Astros' 'untradeable' $200 million contract with World Series champion is brutal
A recent injury does not bode well for Houston.
Astros' 'untradeable' $200 million contract with World Series champion is brutal originally appeared on The Sporting News . Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here . The Houston Astros are in the midst of a disappointing season.
It only got worse when they learned that one of their everyday infielders would miss the remainder of the year with an injury. Third baseman/shortstop Carlos Correa is out for the year after requiring season-ending ankle surgery . The Astros will pay him $21.
5 million to play 32 games in 2026. "Even with the Twins retaining some of Correa's money, the Astros owe Correa $20 million in 2027 and in 2028," FanSided's Zachary Rotman wrote Tuesday. "For a 31-year-old who already had injury concerns and wasn't performing at a $20 million level, that is brutal.
" The risk Correa's injury history brings to other teams makes the $200 million contract he signed with the Minnesota Twins one of the more untradeable in the Majors. MORE : Reds' Elly De La Cruz makes baseball history not done in last 126 years "Correa has vesting options that could take his contract through 2032," Rotman added. "It's admittedly unlikely any of these incentives hit, but I'm not sure there's a single team out there willing to take the risk of this happening, and I don't blame them.