The 2021 Major League Baseball Player Chatter, News and Fantasy Thread

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  • EmpireMaker
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 06-18-09
    • 15573

    #841
    KC Royals

    Trades and Claims



    Notable Minor League Signings

    Extensions

    Notable Losses

    The Royals’ run of consecutive losing seasons reached four in 2020, as they finished 26-34 in the abbreviated slate. That was at least an improvement over 2018-19, during which time Kansas City had the third-worst combined record in the league (better only than the Orioles and Tigers). The Royals view 2020 as a stepping stone, a sign the organization has put those horrible two seasons behind them. Entering the offseason, general manager Dayton Moore said he expected the team to be more competitive in 2021 than it had been in years past.
    Moore was also rather forthright about what he saw as the team’s deficiencies. “We definitely need more on-base guys,” the GM told reporters last October. “We need more quality [at-bats] from probably two other spots in that lineup.” Not coincidentally, the Royals’ biggest free agent position player pickup ended up being Carlos Santana. The veteran first baseman is one of the game’s best at taking quality at-bats. Since breaking into the majors in 2010, Santana has reached base at a .366 clip, a mark that ranks 25th leaguewide (minimum 2000 plate appearances).
    The Royals inked Santana to a two year, $17.5MM guarantee in December. It was a bit of a surprise to see him command a multi-year deal coming off a .199/.349/.350 line in Cleveland. Despite the mediocre bottom line numbers last year, Santana’s strike zone feel was strong as ever. The switch-hitter walked at an incredible 18.4% clip while punching out just 16.9% of the time, making him one of only seven qualified hitters with more free passes than strikeouts.
    Santana was the Royals’ only major league free agent infield pickup, but the club made another important addition on a minor-league contract. Kansas City agreed to a non-roster deal with Hanser Alberto, who had been non-tendered by the Orioles. The 28-year-old seems likely to make the Opening Day roster and push incumbent second baseman Nicky Lopez for playing time. (Before signing Alberto, the Royals pursued Jurickson Profar in free agency, but the latter eventually returned to the Padres on a three-year deal).
    Lopez won’t begin the year on the active roster, having been optioned to Triple-A. The Royals could turn to Whit Merrifield, who has bounced between second and the outfield in recent years, at the keystone. Alternatively, Kansas City could move Merrifield to right field on a regular basis and give the second base job to Alberto with Lopez in the minors. Alberto never walks but he makes a ton of contact, resulting in a productive .299/.322/.413 line (95 wRC+) over the past two seasons. Top prospect Bobby Witt Jr. impressed in Spring Training and could also be an option at some point this season. He’ll begin the year in the minors, perhaps at Double-A.
    The left side of the infield will be filled internally. Adalberto Mondesi hasn’t consistently performed at the plate but he’s shown flashes of power, good defense and elite baserunning. The 25-year-old will get another shot at a breakout season at shortstop. After breaking in as a third baseman, Hunter Dozier moved to right field last year to accommodate the signing of Maikel Franco. Franco was reasonably productive in 2020, but the Royals non-tendered him rather than pay an arbitration salary projected in the $4.5MM – $8MM range. With Franco gone, Dozier moves back to the hot corner.
    The outfield will look quite different than it has in the past. Franchise icon Alex Gordon retired at the end of last season. One of the faces of the Royals’ mid-2010’s playoff runs, Gordon walked away after an illustrious 14-year career in Kansas City. It’ll be difficult to replace his perennially elite left field defense, to say nothing of the unquantifiable impact he had in the locker room and in the community. But Gordon was a below-average hitter in each of his final five seasons, so there’s certainly room for more offense at the position.
    The Royals hope that production comes from their top trade pickup of the offseason. In need of a new left fielder and on the hunt for a left-handed bat to better balance the lineup, Kansas City acquired Andrew Benintendi from the Red Sox as part of a three-team deal. They’re buying low on the 26-year-old, who took a bit of a step back from his peak form in 2019 before suffering through a disastrous 2020.
    The Royals sent outfielder Franchy Cordero, whose blend of power and speed continues to intrigue teams despite a lengthy injury history and swing-and-miss issues, back to the Red Sox, along with a pair of players to be named later. Outfield prospect Khalil Lee was moved to the Mets as part of the deal. Benintendi is controllable for a pair of seasons, and the Red Sox will pay $2.8MM of his $6.6MM salary in 2021.
    In the other corner outfield spot, the Royals could turn to Merrifield regularly with Alberto and/or Lopez at second base. When Merrifield’s on the dirt, Edward Olivares, Nick Heath and prospect Kyle Isbel could work in right. Those players could all be options in center field, as well, but the bulk of time there seems likely to go to a pair of free agent signings. The Royals have long valued speed and range more than most teams, and their moves at the position reflect that. Kansas City signed each of Michael A. Taylor and Jarrod Dyson to low-cost, one-year deals. Neither player offers much at the plate, but they’re high-end defenders and Dyson, in particular, is an excellent baserunner.
    Dyson’s addition is also emblematic of another organizational pattern: reacquiring former Royals. Last winter, Kansas City brought back former All-Star closer Greg Holland on a minor-league deal. That proved to be a masterstroke, as Holland tossed 28.1 innings of 1.91 ERA/3.20 SIERA ball, eventually reclaiming his old ninth inning role. The veteran righty is back again, having re-signed on a surprisingly modest $2.75MM contract this offseason.
    Holland isn’t the only member of the Royals’ old fearsome bullpen to return. Wade Davis, arguably the best reliever in baseball from 2014-16, will be on the Opening Day roster after signing a minor-league deal over the winter. Davis’ stint with the Rockies was a disaster, and he’s now a couple years removed from being productive. But there’s little risk in bringing him back and hoping for a resurgence. That’s also true of former Oriole bullpen stalwart Brad Brach, a fellow minor-league signee.
    The team’s biggest free agent pickup of the winter is another player who once had plenty of success in Kansas City. Mike Minor revived his career with a breakout 2017 season working out of the Royals’ bullpen. That earned him a three-year deal with the Rangers, where Minor stretched back out as a starter. The lefty had plenty of success over his first two years in Texas, earning an All-Star selection in 2019. Minor had a difficult 2020 season in terms of run prevention, pitching to a 5.56 ERA in 56.2 innings. He struck out a career-best 25.9% of opposing hitters, though, and pitched to a 4.20 SIERA that was actually better than in either of his previous two seasons.
    Comment
    • Chi_archie
      SBR Aristocracy
      • 07-22-08
      • 63165

