You brought up Pavano, not me. If you want to talk about trades and each team being interested in someone, then it's relatively even on those counts. That's why it was necessary for me to debate you on Pavano, to prove a larger point.
You can talk about trades, or one team being interested in someone, but there really have only been three free agents that both teams have bid on this decade. This is a fact. Additionally, especially with Contreras, there were a lot of other factors involved besides money (many of them being made public in all three cases), all of which you choose to ignore because they don't fit your argument.
The Yankees have an advantage, no question about it. Additionally, they do have the ability (at times), if they want, to get a guy no matter what. I would say this happened twice during the decade, with Sabathia and Giambi. The Yankees were going to get them, no matter what.
But here's where the advantage is overstated. There have been a ton of guys over the past decade that the Yankees have wanted, but haven't ended up acquiring. They have limits, just like every other team, but their limits happen to be higher. I get it, it's easier to look at the Yankees, who spend the most money, and discuss them as if they have infinite funds. It's easy to discuss them as if they get whoever they want. But the facts, which are indisputable, disagree with this notion.
I'll say it once more, so it's clear. The Yankees have an advantage over every other team in Major League Baseball. They have a larger advantage over some teams than they do over others. There is no question about it. But the advantage isn't infinite, and in some cases, it isn't even that large.
Also, I'd like to touch once more on the Yankees vs. Red Sox aspect of the discussion. The Yankees money plays a role, no question, but there are probably other factors at work. Can I prove these, or speak about them as if they are fact? No I can't. But I can't do this for the same reason you guys can't claim that the Yankees would just top every bid that the Red Sox put out there.