Juan Soto‘s tour through free agency has thus far taken him to meetings with the Yankees, Mets, Red Sox and Blue Jays, with another meeting set for later Tuesday between Soto’s camp and Dodgers brass. Another big-market team can be added to the mix, as the New York Post’s Jon Heyman writes that the Phillies also intend to sit down with the free-agent slugger, though a meeting isn’t yet known to be officially scheduled.
It is no shock that the Phils will at least check in on the market for another big name, as ownership and president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski hasn’t been shy about courting and signing superstar free agents. Bryce Harper and Trea Turner are two of those stars, and it is fair to assume that Harper and Turner have exchanged a few texts and calls with their former Nationals teammate Soto about a reunion in Philadelphia.
Earlier this month, Phillies chairman John Middleton acknowledged that his team would be somewhat involved in the Soto sweepstakes. However, Middleton was rather candid in his evaluation of Soto’s market. Middleton felt, “Soto wants to be in New York, and I don’t mind being a stalking horse. At some point, if Dave and I get that feeling, we’ll probably say, ‘You know what, we’re not going to win this’ because we’ve both been the stalking horse before.”
This hints that the Phillies aren’t planning entirely as pitched a pursuit as other suitors in the race, though it costs the Phils nothing to meet with Soto and agent Scott Boras to assess the situation. Just in case other teams don’t meet Soto’s asking price or some other obstacle arises, Philadelphia could position itself as a fallback option that still checks a lot of boxes on Soto’s presumed wish list, as the Phillies are a consistent contender who should remain in the playoff hunt for some time to come.
Signing Soto to a record contract would further elevate the Phillies’ already-large payroll. As per RosterResource, Philadelphia has an approximate $269M payroll and a $288M tax number for 2025, even before any significant offseason moves have been made, so adding Soto would send the Phillies far beyond the highest tax penalty tier of $301M. Since the Phillies have made luxury-tax payments in each of the last three seasons, they already face an increased price tag for any further overages, so signing Soto would essentially come at twice the cost of his actual salary.
Middleton might not necessarily mind at least a one-year splurge since Kyle Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto are free agents next winter and thus represent some significant money coming off the Phillies’ books. Ideally, the Phils would probably love to free up money this winter by moving at least one of Nick Castellanos or Taijuan Walker, though that is much easier said than done since both players have negligible trade value.
If Soto was signed and Castellanos stayed put, the two would handle the corner outfield positions in some fashion while Brandon Marsh and Johan Rojas became a center field platoon. This wouldn’t be an ideal arrangement from a glovework perspective, yet the Phillies probably wouldn’t mind a defensive step backward if it meant putting Soto’s power bat into the lineup.