|
|
|
|
Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, August 18, 2008
If you can stand it…
Q: So you kept e-mailing and asking where they got their $9 million from?
(They) would not engage. Would not do it through e-mail. Would not do it verbally. Then it went from $9 million to $4.4 million. That’s where it was. At the last minute, he went to $4 million. And we went to $3.5 million.
Q: Between August 12 and last night, what was the dialogue?
He wouldn’t return our phone calls. We talked a couple times. We kept calling. Mike [Rizzo] had a couple calls with Alan [Hendricks]. It ended up being all e-mails. We kept trying to engage in discussion. We wanted to know where the $9 million came from. We never had a number until Aug. 12. And all of a sudden, the number is $9 million. Well, no one’s gotten $9 million ever. Where did it come from? Beckham signed at $4 million. He was the first player taken in the country. Crow didn’t go in the first $8 million. Crow went $9 million. Anyone could have taken Crow ahead of us. They didn’t. We were the first ones to take Crow. We just wanted to know where the $9 million came from. We wanted to negotiate a deal. We wanted to sign the player. That’s the point. We wanted the player.
|
Support BBTF
Thanks to Backlasher for his generous support.
Bookmarks
You must be logged in to view your Bookmarks.
Hot Topics
Sox Therapy: A Winning Ballclub? (21 - 8:34am, May 26)Last: DarrenNewsblog: Maddon on Red Sox beaning Luke Scott: 'I think it's ridiculous, I think it's absurd, idiotic' (8 - 8:33am, May 26)Last: Der_K is feeling better now.Newsblog: YESNetwork: A look at five Yankees' cases for enshrinement in Monument Park (2 - 8:14am, May 26)Last: Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral IdiotNewsblog: HP: Baseball is leaving the human factor behind (60 - 7:55am, May 26)Last: Designated Sitter (GGC)Newsblog: Wilmoth: Nate McLouth Designated For Assignment (13 - 7:52am, May 26)Last: RussNewsblog: OT: NBA Monthly Thread, May 2012 (1835 - 7:45am, May 26)Last:  thokNewsblog: The Hall of Very Good: Former Cards Slugger Critical of "LaRussa's Regime" (6 - 7:16am, May 26)Last: Shooty: Applying to be Fearless LeaderNewsblog: Matschulat: Did I Miss The "Paul Konerko Is So Overrated OMG" Bandwagon? (30 - 7:15am, May 26)Last: baudibNewsblog: CSN to host ‘Phillies at the Beach’ on Memorial Day (19 - 7:11am, May 26)Last: GodNewsblog: T.R. Sullivan: Of Frank Robinson, Milt Pappas and Jim Palmer (10 - 7:09am, May 26)Last: GodNewsblog: Bud Selig -- No need for more MLB replay for now - ESPN (88 - 6:12am, May 26)Last: LassusNewsblog: Himrich’s Top Ten Target Field Foods (8 - 2:43am, May 26)Last: Long John McCaine Mutiny on the Bounty (scott)Newsblog: Boston.com: Curt Schilling’s 38 Studios lays off all staff (119 - 1:28am, May 26)Last:  Swedish ChefHall of Merit: Most Meritorious Player: 1973 Discussion (15 - 12:13am, May 26)Last: DanGHall of Merit: Most Meritorious Player: 1972 Ballot (28 - 11:25pm, May 25)Last: lieiam
|
|
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. bob gee Posted: August 18, 2008 at 12:32 PM (#2906767)we said here's a final take-it-or-leave-it offer of $3 million, which we later moved to $3.3 million. And then verbally at the last minute, we went to $3.5 million.
please, don't do take it or leave it unless you really mean it! it's nice (from a gossip point of view) to go into the details, but i wouldn't want a professional doing this in near real-time (as opposed to a retrospective, long-after-the incident has happened)
disappointing for nats fans that they could afford to sign ramirez or crow, but not both.
and he's in favor of a "hard slotting system". maybe there should be one for gms...
I mean how can it be a serious negotiation with just emails?
What happens now? Does crow have to wait til next year's draft or can he just be signed by an MLB team as an independent free agent?
i don't know what happens if he doesn't sign *next* year...
do (have?) any of the top draft picks got an insurance policy, especially those who go back to college? that is, we'll (player/family) pay X amount of dollars for Y amount of coverage ensuring that they are a first round pick, or something similar to that?
i'd put a high premium on pitchers for that if i were the insurance company...
$3.5 million now has a future value of about $3.7 million a year from now. Plus, Crow is a year further away from free agency, I believe, even if he signs a major league deal next year. The impact of a free agency alone has got to be more than $300K. The insurance premiums for such a high risk have to amount to something as well.