      #842
      Todd Frazier opts out of Pirate spring contract to be a free agent

      who is going to pick him up?
      Comment
      • JAKEPEAVY21
        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
        • 03-11-11
        • 29242

        #843
        Originally posted by jrgum3
        I see his name flying off the board in the later rounds in my drafts so maybe he translates these spring numbers into a huge season.
        It is a contract year for him coming off a rough and injury riddled season last year.
        Comment
        • Otters27
          BARRELED IN @ SBR!
          • 07-14-07
          • 30749

          #844
          Thursday is the day. Who will be the Last team to stay undefeated?
          Comment
          • Cross
            SBR Hall of Famer
            • 04-15-11
            • 5777

            #845
            Originally posted by Otters27
            Thursday is the day. Who will be the Last team to stay undefeated?
            Most likely the Pirates, it has to be.
            Comment
            • JMobile
              SBR Posting Legend
              • 08-21-10
              • 19074

              #846
              Kung Fu Panda makes opening day roster. I say he gets released before the all star break
              Comment
              • stevenash
                Moderator
                • 01-17-11
                • 65380

                #847
                Originally posted by Otters27
                Thursday is the day. Who will be the Last team to stay undefeated?

                Truth be told I haven't given that question any thought.
                Damn you Otters now you are going to make me do more research.

