There's no way teams look at career WAR and say "Heyward = Stanton." I would bet teams don't value defense as much as WAR does.
I agree. You can always find good defense. You cannot find legit power as easily in today's game.
There's no way teams look at career WAR and say "Heyward = Stanton." I would bet teams don't value defense as much as WAR does.
I agree. You can always find good defense. You cannot find legit power as easily in today's game.
Has anyone said teams are going to pay Heyward 13/325 like Stanton?
No...I didn't say they did?
Dave Cameron said this in the offseason:
Because of how quickly he got to the big leagues, Heyward is in line to hit free agency after his age-25 season, and he’s going to have roughly +25 career WAR when he reaches the open market. Barring a disastrous 2015 season, he’s going to get paid, and you can be certain that his agents will be pointing to the 13 year, $325 million deal that Giancarlo Stanton has agreed to as the new precedent. Sure, Heyward isn’t going to get 13/$325M, given the massive differences in power, but it seems likely that he’ll demand a deal that starts at 10 years and goes north of $200 million.
Mystery solved.
I'm also not convinced his stock improved a ton. All he's done so far is further prove he isn't a middle-of-the-order bat. That's another year of his potential to become one down the drain.
If Heyward was a middle-of-the-order bat to go along with his defense and all-around game, he would be the best player in baseball...meaning that hitting free agency at 26, he would probably get something like at least 10 years and close to $350 million.
He's going to get paid. WAR has proven to correlate pretty well with team records, so I'm not sure why some think it's a hugely flawed stat. And Heyward's offensive value alone has been worth over 2 WAR this year. He's going to easily surpass $20 million per year.
If Heyward was a middle-of-the-order bat to go along with his defense and all-around game, he would be the best player in baseball...meaning that hitting free agency at 26, he would probably get something like at least 10 years and close to $350 million.
He's going to get paid. WAR has proven to correlate pretty well with team records, so I'm not sure why some think it's a hugely flawed stat. And Heyward's offensive value alone has been worth over 2 WAR this year. He's going to easily surpass $20 million per year.
Heyward is tied for 56th in wRC+.
That is not a MOTO bat.
Heyward is tied for 56th in wRC+.
That is not a MOTO bat.
Well, if there's three middle of the order bats on average per team (3, 4, and 5 hitters), that would mean there are 90 in MLB.
Well, if there's three middle of the order bats on average per team (3, 4, and 5 hitters), that would mean there are 90 in MLB.
Well, if there's three middle of the order bats on average per team (3, 4, and 5 hitters), that would mean there are 90 in MLB.
Well, if there's three middle of the order bats on average per team (3, 4, and 5 hitters), that would mean there are 90 in MLB.