The headline looks simple enough: MLB.com has placed Logan Gilbert squarely in its 2026 extension-candidate bucket. On paper, it’s almost automatic. He’s an All-Star–caliber starter, he’s under team control through 2027, and the Seattle Mariners still sell themselves as the organization that turns pitching development into October currency. Extend the homegrown ace. Print the jerseys. Move on.
Except it’s not that simple anymore.
Because the extension conversation isn’t happening in a vacuum — not after 2025 landed with a thud that forced the front office to recalibrate. Gilbert’s season didn’t just wobble; it hit a record scratch moment when a Grade 1 elbow flexor strain shelved him for nearly two months. The diagnosis was mild. The optics were not. When he returned from the injured list, the rhythm wasn’t the same. The dominance came in flashes, but so did the volatility. Command wavered. Efficiency dipped. The aura shifted.

And that’s the part extension lists gloss over.
The logic behind extending a pitcher before free agency is straightforward: buy certainty before the price explodes. But Gilbert’s price is complicated precisely because 2025 complicated it. Was the injury a blip? A warning? A stress test? Front offices don’t just look at ERA columns; they study trends, workloads, recovery timelines. They file away phrases like “elbow flexor strain” even when the prognosis reads mild. Pitchers break. Sometimes slowly. Sometimes all at once.
That’s why Seattle’s extension window feels smaller than it looks.
On one hand, this is exactly the moment bold teams strike. If Gilbert’s stock softened even slightly in 2025, this is the classic “security pitch” window — offer long-term stability before a bounce-back year sends the number soaring again. We’ve seen this movie before. When Cal Raleigh was tracking toward free agency after 2027, Seattle didn’t hesitate. They hammered out a six-year, $105 million deal that bought out three free-agent seasons, plus a vesting option. It was proactive. It was structured. It was calculated risk management.

If the Mariners can land Gilbert on a Raleigh-ish framework, you absolutely pick up the phone.
But pitching isn’t catching. The risk profile is different. The financial gravity is heavier. And the market just got louder.
When Tarik Skubal secured a record-setting arbitration win, it wasn’t just a headline for Detroit. It was a signal flare across the league. Late-arbitration starters with elite résumés are no longer playing for incremental raises; they’re resetting expectations. Even if Gilbert isn’t Skubal, the ripple effect matters. Arbitration is no longer a polite stepping stone to free agency — it’s leverage. Real leverage.
That’s why Seattle cannot bid against itself.
A year ago, Gilbert openly said he’d love to finish his career in Seattle. “Seattle has become like home,” he noted. Those words matter. Culture matters. Stability matters. But affection doesn’t erase market forces. If Gilbert stays healthy and reclaims peak form, he doesn’t need an extension to maximize his value. He can simply ride arbitration, stack innings, and test free agency at 30 with the entire industry circling.
So what does “careful” look like?

It means structuring a deal that acknowledges the 2025 volatility without insulting the 2024 dominance. It means building upside into the contract — incentives, escalators, perhaps a vesting component — so that if Gilbert returns to frontline form, both sides win. And it means resisting the temptation to lock in nine figures simply for the optics of continuity.
The scariest outcome for Seattle isn’t watching Gilbert walk in free agency. The scariest outcome is extending him as if 2025 never happened — paying for the pristine version while inheriting the uncertainty that followed. In a division that demands efficiency and in an American League landscape that punishes payroll mistakes, that kind of miscalculation lingers.
None of this is to suggest Gilbert isn’t foundational. He is. When he’s right, the fastball rides, the slider tunnels, and the entire pitching identity of the Mariners clicks into place. He sets the tone. He absorbs innings. He makes October plausible.
But extensions are not rewards. They are risk assessments.
And right now, Seattle’s leverage lies in patience. They control Gilbert for two more seasons. They can watch the health trends. They can evaluate durability. They can measure whether 2025 was turbulence or trajectory. If he dominates in 2026, the price will climb — but clarity will climb with it.
For a franchise that has built its modern reputation on smart, measured pitching decisions, the temptation to rush could be the only real mistake. The smart play isn’t panic. It isn’t fear. It isn’t even urgency.
It’s discipline.
Because in today’s market, extending a homegrown ace isn’t about sentiment. It’s about timing. And for the Mariners, the difference between bold and reckless may come down to whether they remember that lesson before the next negotiation headline explodes across the league.