                I spent almost all of my disposable time this past weekend getting my shit organized for this upcoming season.
                I keep an old school notebook next to my home commuter in my home office here in casa de Nasher.
                That's the way us old timers were taught to keep notes back in the day we were in elementary school when the T-Rex used to roam around my back yard when I was a kid.

                Any-hoo I then take all those informal notes I have jotted down along the way from the notebook and organize it all on my home computer (I still use the Microsoft Suite)

                Long story short (which I don't think I am capable of doing) I thought after all those hours I spent on the pc the work I did was auto saved. I was not and now it's gone. It sucks to be me sometimes.
                Comment
                • Stallion
                  SBR MVP
                  • 03-21-10
                  • 3616

                  #848
                  Ctrl + S , Or file save like every 20 minutes.
                  Comment
                  • Cross
                    SBR Hall of Famer
                    • 04-15-11
                    • 5777

                    #849
                    Opening day so close I can taste it!
                    Comment
                    • jrgum3
                      SBR Hall of Famer
                      • 07-21-17
                      • 7005

                      #850
                      Originally posted by Otters27
                      Thursday is the day. Who will be the Last team to stay undefeated?
                      Can't wait what more can you ask for but baseball all day and my Giants finishing off the day as the nightcap with their game against the Mariners.
                      Comment
                      • EmpireMaker
                        SBR Posting Legend
                        • 06-18-09
                        • 15573

                        #851
                        1:19pm: The Orioles announced that Hernandez has requested and been granted his release. He’s not expected to re-sign a new deal with the O’s, tweets Joe Trezza of MLB.com.
                        7:25am: Felix Hernandez has chosen to opt out of his contract with the Baltimore Orioles and become a free agent, per MLB Network’s Jon Heyman (via Twitter).
                        For awhile this spring, it looked like King Felix would indeed win an opportunity to begin the season in the Orioles rotation, but an elbow injury knocked him out of action in mid-March and undermined his efforts. Had he made the roster, he would have been in line for a $1MM salary.
                        Prior to the injury, Hernandez made three starts, threw 5 2/3 innings, and allowed five earned runs, six hits, two walks, and a hit batsman. He also struck out five. But there simply wasn’t enough evidence that Hernandez would even be healthy enough to take a turn every five days.
                        Hernandez last pitched in the Majors in 2019. He has a 169-136 record in 2,729 2/3 innings over 418 career starts – all with the Mariners. The soon-to-be 35-year-old put up 50.3 bWAR/54.1 fWAR over 15 seasons in Seattle.
                        Comment
                        • Chi_archie
                          SBR Aristocracy
                          • 07-22-08
                          • 63165

                          #852
                          Where will Felix Hernandez land?
                          Comment
                          • Otters27
                            BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                            • 07-14-07
                            • 30749

                            #853
                            Originally posted by Cross
                            Most likely the Pirates, it has to be.
                            Could they start 0-10
                            Comment
                            • JAKEPEAVY21
                              BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                              • 03-11-11
                              • 29242

                              #854
                              Originally posted by Chi_archie
                              Where will Felix Hernandez land?
                              Is he still good enough?

                              Time to retire, Felix.
                              Comment
                              • stevenash
                                Moderator
                                • 01-17-11
                                • 65380

                                #855
                                Originally posted by JAKEPEAVY21
                                Is he still good enough?

                                Time to retire, Felix.
                                I read an interesting column yesterday, and this was the headline.

                                "How is it that Rick Porcello doesn't have a MLB job"?

                                This is from a very respectable baseball writer, and I still respect him.

                                This is my reply to that question.

                                Umm, because he sucks now.