If an agent's duty is to sign their client to the highest amount the market will bear, it appears that (again, if the numbers are accurate), Crow's agents did him a disservice, bordering on malpractice.
While I am a Nats fan, I'm no admirer of Bowden. However, the history of the last two draft here is that the team has gone above slot and shown some creativity in signing "unsignable" players.
Bob, I have heard anecdotally that some amateur players have done that, but I don't believe it's common. I imagine the EV on the premiums would be negative, although I suppose there's value in peace of mind.
That just seems insane.
In Hendricks is carping that the Nats walked away from the deal over $500k, he just just retire. The Nats will be fine, they'll get another pick, another kick at the can. The player, however, may never get another offer like this, and I'm sure will be in an even weaker negotiating position next year. I agree with 7, it's bordering on criminal.
And I'm a Jay fan, and no Bowden apologist.
This is just Bowden's side, so we are (extremely) likely not getting all the facts- but players/agents in the past have totally misread the market- the most extreme case possibly being Matt Harrington.
Judging by other reputed bonuses and where Crow was ranked pre-draft, if he really was demanding $9mm and never came down- he or his agent either really were insane- or just didn't want to sign with the Nats and wanted to take his chances next year with someone else.
It failed spectacularly for Harrington, failed less spectacularly for Townsend (who was likely low-balled by the Orioles to boot- so he was screwed either way) (and Varitek back in the day) and worked for Hochevar (largely because KC overdrafted him the next year)
you can say that again
The problem I have with hard slotting is that all drafts are not created equal. Why should LeBron James get the same contract as Andrea Effin' Bargnani? That said, they're all going to be millionaires anyway, and hard slotting at least eliminates the argument that some late-rounder "would have been a first round pick" but for his college commitment. If it's good enough for the NBA...
That said, Hendricks could have indicated a willingness to drop over the phone at some point without doing a formal counter offer.
Another down side is there may be no player you consider worth the slot's money, but you'd have to draft one anyway.
It's not ideal, but I think the free market is better. Can't blame a GM for wanting cost certainty, though.
so, yeah, if i was the agent, i'd blink a bunch. but i'd also be pressing for the major league contract, figuring IF this guy can break through, get him on the arb/free agency clock as soon as possible.
Wasn't Matt Harrington drafted three times?
As a person who negotiates for a living, I can say it's more common than you would think.
http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/H/Matt-Harrington.shtml
Agree completely. Emails are are a written and date-stamped record.
As with the way revenue-sharing is designed, any increased "fairness" is simply incidental - the primary goal is to lower the percentage a player is paid of his value on a free, open market.
Is it common for teams to draft a first round pick and not know what's the player's estimated price is?
Good question
But then again, if you're a GM and you know that a specific player's asking price is, quite frankly, insane, do you:
1: Assume he's posturing?
2: Assume he's trying to ward off certain teams (like those that won't go over slot)?
3: Assume that when he's drafted and is staring at real $, and see's that no one else is getting a bazillion dollars, reality will sink in...?
Some people simply need a reality check, but if I'm a GM, do I want to run the risk that reality won't sink in until after the deadline?
I have no doubt that some players think they are better, AND think they are regarded as being better*, than they really are- and many such players will pick an agent who will confirm that opinion for them. If a player thinks he's top 10 material, and 2 agents tell him he's late 1st round material, 2 tell him maybe supplemental round, but one guy says, yep, you are a definite top ten pick- he's gonna hire the guy who blew smoke up his a$$
I have no doubt that the vast majority of players think they are better than they really are (just like everyone else)- but tend to have a much better grasp of where others slot them so to speak. Player A may think he should have been taken from 5 to 10, but if BA and others have him at 20-30 and he's taken #25- Player A will likely accept $25 money while thinking he's worth more. The guy who thinks he's a 5-10 pick, and thinks that everyone else thinks the same thing, will simply assume that the team that picked him at 25 thinks so as well, and that he only dropped because the cheapskate teams were scared off.
Can you say that for sure, though? The guy was pretty good the year before this one, but really good this one. What if he goes back to his previous level of play? What if he blows out his arm? I think these guys should fight for the money, too, but at the end of the day, someone gives you that golden ticket, you have to take it. Maybe that's just me. They're talking about more money in signing one piece of paper than I may make in my entire career, so what the hell do I know?
Wasn't Matt Harrington drafted three times?
I can understand not signing with the Rockies. Maybe even not signing with the Padres. But not signing by year three is just certifiably insane.
