jpx7 (04-02-2019)
Still in awe how this is for real. The cost certainty on a potential superstar at this rate changes everything. If Liberty diverts some of this record revenue after the debt is serviced to mlb mandated levels then we could have a powerhouse.
JohnAdcox (04-03-2019), UNCBlue012 (04-03-2019)
Absolutely. I also probably take the 100 mil. That is “Set you up for life” money. He could be worth so much more, but he could also have a freak injury next week and never be the same player again. Someone gives you 100 mil...you take it. Who wins the lottery and doesn’t take the buy out to get all of their money up front (at a 40% loss)...not many.
For every guy that went out and “proved it”....there are twenty that do not.
Think it’s that easy? I think we all would have been very happy if Heyward signed a deal like that. Even “ No brainer” deals can turn sour.
This is a good compromise and “should” be great for the Braves.
Prikichi (04-03-2019)
Listen to what AA said at the 12:40 mark. Very interesting and this may be a bit of foreshadowing.
"...it's rare you get to combine great talent with great character. And when those opportunities do present themselves, we're going to step up as an organization and do a lot of contracts like that."
UNCBlue012 (04-03-2019)
the two things I don't really understand:
1) Why he didn't get a signing bonus.
2) Why he gave away the second two free agent years.
In a market where the Eloy deal had already happened, I'm not sure why you do either of those things.
In some ways, you can look at 100 million and say that's more money than anyone would ever need and the rest is just keeping score.
you could say the same thing about 43 million, which is what someone who'd never played in the Majors, or been rookie of the year, was able to get guaranteed.
Just puzzling really. And I tend to be more risk average than most for "no brainer deals" and this one seems like a real no brainer. I don't see how you could criticize the Braves even after the fact for this one no matter how it turns out.
The explanation that makes sense to me on this deal is that this was the deal the Braves were willing to offer. So if this was the best deal Acuna could get at this point, he had to decide between taking it and risking going forward without it. He took the deal.
While the Braves could have offered a lot more and have the deal still make sense for them, AA has had a fanatical devotion to value in his time here. It wouldn't surprise me if this was the only way he'd do the deal.
Disagree.
The logical extension deal would have been the 8/90 portion that makes complete sense compared to every other extension we've seen lately, everything we know about projecting arbitration salaries, and every precedent for buying out early FA years we've seen the last 2-3 years.
That would have been life changing money for Acuna, it would have blown Eloy's deal out of the water, it would have allowed him to reach FA well before 30 for a mega contract, and it would have represented good value for the Braves.
The $17M options with $10M buyouts are completely out of place. Options don't usually (never?) have such high buyouts.
Those options at the end scream of a scenario where someone wanted to push the deal past the magical $100M mark, and that's the only way the Braves would agree to do it. It certainly appears as if Acuna gave up $25M-$30 in those 2 seasons, plus the ability to secure a $400M contract in the future, just to tack an additional $10M onto this current contract and hit the $100M guaranteed mark.
Acuna seems like he’d be the most fun baseball teammate ever.
UNCBlue012 (04-03-2019)
Kiley was talking about Acuna in his chat and just said this about his agent: "there's some rumors out there about the agent that did the deal, which you can google and kinda figure out what I'm talking about." Reading some of what Kiley said later, he's basically suggesting that the agent wasn't going to talk Acuna out of a deal like this.
Can anyone find anything? I've tried googling and haven't been able to find what he's referring to.
You could have gotten to $100 million with one option year and a $10 million buyout. There was no reason for there to be two.
I agree that 8/90 makes sense for both sides. It's pretty much the market rate right now. However, I'm not sure AA would have done a market rate deal. He's been reluctant to pay market rate as the GM in Atlanta. It makes sense to me that AA wanted to squeeze more out of this deal. Acuna was happy to sign as he's now set for life.
From Kiley:
12:21 on top of that, I didn't mention that the Braves had uniquely beneficial situation where they had a cornerstone guy who hasn't gotten paid yet ($100k initial bonus, $500k salaries for the next few years) and there's some rumors out there about the agent that did the deal, which you can google and kinda figure out what I'm talking about.
12:22 So the Braves had a guy they really wanted to lock up, who really wanted a payday pretty soon and an agent that wasn't going to dissuade Acuna from that. Those are the conditions to get a bargain.
The part about Salazar seemed a bit worrisome, and I hope Acuna wasn't taken advantage of in any way.
UNCBlue012 (04-03-2019)
"Well, you’ll learn soon enough that this was a massive red wave landslide." - thethe on the 2020 election that trump lost bigly
“I can’t fix my life, but I can fix the world.” - sturg
Try Gatemore Sports
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-rele...300790437.html
doesn't sound like a fly by night operation, but maybe Salazar was a bit too eager to get the deal done...sometimes it is the agent sometimes it is the client...hard to say...I wonder if Acuna's veteran teammates ever had "the talk" with him
Last edited by nsacpi; 04-03-2019 at 12:17 PM.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."