                                (Holy shit I have just proven to myself that I can indeed make a long story short at times)
                                Comment
                                • JMobile
                                  SBR Posting Legend
                                  • 08-21-10
                                  • 19074

                                  #856
                                  Dodgers putting Price in the pen and May in the rotation.
                                  Comment
                                  • batt33
                                    SBR Hall of Famer
                                    • 12-23-16
                                    • 5997

                                    #857
                                    Originally posted by jrgum3
                                    Can't wait what more can you ask for but baseball all day and my Giants finishing off the day as the nightcap with their game against the Mariners.
                                    saw that too! go Giants in the nightcap!
                                    Comment
                                    • stevenash
                                      Moderator
                                      • 01-17-11
                                      • 65380

                                      #858
                                      Originally posted by JMobile
                                      Dodgers putting Price in the pen and May in the rotation.
                                      I read where he signed off on that even before it happened.
                                      I always liked Price even though he'd kill my team no matter who he pitched for.

                                      Take a close look at his career.
                                      We've all seen him pitch in live.
                                      Here's the link, now tell me how can you not give him a Hall of Fame vote.
                                      Check out the latest Stats, Height, Weight, Position, Rookie Status & More of David Price. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, draft status, bats, throws, school and more on Baseball-reference.com
                                      Comment
                                      • jrgum3
                                        SBR Hall of Famer
                                        • 07-21-17
                                        • 7005

                                        #859
                                        Originally posted by batt33
                                        saw that too! go Giants in the nightcap!
                                        Gausman gets the ball opening day. Hopefully he has a big year because I think the Giants got themselves a bargain when they brought him back.
                                        Comment
                                        • EmpireMaker
                                          SBR Posting Legend
                                          • 06-18-09
                                          • 15573

                                          #860
                                          Prized White Sox prospect Andrew Vaughn has made the team’s Opening Day roster. He isn’t on Chicago’s 40-man, so the team will need to select him.
                                          The White Sox could have gained an extra year of service time by keeping Vaughn down for the first few weeks of the season, but executive vice president Ken Williams said last week that wouldn’t be a motivating factor in their decision. The team was true to its word. If Vaughn doesn’t return to the minors, he’ll be controllable through 2026 and eligible for arbitration after 2023, though the White Sox could certainly extend him before then, as they’ve done on multiple occasions in recent years with offensive building blocks such as Yoan Moncada, Tim Anderson, Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert.
                                          General manager Rick Hahn stated Tuesday (via James Fegan of The Athletic), “Having Andrew around will be a positive for this offense.” The White Sox expect Vaughn to factor in at designated hitter, first base and left field, according to Hahn.
                                          It became easier to envision Vaughn making Chicago’s season-opening roster when the club received the devastating news of Jimenez’s ruptured pectoral tendon last week. Jimenez underwent surgery Tuesday and remains likely to miss at least five to six months, Hahn said. The hope is that Vaughn will help fill Jimenez’s enormous offensive void.
                                          Now 22 years old, Vaughn is a former University of California standout whom the White Sox drafted third overall in 2019 and then signed to a $7.2MM-plus bonus. Vaughn hasn’t gotten above High-A ball since then, but he has held his own in the minors, having slashed .278/.384/.449 in 245 plate appearances. He has also looked ready for prime time this spring with a .279/.375/.459 line and six extra-base hits (three doubles, two home runs and a triple) in 61 at-bats.
                                          Along with Vaughn’s addition, the White Sox made a handful of other roster moves Tuesday. They optioned infielder Danny Mendick to their alternate site and reassigned fellow infielders Tim Beckham, Zach Remillard and Matt Reynolds, outfielder Nick Williams, and right-hander Ryan Burr. The club also made the previously reported release of catcher Jonathan Lucroy official.
                                          Comment
                                          • Cross
                                            SBR Hall of Famer
                                            • 04-15-11
                                            • 5777

                                            #861
                                            Dodgers are a damn all star team, wow.
                                            Comment
                                            • Chi_archie
                                              SBR Aristocracy
                                              • 07-22-08
                                              • 63165

                                              #862
                                              Originally posted by Cross
                                              Dodgers are a damn all star team, wow.
                                              very impressive on paper
                                              Comment
                                              • JAKEPEAVY21
                                                BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                • 03-11-11
                                                • 29242

                                                #863
                                                Originally posted by stevenash
                                                I read an interesting column yesterday, and this was the headline.

