I'm not going to speak for Stanton, but an 8 figure payday pretty much eliminates the "he needs to plan for life after baseball or if something goes wrong" argument for opting against the buyout, does it not? Other than that, I really don't get the argument for buying out free agent years (which is the Marlins goal, I'd assume). I think a player like Stanton - who's going to earn huge money early in arbitration - is different than most, and when you talk about something that different, conventional logic doesn't apply.
How many people in baseball history can even say they had that kind of money in the first year arby/super-2? I can only think of Howard. Cabrera didn't get it, Lincecum didn't get it, and going further back there's no way you'd get to 8 figures in year one.
So, my point can be summarized as this. Stanton's going to be making out just fine after his first arbitration payday. He knows this, his agent knows this. Stanton maybe doesn't like it here. I don't think anyone blames him. Because of the money coming his way in arbitration (and we're talking first year arbitration here, not third year) and his age at prospective free-agency, there exists almost no incentive to sign an extension that forfeits free-agent years.
We can all agree that Stanton's arbitration schedule figures to be historic, correct?
How many people in baseball history can even say they had that kind of money in the first year arby/super-2? I can only think of Howard. Cabrera didn't get it, Lincecum didn't get it, and going further back there's no way you'd get to 8 figures in year one.
So, my point can be summarized as this. Stanton's going to be making out just fine after his first arbitration payday. He knows this, his agent knows this. Stanton maybe doesn't like it here. I don't think anyone blames him. Because of the money coming his way in arbitration (and we're talking first year arbitration here, not third year) and his age at prospective free-agency, there exists almost no incentive to sign an extension that forfeits free-agent years.
We can all agree that Stanton's arbitration schedule figures to be historic, correct?
Comment