A fact conveniently omitted by the players union apologists on Twitter...dlance said:
He turned down 10/300 with the Nats. Did he think he was going to do better?
A fact conveniently omitted by the players union apologists on Twitter...dlance said:
He turned down 10/300 with the Nats. Did he think he was going to do better?
Yep, turns down $300M, yet the players seem to think this all "unfair". What a joke. The market pays what the market pays, just like any job.dlance said:
He turned down 10/300 with the Nats. Did he think he was going to do better?
Yep. Then you hear the "owners are pocketing all the increased revenues!" complaints... which to me is easily defeated because owners would line up out the door to pay Harper $30-35mm per year over 5-7 years. They just won't do it for 10. And rightly not.Wabs said:Yep, turns down $300M, yet the players seem to think this all "unfair". What a joke. The market pays what the market pays, just like any job.dlance said:
He turned down 10/300 with the Nats. Did he think he was going to do better?
They're pissed that the owners/GMs have finally stopped signing these stupid long term, guaranteed contracts.
Plus, the last time I checked - the OWNers own the team. So they can do whatever the **** they want. If the player(s) don;t like it, then find another team, accept less money, or find another profession.Deluxe said:Yep. Then you hear the "owners are pocketing all the increased revenues!" complaints... which to me is easily defeated because owners would line up out the door to pay Harper $30-35mm per year over 5-7 years. They just won't do it for 10. And rightly not.Wabs said:Yep, turns down $300M, yet the players seem to think this all "unfair". What a joke. The market pays what the market pays, just like any job.dlance said:
He turned down 10/300 with the Nats. Did he think he was going to do better?
They're pissed that the owners/GMs have finally stopped signing these stupid long term, guaranteed contracts.
Hopefully they know that a strike would be detrimental to the game. It took steroids to bring them back after the last one.Agnzona said:
I'm expecting a huge strike as players will demand even more money when the data shows 70% or more are not worth it.
I think he was nails at his job back in the day.Thriller said:
I've never understood the hate for him. He's absolutely nails at his job. What's wrong with that?
I guarantee you wouldn't think that way if you were a player, part of a player's family, or a fellow agent.
Yea, but he is clearly expecting and not receiving a similar contract from a contender.SlimAG2 said:
I feel like Harper turned down 10/300 from the nats to go to a contender. He tried and failed with the nats and it's time to move on.
Both great points. I think the sports media may have played a role in this with talks about Harper and Machado and 400-500MM contracts. He had to think he'd get a similar or better offer from one of the large market contenders, only to find the ground shifting beneath his feet while he was still under contract. The Yankees getting their monster OF really was a killer in his scenario.WES2006AG said:Yea, but he is clearly expecting and not receiving a similar contract from a contender.SlimAG2 said:
I feel like Harper turned down 10/300 from the nats to go to a contender. He tried and failed with the nats and it's time to move on.
You can either take the big contract from any team or take the best offer you get from a contender. The reason that they are a contender is probably because they are good without Harper. If they are already a contender, then what is the benefit of adding Harper to the team? The cost vs benefit analysis would dictate that the amount of expenditure be less from the team that is already a contender vs. the team that needs more players to be in contention.SlimAG2 said:
I feel like Harper turned down 10/300 from the nats to go to a contender. He tried and failed with the nats and it's time to move on.
Thriller said:
I've never understood the hate for him. He's absolutely nails at his job. What's wrong with that?
I guarantee you wouldn't think that way if you were a player, part of a player's family, or a fellow agent.
Like I told my wife after the Super Bowl, I would absolutely love it if the Astros were hated as much as the Patriots or the Yankees. Because that would mean they're winning consistently and doing something right.Thriller said:
Agreed.
It's easy to hate the best at any profession. I don't particularly hate Saban, Belichick, the Yankees, etc. I like to read as much as I can about them because there's usually some secret inefficiency in their sport/industry that they have found that lets them dominate. By the time others have caught up, they've spent the interim time finding the next inefficiency.
I'm really hoping the Astros are doing something similar, though we have a ways to go to get to that level.
I think the simple explanation isThriller said:
You bring up fair points. At the end of the day, his job is to maximize value for his clients. The game and free agency are certainly changing and players would love for the contracts to be what they were just 2-3 years ago. Given what we knew then, I don't think it's unreasonable for Dallas to turn down the deal he was offered because he had no leverage at the time and the free agency changes weren't yet upon us. There were signs, but there were still deals bigger than his going to top tier pitchers.
Marwin is an interesting one. I really don't think there's a comp out there to him - maybe the closest was Zobrist, but even that is a poor comparison. This may be a case of player and agent misjudging the market for a super-utility player.
Boras is playing catchup to the new market conditions, just like his clients. Knowing his successful past, I'd suggest it is his clients that may be pushing for/holding out for contract offers that aren't coming more than Boras. At the base level, the agent is still just the advisor, trying to maximize value. I don't think one agent is the cause of much of the problems or should be run out of the sport, personally.
It's a really fascinating drama to watch in a game theory/dynamic market with imperfect information type of scenario.
I almost like the drama of the hot stove as much as I like pitchers and catchers reporting. Almost.