                                                "How is it that Rick Porcello doesn't have a MLB job"?

                                                This is from a very respectable baseball writer, and I still respect him.

                                                This is my reply to that question.

                                                Umm, because he sucks now.

                                                (Holy shit I have just proven to myself that I can indeed make a long story short at times)
                                                Porcello has always been way overrated. No idea how he won a Cy Young(he didn't deserve it).
                                                Comment
                                                • JMobile
                                                  SBR Posting Legend
                                                  • 08-21-10
                                                  • 19074

                                                  #864
                                                  Originally posted by Cross
                                                  Dodgers are a damn all star team, wow.
                                                  Nobody needs to know where my money is going tomorrow lol
                                                  Comment
                                                  • Stallion
                                                    SBR MVP
                                                    • 03-21-10
                                                    • 3616

                                                    #865
                                                    I wonder how many games the Dodgers will win this year 🤔
                                                    Comment
                                                    • BigSpoon
                                                      SBR MVP
                                                      • 11-04-10
                                                      • 4113

                                                      #866
                                                      Lindor agrees to a 10 year $341M deal with the Mets.
                                                      Comment
                                                      • Otters27
                                                        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                        • 07-14-07
                                                        • 30749

                                                        #867
                                                        Originally posted by Chi_archie
                                                        very impressive on paper
                                                        Yes. Still hard to repeat. Look at the Chiefs
                                                        Comment
                                                        • EmpireMaker
                                                          SBR Posting Legend
                                                          • 06-18-09
                                                          • 15573

                                                          #868
                                                          The Mets have come to terms on a ten-year, $341MM contract extension with star shortstop Francisco Lindor, covering the 2022-31 seasons. Lindor will be paid a $21MM singing bonus, followed by flat $32MM salaries in each year of the deal. $5MM of the annual salaries will be deferred, paid annually from 2032-41, for a total of $50MM in deferrals. The deal also contains a fifteen-team no-trade clause without any opt-out provisions. Lindor is represented by SportsMeter.
                                                          The extension is a monumental development, both for the Mets and for the sport as a whole. New York acquired the 27-year-old Lindor, one of the sport’s brightest stars, in an offseason trade with the Indians. Now they’ll ensure he spends the bulk of his career in Queens.
                                                          Lindor was the eighth overall draft pick by Cleveland back in 2011. He immediately became one of the game’s top prospects and moved quickly through the minors for a high school draftee, reaching the big leagues by June 2015. Lindor burst onto the scene that year with a .313/.353/.482 slash line as the Indians’ everyday shortstop, earning a runner-up finish in American League Rookie of the Year voting.
                                                          That sensational debut set the stage for a run of four consecutive star-level seasons. Between 2016-19, Lindor hit .284/.346/.495 (118 wRC+) with 118 home runs and 81 stolen bases. That’s quality offensive production from any player, but it’s particularly remarkable coming from a shortstop widely regarded as one of the game’s premier defenders. Lindor’s two-way production earned him an All-Star berth and a top 15 finish in AL MVP voting in each of those seasons.
                                                          That production did drop off a bit during the abbreviated 2020 season. Lindor played in all sixty games for Cleveland but hit a career-worst .258/.335/.415 (102 wRC+). It seems that average showing is something of a small sample anomaly, though. Lindor kept his strikeout rate at its customary 15.4% range (well better than the league average of 23.4%) while drawing walks in a career-best 9.0% of his plate appearances. His power production took a slight step back, but Lindor’s 89.9 MPH average exit velocity remained solid.
                                                          Clearly, the Mets aren’t concerned about that slight offensive downturn. They parted with four well-regarded young players (infielders Amed Rosario and Andrés Giménez and prospects Isaiah Greene and Josh Wolf) to acquire him and starter Carlos Carrasco from the Indians in January. They’re following that up with one of the largest contracts in MLB history.
                                                          Working out an extension with Lindor has been the Mets’ hope since they acquired him, but it seemed just a few hours ago the star infielder was headed for the free agent market. Lindor had rather definitively stated he wouldn’t negotiate an extension during the regular season, leaving the parties with dwindling time to work out a deal before tomorrow’s season opener. The Mets originally offered a ten-year, $325MM pact, while Lindor came back with a twelve-year, $385MM counterproposal. With the clock ticking, both sides budged a bit from their original asks, although Lindor ultimately relented on the deal’s length and more significantly than the Mets did on the money.

