OK...to all of the Sox fans saying that the FO is making a smart decision...if this were football, I would agree with you. Football has a salary cap to deal with, and signing someone like Schilling who is asking for more money than he may prove he's worth would hamper the teams ability to make other moves. Thanks to Bud Selig, George Steinbrenner, and the "new age" of baseball, this is not the case in our sport.
Regardless of what the front office will tell you...the Sox have an ENDLESS amount of money. You've all been to games, you all know what you've paid for tickets, you've all bought merch, you know what that stuff costs...the Boston Red Sox are BIG business. They chose to keep their payroll where it is so that they can make MORE money. It's not like they're struggling to pay the players what they are...they're making money hand over foot off of the Sox.
That being said, the Sox owe it to Schilling to let him finish up here as he has stated he wants to do. If it were a salary cap concern, I would totally understand the FO's stance...it's not, however. If they pay Schilling $14 million next year or whatever he's asking for...it's $14 million LESS that the owners bring in, and that's why they're hesitant, and that's what rubs me the wrong way.
Schilling made a sacrifice for you in pitching on an ankle that could have potentially ended his career; you should, in turn, make a "sacrifice" for him. End of story.