Yeah, Matt Harrington really showed them! Not signing in year one was pretty stupid. He cost himself, what, 5 million dollars? I get mad at myself when I make a stupid decision and it costs me $100, I can't imagine what I'd do if I cost myself $5 million.
1: Assume he's posturing?
Bowden did mention that Porcello's pre-draft asking price scared them off last year. It's possible that Boras possesses the credibility to back up his high demands while the Hendricks brothers do not possess the same type of intimidation... yet.
Hey, Jim: your job isn't hard because you work for a "small market" team, your job is hard because you're a moron.
#29: The real downside is that next year's draft class doesn't look as good as this year's. OTOH if the Nats want to neutralize the leverage they should use the comp pick on Crow if he's there.
it's way too early to tell if the draft class isn't as good. It's probably not going to be, but you never know. Still, two top 10 picks even in a bad class is pretty good.
I didn't think you could draft the same player two years in a row if you failed to sign them the first time. Wasn't that the case with JD Drew?
You have to have their permission in order to re-draft them.
Yes, and Bowden's statement is BS. There were all sorts of reports that Crow was asking for $7-8 million before the draft. Maybe what Bowden meant was that "if they had known Hendricks wouldn't budge from $9 million until August 15, they wouldn't have drafted him." But it was well known prior to the draft that Crow may have signability issues and was asking for a ridiculous amount.
If the Nats are going to quibble over $500K for one high draft pick, what makes you think they could handle signing two? Maybe they'll just keep accumulating picks until they have 30 or so first-rounders and then screw over 29 players every year.
If the Nats don't sign pick 10A next year (or whatever it is), they lose it in the 2010 draft
Exactly. That's why they have no leverage next year. If they don't sign 10A next year, they've thrown away a first round pick.
I guess if Bowden said, "I knew Crow's pre-draft $9M figure was BS, but I wrongly calculated that I could get Crow to come down to my price," in an interview, it wouldn't sound so good. Bowden deserves a lot of the blame, he took a gamble and lost.
Also, does Crow have any leverage left to ask for more than $4M next year?
Bowden is having a tough couple of months. The Cordero non-tender bungling, the Latin America kickback scandal and now this. Is ownership that committed to him?
...and the team has lost ten games in a row, and has the worst record in baseball.
If they keep that up, they'll get Strasburg
but Milledge is now at .261/.323/.407, giving him a 100 point OPS edge on Carlos Gomez .250/.286/.338 , which, if it holds up, will let me win a bet with a Carlos Gomez fanboy.
seriously, how badly did this year go for Bowden?
Felipe Lopez has been sub-replacement since the day he put on a Nats uniform
Austin Kearns is hitting .217/.307/.308
so much for that trade.
Milledge leads the team with 12 homers and is second with 45 ribbies.
Christian Guzman or Ronnie Belliard might be the team's MVP (them or Jesus Flores- gee thanks Omar)
Nick Johnson is out for the year after barely 100 Abs
Zimmerman was hurt and hasn't played well
Wily Mo came into the year with a career OPS+ of 102... and just completely vaporized.
Willie Freakin Harris might have had the best year of all their OFs
Elijah Dukes stayed out of jail and actually began to rake... and got hurt....
Well, they'll get to draft him...
I guess it would be 1A (meaning 2 overall), but if there were 2 A++ prospects on the horizon in a weak year, could a team just draft someone #1 overall whom they had no intention of paying?
Sure, but (a) there's no guarantee the two players considered the best will still be the best a year from now; and (b) with the window of success for many GMs being only a few years, few GMs are going to have the balls to forego a top pick this year for a top pick next year when they need to build the farm system now.
That said, as someone selfishly interested in 1) seeing the best players play baseball, and 2) small-market teams drafting based on talent rather than price, I'd like to see a slotting system in place. I don't care much if such a system transfers wealth on net to owners from prospective players - if properly designed, that affect would be small except for extreme cases (e.g. the LeBron Jameses of baseball). If a team doesn't want to draft any available player in the slot they're assigned, they could pass and receive a compensation pick at the end of that round.
The current system isn't broken enough that I'm really upset with it (other than free agent draft pick compensation, which is the stupidest thing ever), but I would like to see slotting so long as it achieves the goals I mention above. If the only slotting system the powers-that-be could design wouldn't meet those goals, screw it.
Check out Milledge's Gamelog. Follow the OPS as it peaks in mid-April, goes down until mid-May, up until mid-June, down until the end of July (a week after his return from the DL)...and now since the beginning of August, his OPS has gone from .651 to .730.
I wonder if all these peaks and valleys correlate with injuries.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main