But these are players who, when in Boston, made it difficult to make the necessary long term commitments each required. Eovaldi came in with a significant injury history, spent two of his 4 years missing significant time with injuries (and one of the two years he didn’t was 60 games long), and moved on to sign a deal that, with options and incentives can earn him $63mill over 3 years. I don’t care so much about the money as I think “what did this guy do in the past 4 years that makes him worth 3 more?” Especially since he’s now 4 years older. (Bloom apparently did offer him a multiyear deal in November. The terms have never been disclosed.)
Wacha’s contract can be about the same. The $6.5mill AAV is a misrepresentation; it’s only that if he is awful this year. If he is good, SD has a 2 year $32mill team option. Not sure if they exercise it, but Wacha, like Eovaldi, isn’t known for lasting 3 years.
To me, keeping these two notoriously fragile arms in a rotation that already has Chris Sale strikes me as a very risky idea.
Kluber was a stopgap. That’s it. He didn’t work out and he won’t be back (barring an extremely unlikely turnaround). If they DFAd him tomorrow, even Mrs. Kluber would understand.
No one knows if the Sox will get involved in the pitching free agent market or make a deal for another starter, like trade one of their CFs. But at least they have those options they might not have if Wacha and Eovaldi were tying up anywhere from $60-100mill and two roster spots for the next free seasons…
And next off-season will have better