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Posted
7 hours ago, notin said:

Huh?

Bregman signed a deal for $175million, slightly more than $26million.

Even if you mean AAV, his deal $35mill per year, it’s still more than $26mill.  If you disagree and think it’s not much more, can I borrow $9mill?

Huh? Huh? Must you start so many of your posts with this word? Articulate your argument a little better than huh.

I understand your point on the math. Bregman’s AAV is $35M, not $26M, and yes, there is a meaningful difference there. My post was not about whether $9M matters to me — it was about whether $9M matters to the Boston Red Sox an organization valued probably around 11b. When you factor in Fenway and NESN.

I remind you this is the same organization that just committed roughly $6M to IKF, and 12m to Sandoval which in my opinion has provided very little value. So let’s not suddenly act like every dollar is sacred. The dollar amounts are big in pro baseball $9 million can be added or subtracted from any major league baseball roster very easily… I have zero doubt you know this,  yet per usual…. You attempt to denigrate the entire argument based on dollar amounts.

I’ll spell it out……The larger point I was making is this: if we had not jumped early into long-term commitments for players we already controlled for years (Anthony, Campbell, Bello, etc.), I believe we could have realistically structured both the Suárez deal and Bregman. The math may not line up perfectly dollar-for-dollar, but we also would have had assets such as Kyle Harrison (no need at 3b = no trade with brewers) and others that could have been available to be moved in a package to free up additional payroll if needed.

So yes, $26M does not equal $35M. I understand that. The argument was never that they are identical numbers. The argument was that the Red Sox had alternative paths available, and chose not to take them.

Moon has sound logic and he hasn’t wavered from it since October: Alex Bregman stats in year 1 of his massive contract are not living up to the compensation. And if he’s not living up to the compensation in year1 , what are years 3-5 going to look like? But my opinion is simple: the Red Sox would be a better team today with Bregman at third base than without him. Between his bat, his consistency, and his clubhouse presence, I believe this team is at minimum sitting in a Wild Card spot right now with him on the roster. And that’s not worth spending a whole bunch of extra money just being smarter about when we spend it. 

Old-Timey Member
Posted
16 minutes ago, UtahSox said:

Huh? Huh? Must you start so many of your posts with this word? Articulate your argument a little better than huh.

I understand your point on the math. Bregman’s AAV is $35M, not $26M, and yes, there is a meaningful difference there. My post was not about whether $9M matters to me — it was about whether $9M matters to the Boston Red Sox an organization valued probably around 11b. When you factor in Fenway and NESN.

I remind you this is the same organization that just committed roughly $6M to IKF, and 12m to Sandoval which in my opinion has provided very little value. So let’s not suddenly act like every dollar is sacred. The dollar amounts are big in pro baseball $9 million can be added or subtracted from any major league baseball roster very easily… I have zero doubt you know this,  yet per usual…. You attempt to denigrate the entire argument based on dollar amounts.

I’ll spell it out……The larger point I was making is this: if we had not jumped early into long-term commitments for players we already controlled for years (Anthony, Campbell, Bello, etc.), I believe we could have realistically structured both the Suárez deal and Bregman. The math may not line up perfectly dollar-for-dollar, but we also would have had assets such as Kyle Harrison (no need at 3b = no trade with brewers) and others that could have been available to be moved in a package to free up additional payroll if needed.

So yes, $26M does not equal $35M. I understand that. The argument was never that they are identical numbers. The argument was that the Red Sox had alternative paths available, and chose not to take them.

Moon has sound logic and he hasn’t wavered from it since October: Alex Bregman stats in year 1 of his massive contract are not living up to the compensation. And if he’s not living up to the compensation in year1 , what are years 3-5 going to look like? But my opinion is simple: the Red Sox would be a better team today with Bregman at third base than without him. Between his bat, his consistency, and his clubhouse presence, I believe this team is at minimum sitting in a Wild Card spot right now with him on the roster. And that’s not worth spending a whole bunch of extra money just being smarter about when we spend it. 