                                                          That’s not to say he fared poorly. His deal checks in as the third-largest contract in MLB history in terms of total guarantee. Hardly coincidentally, it tops Fernando Tatís Jr.’s recent $340MM extension with the Padres by the narrowest of margins. The deferred money in Lindor’s deal keeps the contract’s actual value a bit below Tatís’, since none of the latter’s money is deferred. Nevertheless, Lindor picks up a symbolic $1MM more than one of the game’s other top shortstops. By average annual value, meanwhile, Lindor’s $34.1MM comes in sixth all-time. It is also easily the biggest financial outlay in Mets’ history.
                                                          Keeping one of the sport’s best players and most charismatic people for the next decade is certainly a huge development for the Mets on its own. But the Lindor deal also represents something of a symbolic leap for the organization’s future under new owner Steve Cohen. Under the previous ownership group, the Mets’ payrolls were closer to average than the top-of-the-market range one would expect from a team in New York City. The offseason sale of the franchise to Cohen, MLB’s richest owner, brought hope for Mets’ fans of a massive uptick in spending.
                                                          New York had an active winter, but they didn’t make a true splash at the top of free agency, to the consternation of some observers. By extending Lindor, the Mets keep one of the top players in next winter’s class off the market. The 2021-22 free agent shortstop class has drawn plenty of attention. It remains loaded, with Corey Seager, Trevor Story, Carlos Correa and Javier Báez all slated for the open market. Lindor was perhaps the face of that group, though, and he carried as much or greater earning power than his peers.
                                                          Because Lindor’s extension begins in 2022, the Mets’ books for the upcoming season are unaffected. The two sides had already agreed to a $22.3MM salary for this season to avoid his final potential trip through arbitration; Lindor will play out the year on that deal. Pushing the extension off a season also keeps the Mets’ competitive balance tax number for 2021 at the same level- around $194MM, in the estimation of Cot’s Baseball Contracts. That leaves New York with about $16MM of breathing room if they wish to stay below the $210MM tax threshold this year.
                                                          Lindor’s deal will count for $34.1MM (a deal’s average annual value is measured for CBT purposes) against the luxury ledger every year from 2022-31, assuming the luxury tax system is still in place under the terms of the next collective bargaining agreement. The deal pushes the Mets’ actual payroll number in 2022 to over $127MM, per Cot’s, with a projected luxury tax number of $135MM. New York will need to shell out another significant outlay (albeit nothing approaching the Lindor range) if they wish to keep star outfielder Michael Conforto from hitting free agency over the offseason. The Mets and Conforto have talked about an extension this spring and could continue those conversations into the season.
                                                          Regardless of what decisions Cohen and team president Sandy Alderson make in the coming months, they’ll be able to build around their new franchise shortstop. In the waning moments before their self-imposed extension deadline, the Mets and Lindor got the deal done.
                                                          Comment
                                                          • Cross
                                                            SBR Hall of Famer
                                                            • 04-15-11
                                                            • 5777

                                                            #869
                                                            Here we go, action coming!!!!
                                                            Comment
                                                            • JAKEPEAVY21
                                                              BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                              • 03-11-11
                                                              • 29242

