 innings, striking out 212 batters while posting a 1.06 WHIP — numbers that vaulted him to a second-place finish in Cy Young voting and cemented his place among the game’s top starters.
The Phillies are betting that trajectory is not only real — but sustainable.
Dombrowski pointed to a combination of talent and relentless refinement as the foundation of Sánchez’s rise.
“He’s very talented,” Dombrowski said. “And it’s also how hard he works. There’s no thought process that he’s arrived. He wants to be the best.”
That mindset is part of what made this deal possible.
For Sánchez, the decision wasn’t about chasing the absolute ceiling of the market. It was about something more immediate — and more certain.
“Security was important,” Sánchez said. “I only worry about the things I can control.”
That choice comes in contrast to the path taken by other pitchers who have played out their contracts in search of larger deals. Sánchez saw those examples. He understood the risk. But ultimately, he chose stability — and Philadelphia.
“It shows the commitment that this team has,” Sánchez said. “They reward the work I’ve been doing.”
There was also a practical element. With Opening Day approaching, both sides preferred resolution now rather than distraction later.
“You try to keep distractions to a minimum once you get to Opening Day,” Dombrowski said. “Anytime we try to do something like this, we try to get it done before then.”
The timing, then, was deliberate.
So was the message.
This is a Phillies team that has consistently operated with urgency, whether in free agency, at the trade deadline, or in retaining its own. Locking in Sánchez fits that pattern — an effort to stabilize a rotation that has become one of the organization’s defining strengths.
But it also speaks to something less tangible: culture.
Sánchez described the clubhouse as “like my second family,” a factor that reinforced his desire to stay.
“The way we do things together is beautiful for the city of Philadelphia,” he said.
That connection — between player, team, and city — is what the Phillies are trying to preserve.
And on Sunday, they took another step toward doing it.
Because this wasn’t a move they had to make.
It was one they believed in — and one that will be on full display when Sánchez takes the mound Thursday to open the Phillies’ season.
“We consider him one of the best pitchers in Major League Baseball,” president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. “He’s pitched tremendously for us, and we look forward to him continuing to do so.”
The timing only underscored the message.
Sánchez will take the ball Thursday at Citizens Bank Park as the Phillies’ Opening Day starter — a role that, not long ago, would have felt unlikely. Now, it feels inevitable.
In a sport increasingly defined by timing — when to buy, when to sell, when to wait — the Phillies chose to act early. Dombrowski acknowledged the club didn’t need to revisit Sánchez’s contract, but internally, the decision was straightforward.
“When we looked into the future, we kind of assumed years four and five were no-brainers,” Dombrowski said. “So we started talking beyond that. With somebody of Christopher’s stature, we’d rather get this done now.”
That phrasing — somebody of his stature — reflects how much Sánchez’s profile has changed.
Not long ago, he was fighting to establish himself in the rotation. Now, he’s not only a frontline starter — he’s the one setting the tone for the season’s first pitch.
Sánchez’s rise hasn’t been linear — it’s been accelerating.
In 2023, he was still finding his footing, posting a 3.44 ERA while working between roles. In 2024, he became a dependable presence in the rotation, logging 181 2/3 innings with a 3.32 ERA. And in 2025, he made the leap. Sánchez went 13-5 with a 2.50 ERA across 202 innings, striking out 212 batters while posting a 1.06 WHIP — numbers that vaulted him to a second-place finish in Cy Young voting and cemented his place among the game’s top starters.
The Phillies are betting that trajectory is not only real — but sustainable.
Dombrowski pointed to a combination of talent and relentless refinement as the foundation of Sánchez’s rise.
“He’s very talented,” Dombrowski said. “And it’s also how hard he works. There’s no thought process that he’s arrived. He wants to be the best.”
That mindset is part of what made this deal possible.
For Sánchez, the decision wasn’t about chasing the absolute ceiling of the market. It was about something more immediate — and more certain.
“Security was important,” Sánchez said. “I only worry about the things I can control.”
That choice comes in contrast to the path taken by other pitchers who have played out their contracts in search of larger deals. Sánchez saw those examples. He understood the risk. But ultimately, he chose stability — and Philadelphia.
“It shows the commitment that this team has,” Sánchez said. “They reward the work I’ve been doing.”
There was also a practical element. With Opening Day approaching, both sides preferred resolution now rather than distraction later.
“You try to keep distractions to a minimum once you get to Opening Day,” Dombrowski said. “Anytime we try to do something like this, we try to get it done before then.”
The timing, then, was deliberate.
So was the message.
This is a Phillies team that has consistently operated with urgency, whether in free agency, at the trade deadline, or in retaining its own. Locking in Sánchez fits that pattern — an effort to stabilize a rotation that has become one of the organization’s defining strengths.
But it also speaks to something less tangible: culture.
Sánchez described the clubhouse as “like my second family,” a factor that reinforced his desire to stay.
“The way we do things together is beautiful for the city of Philadelphia,” he said.
That connection — between player, team, and city — is what the Phillies are trying to preserve.
And on Sunday, they took another step toward doing it.
Because this wasn’t a move they had to make.
It was one they believed in — and one that will be on full display when Sánchez takes the mound Thursday to open the Phillies’ season.
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