Nick is who he is. We paid market value for him and that's essentially what we are getting. The whole argument, for the most part, was should the Braves be paying market value for players like that. As it turns out it doesn't matter since they aren't close to contending while he's been here. Like Dickey and Colon it simply doesn't matter with where the Braves are as a team. The problem was if the Braves really were contenders in 2017. A contract like Nick's would have hurt the team since they are a mid market team with a limited budget.
Hindsight on the Heyward contract is nonsense really. Anybody can be right in hindsight and nobody saw Heyward declining to this level on offense. It was always his defense that people thought would dramatically decline which gave them pause about a long contract. Anyone saying otherwise is lying. And to me, like always, it's about the process and not the results. Signing a 26 year old FA who is a stud defensively and a good hitter to a big contract isn't a bad process even if the results stink. Trading for a 31 year old OF who is among the worst defensively and average to above average offensively is not a good process. If the team makes good process decisions they will get back to winning even if some of them have bad results.
This simply isn't true. If you bother to dig, you'll find TONS of posts from members who argued that Heyward was simply too big a gamble because they didn't believe in his offense. Was he "capable" of putting up multiple 30/100 seasons while being the best defensive RF in the game? Sure he did it once (close enough, anyway when he was in his early 20s) and it was certainly reasonable to expect him to maintain or even improve on those numbers as he gained more experience. A funny thing happened though - he never came close to replicating the numbers (counting stats or no) that he put up in his rookie season OTHER than in his banner 2012 campaign. His numbers absolutely cratered (.277/.393/.456/.849 his first time through to .227/.319/.389/.708) before his breakout (and likely career) season. Swanson had a similar "mysterious" crater between seasons 1 and 2 (.302/.361/.442/.803 to .232/.312/.324/.636) as the league adjusted to him. Can we expect Dansby to adjust back and blow up in 2018? I don't, but I saw Heyward do it just like everybody else did.
The numbers aren't exact as far as the numbers-crowd is concerned, but they point to the same thing. The league starts to figure EVERYBODY out, and the successful players make the adjustments and continue on and adjust back. I can't tell you whether Dansby Swanson's capable of making the correct adjustments (or what they are with certainty), but I can tell you that Jason Heyward sure as *ell hasn't YET - he hasn't posted an OPS higher than .735 or an OPS+ higher than 109 ONCE since those banner years, and for as much as everyone (myself included) loved him and thought he'd take that next step, there were tons who screamed that valuing him higher higher than Freeman was nuts.
Were we wrong???
SJ24 compares Acuna to Trout - the minor league numbers line up, why is he such an idiot???