                                                              #870
                                                              Originally posted by Cross
                                                              Here we go, action coming!!!!
                                                              Afternoon padres baseball today...fired up!
                                                              Comment
                                                              • jrgum3
                                                                SBR Hall of Famer
                                                                • 07-21-17
                                                                • 7005

                                                                #871
                                                                So excited for baseball Opening Day is finally here boys it's like Christmas morning only better!
                                                                Comment
                                                                • Chi_archie
                                                                  SBR Aristocracy
                                                                  • 07-22-08
                                                                  • 63165

                                                                  #872
                                                                  Here we go
                                                                  Comment
                                                                  • Chi_archie
                                                                    SBR Aristocracy
                                                                    • 07-22-08
                                                                    • 63165

                                                                    #873
                                                                    Originally posted by EmpireMaker
                                                                    The Mets have come to terms on a ten-year, $341MM contract extension with star shortstop Francisco Lindor, covering the 2022-31 seasons. Lindor will be paid a $21MM singing bonus, followed by flat $32MM salaries in each year of the deal. $5MM of the annual salaries will be deferred, paid annually from 2032-41, for a total of $50MM in deferrals. The deal also contains a fifteen-team no-trade clause without any opt-out provisions. Lindor is represented by SportsMeter.
                                                                    The extension is a monumental development, both for the Mets and for the sport as a whole. New York acquired the 27-year-old Lindor, one of the sport’s brightest stars, in an offseason trade with the Indians. Now they’ll ensure he spends the bulk of his career in Queens.
                                                                    Lindor was the eighth overall draft pick by Cleveland back in 2011. He immediately became one of the game’s top prospects and moved quickly through the minors for a high school draftee, reaching the big leagues by June 2015. Lindor burst onto the scene that year with a .313/.353/.482 slash line as the Indians’ everyday shortstop, earning a runner-up finish in American League Rookie of the Year voting.
                                                                    That sensational debut set the stage for a run of four consecutive star-level seasons. Between 2016-19, Lindor hit .284/.346/.495 (118 wRC+) with 118 home runs and 81 stolen bases. That’s quality offensive production from any player, but it’s particularly remarkable coming from a shortstop widely regarded as one of the game’s premier defenders. Lindor’s two-way production earned him an All-Star berth and a top 15 finish in AL MVP voting in each of those seasons.
                                                                    That production did drop off a bit during the abbreviated 2020 season. Lindor played in all sixty games for Cleveland but hit a career-worst .258/.335/.415 (102 wRC+). It seems that average showing is something of a small sample anomaly, though. Lindor kept his strikeout rate at its customary 15.4% range (well better than the league average of 23.4%) while drawing walks in a career-best 9.0% of his plate appearances. His power production took a slight step back, but Lindor’s 89.9 MPH average exit velocity remained solid.
                                                                    Clearly, the Mets aren’t concerned about that slight offensive downturn. They parted with four well-regarded young players (infielders Amed Rosario and Andrés Giménez and prospects Isaiah Greene and Josh Wolf) to acquire him and starter Carlos Carrasco from the Indians in January. They’re following that up with one of the largest contracts in MLB history.
                                                                    Working out an extension with Lindor has been the Mets’ hope since they acquired him, but it seemed just a few hours ago the star infielder was headed for the free agent market. Lindor had rather definitively stated he wouldn’t negotiate an extension during the regular season, leaving the parties with dwindling time to work out a deal before tomorrow’s season opener. The Mets originally offered a ten-year, $325MM pact, while Lindor came back with a twelve-year, $385MM counterproposal. With the clock ticking, both sides budged a bit from their original asks, although Lindor ultimately relented on the deal’s length and more significantly than the Mets did on the money.

