Freshmaker
Arbitration Eligible
Well there goes plan F for the OF
[tw]1207315687942819840[/tw]
[tw]1207315687942819840[/tw]
Well there goes plan F for the OF
[tw]1207315687942819840[/tw]
I think the Stanton deal between the Marlins and Yankees had some of these features.
I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I think something clicked with Ozuna. I think he is peaking and will be very, very productive the next 3-4 years.
I believe at 29-32 he will end up being more productive than 33-37 JD years.
I don’t think we will sign him, I “do” think we will wish we had when things are said and done.
Rendon's deal and a high AAV deal for Donaldson would seem to delete any reason for Colorado to send any money along when moving Arenado. With their needs for pitching in line with Atlanta's strength seems they are in position to dictate trade package.
Rendon's deal and a high AAV deal for Donaldson would seem to delete any reason for Colorado to send any money along when moving Arenado. With their needs for pitching in line with Atlanta's strength seems they are in position to dictate trade package.
That is not how it works.
If there were more than 1 team willing to give Rendon that much money, he would have signed for more money. The fact that he didn't tells you that every other team was not comfortable topping that offer. And lets remember that these teams didn't have to give up any prospects for the honor of paying Rendon a premium contract.
Combine that with the fact that only about 10 teams can even afford to absorb his contract (some of those teams aren't currently competitive) and this tells you Arenado doesn't have much trade value at his current contract. The more money they absorb, the better prospect package they can get in return.
The Yankees deal for Stanton is a good idea of what the Rox could expect to get for Arenado if they don't eat much money.
Arenado is not the same bad contract (considering Rendon and possible Donaldson) as say Blackmon or Desmond. Those 2 might require some money coming back but Arenado being arguably better than Rendon and better than Donaldson at this point makes his value at least commensurate with Rendon.
Yes, but thatÂ’s not how contracts with opt outs are valued. The absolute best upside scenario is not the total value.
IÂ’m unsure why this is still unclear.
Rendon's value is, by definition, negative. Literally no other team wanted the contract he signed, so no other team would trade for him right now.
Arenado's production and contract are roughly equivalent to Rendon's (the opt out vs Rendon's extra guaranteed salary, and 1 year younger vs Rendon currently being a bit better). Therefore, no team is going to give up value for the rights to Arenado's contract.
The Rox probably have to eat money to get anything in return for Arenado.
Outside the box idea for our 5th starter job...keep in mind this would be after we address our cleanup hitter position.
But what about Felix Hernandez on a 1 year / $5m deal with incentives based on games started etc.
It's a lose lose for the team. If the player plays well they opt out and you potentially lose him bc you have to bid on his services vs all other teams. If he tanks or plays poorly he opts in and you are then stuck with his contract. I wish everyone would understand an opt out clause is only good for the player.
You are correct. The Yanks owe Stanton something like 8/235, and the Marlins will owe them $30M if he doesn’t opt out after this season. It’s not looking good for him opting out.
The Stanton deal is a prime example of the risk these opt outs shift to the team, and why extra money would have to come to Atlanta to mitigate Arenado’s risk. If the Braves can afford $20M-$25M for JD over the next 3 years, getting $10M per year and Arenado from the Rox for as many years as he’s in Atlanta is almost the same thing....plus 4 more years of control over a much younger player.
There are ways to make Arenado work for the Braves. Something like Riley plus a non-Anderson arm for Arenado and $10M per year he stays in Atlanta.
The opt out is a potential windfall for the player, but that doesn't mean it has to be particularly bad for the team.
What the team loses is the opportunity to pay Arenado 5/164 over his Age 31-35 seasons. He needs to average a little less than 4 wins a season over those five for the team to break even on that proposition.
That's certainly possible, but the the actual cost of the option is the chance that he exceeds that less the risk that he doesn't. I'm not sure that's a whole lot of value.