Third baseman Justin Turner is staying stuck together with all the Los Angeles Dodgers, he declared Saturday on Twitter.

Turner’s deal is for two decades and $34 million ensured, and it has a club option for another season, sources told ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

A part of the Dodgers because 2014, Turner is your longest-tenured place player on the group and also the third longest general, supporting Clayton Kershaw (2008) and Kenley Jansen (2010).

Turner was a journeyman for the first half of the major league career. He had been non-tendered from the New York Mets at December 2013, went for the following two months and then consented to a minor league contract with the Dodgers. At 29, he started to establish himself among the game’s most effective third basemen.

He left an All-Star group, completed inside the top 10 in National League MVP voting on 2 events and also set the tone for the Dodgers’ hitting philosophy because their most consistent performer.

On the way, Turner contributed a few unforgettable postseason minutes, most especially his walk-off home run contrary to the Chicago Cubs in Game two of their 2017 NL Championship Series.

His crowning achievement eventually came last year, when Turner — a lifelong Dodgers fan who grew up in Lakewood, California, also explains Kirk Gibson’s famous pinch-hit home run in the 1988 World Series because his very first baseball match — helped lead the franchise to its first championship in over 30 decades.

Turner submitted a 1.066 OPS in six World Series games against the Tampa Bay Rays, but his career emphasize became after Major League Baseball advised the Dodgers from the late phases of the eventual clincher which Turner had tested positive for COVID-19.

Turner, the Dodgers’ player rep, was eliminated to start the eighth inning of Game 6 and was not on the area to celebrate the closing out. However he broke protocol and reentered the area to shoot pictures using the World Series trophy and has been seen around teammates with no mask, drawing the ire of both MLB officials and uncontrolled criticism from those around the nation. MLB ultimately chose to not subject him.