My point is it’s actually silly to take these little contracts like IKF and Sandoval and pretend had they been avoided, a superstar was easily affordable.  Sure they spent $15mill on them, but that’s still $160mill short on Bregman.  I think we can both safely assume the Sox don’t look solely at AAV.  
 

And at some point in this deal, Bregman is likely to decline, but his contract never will.  
 

Sure it’s easy to cite the extensions for young players that haven’t worked out yet.  But we both know that free agents rarely last as long as their deals.  Whats preferable? A $50mill deal to a younger player with a bad year or two upfront?  Or a $180mill deal to an older player with an equally bad year or two at the end?

Community Moderator
Posted

It seemed to be that it was Ranger or Bregman, not IKF/Sandoval/10M or Bregman. They pivoted to Ranger right after missing out on Bregman. Don't think the smaller contracts played into it.

Old-Timey Member
Posted
1 minute ago, mvp 78 said:

It seemed to be that it was Ranger or Bregman, not IKF/Sandoval/10M or Bregman. They pivoted to Ranger right after missing out on Bregman. Don't think the smaller contracts played into it.

And Ranger has worked out.

Would people prefer Bregman with more Bello in the rotation?  Or Ranger and Durbin?

Again - one year ago today Durbin had a .501 OPS, not much better than his current.   He finished with a .721.  If he can do that again…

 

Posted
23 minutes ago, notin said:

My point is it’s actually silly to take these little contracts like IKF and Sandoval and pretend had they been avoided, a superstar was easily affordable.  Sure they spent $15mill on them, but that’s still $160mill short on Bregman.  I think we can both safely assume the Sox don’t look solely at AAV.  
 

And at some point in this deal, Bregman is likely to decline, but his contract never will.  
 

Sure it’s easy to cite the extensions for young players that haven’t worked out yet.  But we both know that free agents rarely last as long as their deals.  Whats preferable? A $50mill deal to a younger player with a bad year or two upfront?  Or a $180mill deal to an older player with an equally bad year or two at the end?

I read that if you go over the lux tax, you forfeit your share of that sweet sweet dodgers money.  The RS went over by like $3.50 and cost themselves like a $30m in lux tax rev share as a result.  In addition, Fenway is not packed and missed playoff revenue is significant.

I see the RS as more dysfunctional than anything else.  I know people wanna pretend that we are some value hawking, eagle-eye, line in the sand, business first, shrewd, efficient, $$/WAR ....

But its simply not really it.  For every dollar they save "here" they just give right back "there"

Posted
20 minutes ago, notin said:

And Ranger has worked out.

Would people prefer Bregman with more Bello in the rotation?  Or Ranger and Durbin?

Again - one year ago today Durbin had a .501 OPS, not much better than his current.   He finished with a .721.  If he can do that again…

 

What were the PA on the .501 OPS.  Its easier to get it up when it is over a sample size of like 14 games.  

NOt that it really matters because the goal isnt increasing his OPS to higher number, its simply having him turn it around.

But I reject presenting it as Breslows choice of Ranger > Bregman.  It was Bregman who made that choice when Breslow made a fool out of himself and insulted Bregman for no reason.

Old-Timey Member
Posted
23 minutes ago, drewski6 said:

What were the PA on the .501 OPS.  Its easier to get it up when it is over a sample size of like 14 games.  

NOt that it really matters because the goal isnt increasing his OPS to higher number, its simply having him turn it around.

But I reject presenting it as Breslows choice of Ranger > Bregman.  It was Bregman who made that choice when Breslow made a fool out of himself and insulted Bregman for no reason.

I agree on Brez. I think most analysts especially AJ agree that Brez BOTCHED the Bregman’s negotiations from the first offer made, and then every move after that. That’s Brez #12 in your program.

