Buckets wrote:
lol...for that "price" thank GOD the Cubs said no thanks.
Buckets wrote:
Agreedthedangerouskitchen wrote:$31 mil a YEAR for some bum who is 2-7 with a 5.12 ERA in the playoffs... ?!?!?!
at Boston.
At least a guy like Trout will get paid when he's in his 20's, and there's a chance he will still be a productive player at the end of his deal. Anything over 4-5 years to a pitcher has disaster written all over it, especially when the pitcher in question is on the wrong side of 30.Max. wrote:Probably won't be long. Imagine what Trout will get.PhutureDynasty wrote:Baseball contracts are getting ridiculous.
Will I see a billion dollar contract before I die?
The length of the deal is far worse than the annual salary, in my opinion. Considering the current market and Price's performance level, I'd go 30 million annually, I just wouldn't go over 4 years.Buckets wrote:Yea the Red Sox way overpaid. Kershaw is 3 years younger and received "less" (only $2 million difference) but still I'd say $25 mill max per year for David Price would be my budget
PhutureDynasty wrote:Here's an interesting question, if all sports had no salary cap and each player signs their contracts the same year who is the highest paid for each sport?
Baseball - I'd assume Trout although I'm sure Abe will argue Mauer
Football - Luck? Watt? Brady? Newton?
Hockey - Likely Crosby or Toews
Basketball - Curry? Durant? LeBron? McConnell?
Yes.rtiff68 wrote:PhutureDynasty wrote:Here's an interesting question, if all sports had no salary cap and each player signs their contracts the same year who is the highest paid for each sport?
Baseball - I'd assume Trout although I'm sure Abe will argue Mauer
Football - Luck? Watt? Brady? Newton?
Hockey - Likely Crosby or Toews
Basketball - Curry? Durant? LeBron? McConnell?
I'm assuming that you're just saying annual value the first year and ignoring the length of the deal, right?
Here's the thing, though: isn't better to do this type of move when you're 1 player away?Kobeunderbite wrote:People can laugh at Boston but they've acquired a top-flight closer and starter before the winter meetings even started, not a shabby job at upgrading the roster for Dombrowski.
I was going to say, NBA would probably be Anthony Davis. Football would probably be Luck (Brady usually takes pay cuts to help the team). Baseball would be Trout. Hockey, I have no idea honestly as I don't follow.PhutureDynasty wrote:How could I forget Anthony Davis?
rtiff68 wrote:Here's the thing, though: isn't better to do this type of move when you're 1 player away?Kobeunderbite wrote:People can laugh at Boston but they've acquired a top-flight closer and starter before the winter meetings even started, not a shabby job at upgrading the roster for Dombrowski.
If my Giants landed Greinke on a similar deal, I wouldn't be wild about it because of the back end, but I'd love it in the sense that SF is one starter away from vaunting right back to contender status (IMO), and they'd be in an excellent position for the next 3 years while simultaneously castrating a division rival in the short term as well.
See, in a situation like this I really think some rogue owner would go ridiculously over the top in order to instantly transform his franchise-- particularly in basketball, where 1 player makes such an enormous difference. Would you really be surprised if Cuban offered LeBron or Curry 50m annually if the league was cap-less? SHit, Dan Gilbert just gave Tristan Thompson 16m a year in a league that IS capped...Buckets wrote:I was going to say, NBA would probably be Anthony Davis. Football would probably be Luck (Brady usually takes pay cuts to help the team). Baseball would be Trout. Hockey, I have no idea honestly as I don't follow.PhutureDynasty wrote:How could I forget Anthony Davis?
I think with no cap, NBA players would be paid the most though since there's only 5 guys on the court and 1 player can really make an impact. The top tier guys (probably cutoff at top 4) such as Durant, Davis, LeBron, and Curry would get at least $30 million. I think the cutoff would be at Harden.