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The A-Rod contract (1 Viewer)

Michael Brown

Footballguy
After A-Rod signed his 10-year deal, a lot of people attacked the decision by the Yankees and said it was foolish to sign a guy to a 10-year deal that will carry him into his late 30's/early 40's. Theory of course being that he'll quickly decline as he hits 35 and won't be worth it in the latter half of the deal. Others argued that with the rate of increasing salaries such as they are, in 5-7 years time this A-Rod contract will look like a steal.

Now that we've had a moment to step back from it all, I wonder something. When the current big-name guys start going up for free agency (Pujols, Utley, and further down the line perhaps guys like Justin Upton and Hunter Pence), the A-Rod contract still won't look like a bargain even though it might be one.

Reason being, he's going to be the best player (or close to it) for some time. Add in the fact that he's on the Yankees and they tend to overpay market value for guys and it's assumed that he's going to have the highest contract in the game. So even when factoring in inflation rates, will the next crop of guys or even the crop after them be able to command "A-Rod money"? Meaning, even if player salaries are spiraling upwards and everyone in the game is getting $15-$20 million contracts, won't A-Rod's deal still represent the absolute ceiling of contracts? This could act as a detriment to the rest of the players until his deal has expired. Because 10 years ago, guys were making $12 million per year and that was considered astronomical. Ten years later, $27.5 million is the ceiling. Well I doubt that ten years from now, anyone will be making $35-$50 million per season even if revenue increases exponentially.

What do you all think will happen with contracts? Will someone surpass A-Rod's deal while it's still in play? Will there be a ton of guys making $20-$25 mil per season? And will his contract hold down other deals on the assumption that Player X isn't close to being A-Rod, so why should he make more money than him (even if it means the owners simply pocketing all the extra revenue)?

 
The Yankees are only staying with the only philosophy they have ever known (and doing it well I might add). As long as there are baseball players who like money the Yankees will always be able to overpay for them. More than likely there will not be another team/owner who will pay Arod type money to a Pujols or an Utley. Oh they'll get theirs but it won't be Arod money. If they want that the'll have to go to the Yankees - and that's the beauty of their ways. They usually get who they want because they have the money to spend. Many of their big deals go to no-brainer types (Jeter, Rivera etc.) and now Arod. As long as the owners keep Mark Cuban out of baseball the Yankees will always be able to spend more than the other guys.

 
if the Royals can afford to pay Gil Meche 7 figures now, anything is possible 10 years from now. However, its going to take a special 5 tool, marketable talent to pull that kind of cash. Right now, it doesnt look like there is anyone in the pipeline that will do that.

Even the super-talented young guys that you mentioned dont have the complete package. For all his faults, A-Rod is probably the most phsyically gifted human being to ever put on a uniform. Its gonna take more than a great OPS to pull in this type of contract again.

 
I wonder if the Yankees were actually competing with another club for Arod's services before they gave him 300 million?

 
I wonder if the Yankees were actually competing with another club for Arod's services before they gave him 300 million?
Is this a serious question or are you implying that they did what the Rangers did and overpayed based on a market that they created - essentially competing with themselves...
 
I wonder if the Yankees were actually competing with another club for Arod's services before they gave him 300 million?
Is this a serious question or are you implying that they did what the Rangers did and overpayed based on a market that they created - essentially competing with themselves...
Yes - serious question.Did another team even offer him a dime?I don't recall any other team even getting serious enough to make an offer.
 
I wonder if the Yankees were actually competing with another club for Arod's services before they gave him 300 million?
Is this a serious question or are you implying that they did what the Rangers did and overpayed based on a market that they created - essentially competing with themselves...
Yes - serious question.Did another team even offer him a dime?I don't recall any other team even getting serious enough to make an offer.
I think they bid against themselves.And I hate to see that bag on that mammals head.
 
To the thread question...I think the Yankees deal with ARod will be the ceiling for at least 7 years. It is possible that someone gets more than ARod before the end of the contract. Of course it could the Yankees doing so :thumbup:

Seriously, if a player like say Joba is a stud and pitching like say Beckett 5 years from now and the Yanks re sign him you could see a 30+ a year deal go down for 7 years. It is hard to predict the contracts, but they always go up.

As for the Yanks, yes I think they needed to get ARod signed, but I also think they were bidding against themselves and could have gotten ARod for much less (especially after he hosed them out of 21 mil). I am still waiting on the final deal to give my opinion but if the Yanks don't take 21 mil off of the total I will be VERY disappointed as nobody else was going to give him a 10 year deal for 280 mil...NOBODY

 
In the end, the Yanks got taken for a ride... but they ended up with the chip they needed.

Yanks from an operational point of view and a financial standpoint will reap plenty of rewards from A Rods contract. It was more than a sound investment.

But they do look like fools and obviously will lose future leverage because they will go back on their word in a minute if it suits their desires.

 

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