**CLEVELAND — “You don’t replace a player like that overnight,” a front-office insider warned this week as speculation around Steven Kwan’s future with the Guardians reached a fever pitch — and suddenly what once felt like a forgone conclusion is now one of the most polarizing questions in baseball: Will the Guardians really just let Steven Kwan walk away without a fight?
For a franchise that has clung tightly to its core identity of developing homegrown talent — and for a fan base that has watched Kwan become one of the most beloved figures in recent Cleveland history — the idea of letting him slip away relatively unchallenged has hit like a sucker punch.

Kwan, 27, is no ordinary outfielder. A two-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove winner, he has become the defensive anchor in left field and a spark plug atop the lineup, combining elite on-base skills with a knack for disrupting pitchers’ rhythms. Even in 2025, a season marked by ups and downs for the Guardians, Kwan’s contributions were tangible: a .272 batting average, 29 doubles, 11 home runs and run-saving plays that only reinforced how rare a talent he has become.
Yet as Cleveland heads into the 2026 season with its postseason hopes hanging in the balance, questions around Kwan’s long-term future have mushroomed into something unavoidable.
Last January, the two sides avoided arbitration with a $7.725 million deal — a figure that landed below many projections and, crucially, offers just a hint of where negotiations could go next. Arbitration control doesn’t expire until after the 2027 campaign, but that only heightens the tension: the Clock is Ticking.

Teams rarely make noise over arbitration years unless there’s a strategic motive. And as of now, Cleveland’s brass has remained publicly tight-lipped about long-term talks, leading to a swirl of trade chatter.
Back in mid-2025, reports surfaced that multiple clubs — including the Los Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies, San Diego Padres, and New York Mets — had expressed interest in Kwan at the trade deadline. That talk didn’t end in a deal, but it confirmed one thing: Kwan’s star power is real, and his value on the market is significant.
The heart of local angst lies in two converging realities: the Guardians are competitive, but not overwhelmingly so, and Kwan is under team control but not locked in long term. A serious extension — potentially a six-year, $70 million+ pact — looms on the horizon, and some pundits say holding off could backfire if the market shifts or if another contender flips the script.
Guardians fans have not taken the uncertainty quietly. Across forums and social platforms, supporters have alternated between calls to “Sign him long-term now!” and frantic speculation that a trade might be inevitable if the front office reacts to a slow start or playoff miss in 2026. It’s not just about on-field production — it’s about identity, continuity, and emotional connection. Many fans equate Kwan with the very soul of this era of Guardians baseball, insisting the team must commit to keeping him.
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Inside Progressive Field, the conversations are more measured — but no less urgent. League executives note that Cleveland’s financial footprint is more conservative compared to deep-pocketed markets, which could make an extension negotiation delicate. Yet trading him for prospects — especially a player with defensive prowess, on-base ability, and team control — would be a blockbuster in its own right, reshaping not just Cleveland’s roster but the power dynamics of the American League.
At the core of all this is a simple, almost brutal truth of modern baseball: no player is untouchable if the return is compelling enough. But there’s a difference between can and should — and that’s where the Guardians find themselves stuck in a pressure cooker of competing priorities.
Three seasons into a promising run and with Kwan currently penciled into the everyday lineup, the narrative feels like a crossroads: extend and build around one of the game’s elite defenders, or trade and try to replenish a roster that needs depth in multiple areas.
As one rival executive put it recently: “This isn’t about whether Kwan is good — he is. The question is whether Cleveland truly believes it can win with him long-term, or needs to pivot on their entire blueprint.”
For now, the Guardians are playing it close to the vest, public silence only amplifying the drama. But make no mistake: if this saga reaches a crescendo — either in a massive long-term deal or a stunning trade — it could be one of the biggest storylines of the 2026 season.
And Cleveland fans, long starved for sustained October glory, will be watching every word.