CLEVELAND — In a stunning offseason twist that should have been a cause for celebration, the Cleveland Guardians locked in franchise cornerstone JosĂ© RamĂrez to a massive seven-year, $175 million extension — yet the ringing echoes from Progressive Field aren’t cheers. They’re doubts. Because even after one of the most eye-opening contract commitments in recent franchise history, one question looms over Cleveland like a dark cloud: How can one of baseball’s best players win in Cleveland when the team around him remains woefully inadequate?
RamĂrez — a six-time All-Star and the face of Guardians baseball for the better part of a decade — agreed to a deal that will keep him in the city through the 2032 season. The extension includes significant deferred money, creative financial structuring, and full no-trade protection, signaling that both sides want permanence. For a small-market club like Cleveland, locking down a future Hall of Famer for the long haul is a coup few expected.

Yet as RamĂrez’s name lights up the scoreboard night after night — and as his legacy continues to grow as one of the greatest players in franchise history — the rest of the Guardians’ lineup looks eerily familiar: underpowered, inconsistent, and dangerously thin. The star slugger’s new contract should have given the front office a war chest to dress this roster into a contender. Instead, the silence from free agency has been deafening.
Last season, Cleveland’s offense ranked among the worst in all of Major League Baseball. Despite winning the American League Central and making a spirited run toward October, the Guardians managed just 3.97 runs per game — good for 28th out of 30 teams. That’s the kind of production usually reserved for cellar dwellers, not a division champ with postseason aspirations.
And yet here they are.
Front office officials, including President of Baseball Operations Chris Antonetti, have publicly acknowledged the need for offensive improvement — but fans heard a qualification attached to every answer. Cleveland operates on the lowest payroll in MLB, an uncomfortable truth that has limited its ability to chase premium bats or impactful free agents. Rather than aggressively pursue marquee hitters, the team has instead doubled down on internal options and prospect development.

That strategy might work for some teams — but not when your star player is a perennial MVP candidate and your lineup beside him is largely built on hope and potential, not proven production.
The frustration isn’t just speculation among armchair fans — it’s an almost universal theme in Cleveland baseball circles this offseason. Commentators, broadcasters, and even analytics insiders have pointed to one glaring reality: RamĂrez can’t do it alone, and Cleveland hasn’t done nearly enough to help him. This isn’t just about adding depth — it’s about fundamentally transforming a lineup that can’t reliably swing the bat when the game is on the line.
Trade rumors have swirled, as they always do this time of year — some suggesting the Guardians should flip RamĂrez for a haul of young talent if they truly aren’t committed to contending. While most experts quickly dismiss that idea — noting his no-trade protections and legendary status — the very notion that it’s being discussed underscores the unease in the fanbase.
Ironically, the contract extension — which should have been a rallying moment — has instead magnified just how thin Cleveland’s roster truly is. It reopened conversations about the club’s unwillingness to spend, its reluctance to trade prospects for proven talent, and the persistent question every Guardians fan whispers in private: Is this ever going to be a true World Series contender?

The pressure on the Guardians’ brass is now monumental. They have locked in arguably the greatest position player in franchise history through his age-40 season. They have given themselves financial flexibility on paper. And they’d be forgiven for thinking that such an era-defining commitment should buy them time. Instead, it has bought them scrutiny.
Fans don’t just want roster tweaks — they want proof that Cleveland is serious about winning right now, not five or six years down the line when RamĂrez is older and potentially past his peak. They want a lineup capable of putting up runs with the best of them, not one that hopes its third baseman can bail it out every night.
And so as Opening Day inches closer, one thing is clear: all eyes aren’t on JosĂ© RamĂrez’s Hall of Fame chase — they’re on the rest of this roster. Because even a generational talent can only will a team so far.
The question now isn’t whether RamĂrez still has MVP-caliber seasons left — it’s whether the Guardians still do.