 

Posted
1 hour ago, mvp 78 said:

Campbell for Urias - C-

Fitts, Weissert, Judice for Verdugo - A

Slaten for Ammons/cash - B+

O'Neill for Santos and Robertson - B+

Grissom for Sale - F

Paxton for Bolivar - C-

Jansen for Paulin, Coffey, Batista - D+

Priester for Yorke - B

Sims for Portes - D

Garcia for Kavadas, Zeferjahn, Lugo and Vargas - D

Narvaez for Rodriguez - B+

Fajardo for Booser - A-

Moran for Gasper - B

Crochet for Teel, Montgomery, MEidroth, Gonzalez - A-

Aybar for Koss - D

Rodriguez, Holobetz, Comp A for Priester - C

Harrison, Hicks, Tibbs, Bello for Devers - C-

Tibbs and Ehrhard for May - F

Matz for Jordan - B

Heyman for Hoppe - C

Ward for Bernardino - C-

Hernandez for Murphy - C+

Gray for Guerrero - C

Gray for Clarke, Fitts and Galle - B+

Oviedo, Samaniego and Guzman for Garcia and Travieso - C-

Jackson for Grissom - C

Watson for Riemer - D+

Bennett for Perales - B-

Contreras for Dobbins, Fajardo and Aita - A-

Baez for Gray - C-

Ziehl and PTBNL for Hicks, 2 PTBNL and Sandlin - C-

Durbin, Monasterio, Seigler and Comp B for Harrison, Drohan and Hamilton - D-

I think you got em all, not just the important ones. Some are clearly TBD or neither side will get any plus or minus from, but you graded them anyway.

Thanks for taking the time to do this.

If you had to narrow down to 5 or 10, which ones would you choose?

Posted
52 minutes ago, mvp 78 said:

It seemed to be that it was Ranger or Bregman, not IKF/Sandoval/10M or Bregman. They pivoted to Ranger right after missing out on Bregman. Don't think the smaller contracts played into it.

Thats correct…… They HAD to pivot based on other decisions they had made. 
Let’s not focus on IKF/ Sandoval for now start here:


Bello- time in league is 3 years, he would have been Arb1 this year. (3years of control left) Roughly 1.6m salary…. Instead RS show an AAV of 9.16m = 7.56m unnecessary against the RS AAV

Anthony- time in league less than 1 yr. (6 years of control left) Roughly 800k salary……… instead RS show an AAV of 16.25M = 15.45m unnecessary against the RS AAV

Campbell- time in league less than 1 yr. (6 years of control left) Roughly 800k salary……… instead RS show an AAV of 7.5M= 6.7m unnecessary against the RS AAV

combined between those 3 that’s 29.7M in unnecessary AAV then if you simply didn’t sign IKF (something they didn’t need to do) you’re there you’re at 35M AAV.

Ergo RS could have signed both Suarez and Bregman for the same # in AAV. If the front office wasn’t completely dysfunctional and obsessed with winning every deal instead focusing on winning baseball games. 

 

 

Posted
1 hour ago, notin said:

My point is it’s actually silly to take these little contracts like IKF and Sandoval and pretend had they been avoided, a superstar was easily affordable.  Sure they spent $15mill on them, but that’s still $160mill short on Bregman.  I think we can both safely assume the Sox don’t look solely at AAV.  
 

And at some point in this deal, Bregman is likely to decline, but his contract never will.  
 

Sure it’s easy to cite the extensions for young players that haven’t worked out yet.  But we both know that free agents rarely last as long as their deals.  Whats preferable? A $50mill deal to a younger player with a bad year or two upfront?  Or a $180mill deal to an older player with an equally bad year or two at the end?

Extensions on young players with 5-6 years of control are done by dipsh** who are obsessed with winning deals vs winning World Series. The best way to win World Series is to keep young talented players cheap and use you dollars to maximize roster around them with GOOD proven baseball players. Such as Suarez and Bregman. 

Posted
2 hours ago, UtahSox said:

Extensions on young players with 5-6 years of control are done by dipsh** who are obsessed with winning deals vs winning World Series. 

The Braves are dipsh**s?

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