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Royals, Pasquantino agree to 2-year deal to avoid arbitratation

Ed Zurga / Getty Images Sport / Getty

The Kansas City Royals and first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino avoided arbitration by agreeing to a two-year contract, the team announced Friday.

Pasquantino's deal will pay him more than $11 million in guaranteed money, sources told Anne Rogers of MLB.com. It also includes incentive clauses that can increase his earnings to nearly $16 million.

Completion of the agreement is pending a physical, per the team.

Pasquantino and the Royals had been slated to go to an arbitration hearing in the next few weeks after failing to agree on a contract before the Jan. 8 deadline. He filed at $4.5 million, while the team countered at $4 million.

Instead, the sides seem to have found common ground with a multi-year agreement that covers his first two years of arbitration. Barring another extension, Pasquantino will again go through the arbitration process when his new deal expires in 2028, his final season before free agency.

The 28-year-old is coming off a solid campaign for the Royals that saw him emerge as a bona fide power threat in spacious Kauffman Stadium. He slashed .264/.323/.475 while setting career highs in home runs (32) and RBIs (113) across 682 plate appearances.

Pasquantino's reported agreement leaves left-hander Kris Bubic as Kansas City's lone arbitration-eligible player still without a contract. Bubic, who's in his third year of arbitration, is asking for $6.15 million, while the Royals countered by filing at $5.15 million.

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