Read More...Ryan Westmoreland announced his retirement from professional baseball in an email to several members of the media on Wednesday.
“With a clear mind and heart, as well as the unwavering support and friendship of my family, friends, agent(s), doctors, therapists and the Boston Red Sox, I have decided to voluntarily retire as a professional baseball player,” Westmoreland wrote. “Although it is a very difficult decision for me, it has become clear that the neurological damage caused by the ...
Login to Join (0 members)
{/exp:tag:subscribed}Page rendered in 1.1229 seconds, 148 querie(s) executed
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. John Northey posted on February 25, 2013 at 07:04 PM # hit 0 | hit 0"But for now, my portfolio takes precedence."
Dale, if my dad had given me the choice at that age of a couple more summers with me or a couple million more starting out in life, I love the guy but he'd have been playing.
Isn't Torii Hunter one of the examples of athletes who make bad investments?
A quick search of Google says yes.
Maybe Vernon should find someone else to team up with...
Players do this from time to time. They almost never mean it. I remember Clemens talking about retiring in the early 90s when his deal with the Sox expired in '96. He hung on for a few years after that.
What's funny about this one of course is what Calcaterra noted today, if it wasn't for the contract Wells would have been released a long time ago and is not likely to have the option of continuing his career when his contract expires. What was the line during the umpire strike in '99? "It's an offer to be accepted or a threat to be ignored" or something like that?
I think the fact that salaries exploded in the late 90s and the aughts are a big reason some players of Clemens era stuck around. Clemens made roughly 150 millions dollars in his career and he made a third of that in his last 3 seasons he pitched and that included two seasons where he didn't start pitching until the middle of the year. That's a pretty huge difference.
Wells might be able to stick around after his contract expires but he isn't ever going to have another significant salary compared to what he has already made in baseball.
Like Mark Buehrle who was gonna play for the White Sox or the Cardinals or retire.
Yeah, I thought about using that one in my tremendously clever post. The unfathomable thing is that somehow Wells has slightly positive oWAR for those two years.
Wells' situation is different to be sure. He's saying he won't accept the inevitable NRI that's offered when this contract is up. Good for him.
Option 2: Keep doing what I love, and get paid tens of millions of dollars.
Yeah.
He played the role of "we didn't want this guy, he doesn't really serve a purpose, he was part of the price of getting them to take Vernon Wells, but it would be rude to openly admit that and cut him...so he's going to play".
What about an equity stake in the club? If he really wants to own a club, bring him on board and save yourself some money.
This is my feeling as well. That may be in part because I didn't have to see the tail end of this contract in Toronto, but even when he was here and over-paid I didn't hold it against him. Always seemed like a cool guy. I hope after his playing days he is a familiar face around SkyDome.
Speaking of which, does Carlos Delgado have much interaction with the Jays these days?
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.