PITTSBURGH — Andrew McCutchen can sense the end of his baseball career coming.
It's not quite here yet.
The five-time All-Star agreed to a $5 million, one-year deal on Monday to stay in Pittsburgh for the 2025 season, confident he can still be a difference-maker for a team trying to get back toward postseason contention.
''I think the biggest thing for me is knowing I can still compete and can still be able to produce,'' the 38-year-old said. ''I still feel like there's a way that I can be better and I know that it's still in there.''
When that hard-to-define "it" disappears, McCutchen will know it's time to move on. The 2013 National League MVP realizes that day will come soon enough. It's not here yet. For now, he's eager for a 17th season in the big leagues, including 12 in his adopted hometown.
McCutchen has made no secret of his desire to finish his career in Pittsburgh, which drafted him in 2005 and where he spent the first nine seasons of his career before returning in 2023.
General manager Ben Cherington repeatedly said toward the end of last season the team wanted to find a way to keep the outfielder-turned-designated hitter who hit .232 with 20 home runs and 53 RBIs in 120 games last season.
The man who signs the checks felt the same way.