                                                                    That’s not to say he fared poorly. His deal checks in as the third-largest contract in MLB history in terms of total guarantee. Hardly coincidentally, it tops Fernando Tatís Jr.’s recent $340MM extension with the Padres by the narrowest of margins. The deferred money in Lindor’s deal keeps the contract’s actual value a bit below Tatís’, since none of the latter’s money is deferred. Nevertheless, Lindor picks up a symbolic $1MM more than one of the game’s other top shortstops. By average annual value, meanwhile, Lindor’s $34.1MM comes in sixth all-time. It is also easily the biggest financial outlay in Mets’ history.
                                                                    Keeping one of the sport’s best players and most charismatic people for the next decade is certainly a huge development for the Mets on its own. But the Lindor deal also represents something of a symbolic leap for the organization’s future under new owner Steve Cohen. Under the previous ownership group, the Mets’ payrolls were closer to average than the top-of-the-market range one would expect from a team in New York City. The offseason sale of the franchise to Cohen, MLB’s richest owner, brought hope for Mets’ fans of a massive uptick in spending.
                                                                    New York had an active winter, but they didn’t make a true splash at the top of free agency, to the consternation of some observers. By extending Lindor, the Mets keep one of the top players in next winter’s class off the market. The 2021-22 free agent shortstop class has drawn plenty of attention. It remains loaded, with Corey Seager, Trevor Story, Carlos Correa and Javier Báez all slated for the open market. Lindor was perhaps the face of that group, though, and he carried as much or greater earning power than his peers.
                                                                    Because Lindor’s extension begins in 2022, the Mets’ books for the upcoming season are unaffected. The two sides had already agreed to a $22.3MM salary for this season to avoid his final potential trip through arbitration; Lindor will play out the year on that deal. Pushing the extension off a season also keeps the Mets’ competitive balance tax number for 2021 at the same level- around $194MM, in the estimation of Cot’s Baseball Contracts. That leaves New York with about $16MM of breathing room if they wish to stay below the $210MM tax threshold this year.
                                                                    Lindor’s deal will count for $34.1MM (a deal’s average annual value is measured for CBT purposes) against the luxury ledger every year from 2022-31, assuming the luxury tax system is still in place under the terms of the next collective bargaining agreement. The deal pushes the Mets’ actual payroll number in 2022 to over $127MM, per Cot’s, with a projected luxury tax number of $135MM. New York will need to shell out another significant outlay (albeit nothing approaching the Lindor range) if they wish to keep star outfielder Michael Conforto from hitting free agency over the offseason. The Mets and Conforto have talked about an extension this spring and could continue those conversations into the season.
                                                                    Regardless of what decisions Cohen and team president Sandy Alderson make in the coming months, they’ll be able to build around their new franchise shortstop. In the waning moments before their self-imposed extension deadline, the Mets and Lindor got the deal done.
                                                                    Lindor is good
                                                                    Comment
                                                                    • stevenash
                                                                      Moderator
                                                                      • 01-17-11
                                                                      • 65380

                                                                      #874
                                                                      Hi guys, I'll tell you all about my draft last night, the last draft of the nationals before the season started today.
                                                                      I did not get the four or five overall like I wanted, hardly, I got the 12 and last spot in the first round.
                                                                      I don't like picking 12 and 13 then waiting 23 selections until picking 35 and 36 overall.

                                                                      But I stayed with my game plan, that was the best overall OF hitter, the best available SP in the first two rounds and with picks 12 and 13 I did very well I think.
                                                                      Comment
                                                                      • JAKEPEAVY21
                                                                        BARRELED IN @ SBR!
                                                                        • 03-11-11
                                                                        • 29242

                                                                        #875
                                                                        Originally posted by stevenash
                                                                        Hi guys, I'll tell you all about my draft last night, the last draft of the nationals before the season started today.
                                                                        I did not get the four or five overall like I wanted, hardly, I got the 12 and last spot in the first round.
                                                                        I don't like picking 12 and 13 then waiting 23 selections until picking 35 and 36 overall.

                                                                        But I stayed with my game plan, that was the best overall OF hitter, the best available SP in the first two rounds and with picks 12 and 13 I did very well I think.
                                                                        Let's see your squad...
                                                                        Comment
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