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Pavano -high value-could make the Indians season......
and Giambi lands on his
feet in Oakland
Photo
by Kvork Djansezian - AP
Photo
by Ben Margo - AP |
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Holy Cow! Almost
lost
against the backdrop of NFL playoff games have been some very
interesting
baseball developments, not just signings but also the behind-the-scenes
skullduggery among the various contenders for the talent that’s still
out
there.
For me, two signings take precedence.
Both
of them relate to the Yanks recent
finalization of their humongous contract with Mark Teixeira, the
wunderkind
first baseman, who of course got 22.5 million dollars per year for
eight long
years.
First, I’m very happy for Jason
Giambi, who Teixeira is
replacing. Jason landed back in Oakland, the team
for
which he built his formidable reputation as a hitter for both average
and
power. That Oakland legacy was enough to inspire
the
Yankees to sign Giambi seven years ago for record numbers.
Sadly for Jason and Yankees fans, that signing never
really
bore fruit in terms of World Series victories.
The
prevailing remembrances for most New Yorkers of
Giambi’s
New York
service will be
steroids and a fervent wish that the Yanks had kept Tino.
But for the true baseball aficionado,
Jason Giambi was a
potent presence in the Yanks lineup, more than capable of knocking one
over the
wall or, at the very least, to draw a base on balls after coaxing about
ten
more pitches out of their opponent’s starter. If
he had any speed on the bases, or anywhere for
that matter, Jason
would have been even more valuable.
Giambi will be missed in
New
York, I suspect, much as Tino
Martinez
was before him.
Not because Mark
Teixeira can’t play the game, but just as a Yankees presence and
overall good
guy and teammate.
Giambi was always
affable with the media, too, even after some rough nights in the field.
But his gaffes in the field and his
lack of speed on the base
paths severely limited his overall value and suppressed his runs scored
quite
severely. Surely though, he was valued
by his teammates and management as a hard-nosed player who wanted to
win. But
in hindsight, he surely was not the player the Yanks had envisioned.
The second signing I’ve been anxiously awaiting took
place
yesterday.
That would be the Indians
signing of a true Yankees disaster, Carl Pavano, probably the biggest
mistake
the Yankees, or any team for that matter, has ever made in free agency
except
perhaps for the Albert Belle fiasco.
Pavano was beset by injuries
throughout the term of his 4-year
$50 million contract with the Yanks and pitched just 26 starts in four
years. That’s basically 2 mill per
start. Even the Roger Clemens
partial-year deal doesn’t compare in sheer magnitude of loss.
But what makes this deal most intriguing is its
structure.
It’s for one year only at 1.5
mill, but Carl can make as much as 5.3 mill with 18 starts, not a bad
deal for
anyone concerned really.
What makes this
even better is that Pavano may be pitching against the Yankees in the
middle of
April, at the new stadium, as the Indians third starter behind Cliff
Lee and
Fausto Carmona.
Those two signings typify the risk
involved for teams and
players in free agency. It appears that
only the major league players, like New York,
Boston,
Philly, LA…. can
even contend for the really big earners, your Teixeiras and Mannys and
Sabathias. Cleveland can’t compete for Sabathia
or
Burnet maybe but they can wind up picking up a potentially great
pitcher for
fair value.
If Pavano doesn’t make his starts number, he walks away
with
just 1.5 million.
But, if he does win 15
or more games, and as he’s already undergone the arm surgery, his
chances of
doing just that are quite good, he’ll make, say, 5 million.
That’s just 300K per win, and, figuring 25
starts, just
200k per start.
It’s good for the game that a team
such as the Indians can
still pick up a bargain and actually compete. And
it’s just as good, if not better, that a team
such as the Yankees or Boston
can make
such huge mistakes. Surely a Milwaukee can’t
be so
colossally stupid!
That’s not to say that the signings of Sabathia and
Burnet
and Teixeira are stupid.
But the risk is
pretty large.
Ask yourself what are the
chances that Teixeira will put in even close to eight full seasons.
He’s a big fellow, he’ll be 29 in April and
he’ll be playing the lion’s share of his contract years in his
thirties, the
last three years in his 35’s, so to speak.
Burnet’s getting 82.5 mill for 5 years
and he’s already
32. Sabathia got better money, 7 years
for 161 mill. He’s another big guy but
he’s only 28 and he seems to throw effortlessly most of the time. The chances are pretty good, though, that all
three free agents won’t finish their contracts in one piece.
To say the very least, the Yankees will be paying 3 or 4
times the Indians rate per win, and waaaay more than that for RBI’s.
Ryan Garko,
Cleveland’s first baseman, had 90
rbi’s in
2008 and 14 homers in 495 at bats.
Teixeira
averages over 100 ribbies per year and is a
career .290
hitter.
Garko makes about 420K. Their
best player, Grady Sizemore, makes about 3 mill and their biggest bust
is
Travis Hafner, who only pulls down about 8 million.
What the big teams are really paying
for is the surety of
winning, the percentage chances of winning it all.
That’s why the New York-Boston battle is so
intriguing. Only God and the Yankees
know what winning the title is really worth. It
must exceed the marginal cost of these players,
especially if you
introduce the factor that these contracts are usually insured.
In the last ten years, big-market teams have made the
World
Series contests 12 times.
But the little
guys have made it 8 times, including
Tampa Bay,
Colorado,
St Louis twice,
Houston,
Florida,
Arizona and
Atlanta.
Money alone won’t always make the
difference. Holy Cow!
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