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  • How Much Can The Twins Spend This Offseason?


    John  Bonnes

    It is way too early to be talking specifics about the Minnesota Twins payroll this offseason – except that it is not. With the trade deadline approaching, and several trade candidates being among the most highly paid players on the team, taking a quick peek ahead becomes mandatory. So let's take a way-too-early, back-of-the-napkin view of where things sit right now.

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    The Lineup ($56M)
    The bad news this year was the Twins had to empty the St. Paul Saints roster to cover for all the Twins' injuries. The good news is that many of those players will be available to fill in for departing free agents like Nelson Cruz and Andrelton Simmons. With a bit of reshuffling, the default lineup likely looks like this:

    2022 Player  $M   Type 
    C Garver  $           3.80 arbitration
    1B Kirilloff?  $           0.60 team control
    2B Arraez  $           0.60 team control
    3B Donaldson  $         21.00 contract
    SS Polanco  $           5.00 contract
    LF Larnach  $           0.60 team control
    CF Buxton  $           8.50 arbitration
    RF Kepler  $           6.75 contract
    DH Sano  $         12.00 contract

     

    The Bench ($2.8M)
    Will the Twins try to add depth with a capable 10th man this offseason? Maybe. Until then, the bench looks like this:

    2022 Player    Type 
    C OF Rooker/Galick  $           0.60 team control
    M IF Gordon  $           0.60 team control
    C Jeffers  $           0.60 team control
    Other Astudillo  $           1.00 arbitration

     

    The Rotation ($20.0M)

    The Twins will need to focus on the rotation this offseason, seeing as J.A. Happ, Matt Shoemaker, and Michael Pineda are all free agents. Let's fill in those spots for now with minor leaguers like Bailey Ober, Randy Dobnak, and Jhoan Duran, and anticipate several of them will be replaced by acquisitions this offseason.

    2022 Player    Type 
    SP Maeda  $           9.00 contract
    SP Berrios  $           9.00 arbitration
    SP Ober  $           0.60 team control
    SP Dobnak  $           0.80 team control
    SP Duran  $           0.60 team control

     

    The Bullpen ($14.5M)
    The bullpen losses some free agents too, and there were already lots of gaps to fill. Even though he's expensive, we'll assume Taylor Rogers returns because there are just so many other spots to fill. If so, the bullpen looks something like this:

    2022 Player    Type 
    Closer Rogers  $           7.50 arbitration
    RH MR Duffey  $           3.00 arbitration
    RH MR Alcala  $           0.60 team control
    RH MR Farrell  $           0.60 team control
    LH MR Thielbar  $           1.00 arbitration
    RH MR Stashak  $           0.60 team control
    Swing Smeltzer  $           0.60 team control
    Other Thorpe  $           0.60 team control


    That's a decent amount of money, but they also have many spots to fill. They must address the rotation, definitely need to upgrade their bullpen, might want to improve their defense, or even try and bring back Nelson Cruz again.

    To Spend  ($35-45M?)
    Add those all up, and the Twins existing payroll comes in at about $96M. They spent about $130M last year, so they will have about $35M to spend if they match that. If they increase it by 10% - a reasonable assumption if they want to keep their competitive window open, they could be closer to $45M to spend.

    The trade deadline could change a lot of this, too.  Josh Donaldson, Jose Berrios, and Byron Buxton will be among the most expensive players on the roster next year. Moving any of them could free up money for more free agents. Of course, that would also create other spots they need to fill. 

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    11 hours ago, Seansy said:

    Hi John,

    Are you including buyouts for payroll? Sańo is only owed 9.25M for 2022. His 2.75M buyout is only for the 2023 team option.

    Not sure if Alexander's buyout is included either.

     

    Spelling error on Garlick too. ?

    I included Sano's buyout in next year's number, which is why it is $12M instead of $9.25M. I figure it will likely need to be paid in the 2022 season (at the end). I did not include Colome's buyout for next year for the same reason - it will be paid this year. 

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    9 hours ago, roger said:

    So many unknowns, John.  Really about 41 days too soon to think about this.  

    The Twins lost a ton of money in 2020.  The Pohlads stepped up and said they are treating it as a one time loss and won't try to recover it by cutting future payrolls.  With the early season COVID restrictions and now poor play, 2021 attendance is going to be low.  Will they surpass 1,000,000?  With a $130M+/- payroll, that means another healthy loss, although it could be reduced should they move a couple bigger contracts at the deadline.  Hopefully, they will approach next year as this year and treat the 2021 losses as a sunk cost.

    I like the lineup you have projected for 2021 and can see the Twins fielding a competitive team while spending less than 2021, perhaps much less.  But we won't have a good feel for what the ownership/FO will be doing until after the trading deadline.

    I agree that how the team treats budget for next year is a pretty big unknown. I suspect we won't know until next March what they really chose. But $140M is at least reasonable. I'd probably put the over/under a bit lower, but not much.

    And FWIW - I'm not projecting that lineup. I'm just saying how things sit right now, if they had to field next year's team. I anticipate a lot of changes. I just wanted to know whether they have $20M or $60M to spend, because that might play into how they approach the trade deadline and the "reload" vs "rebuild" decision. 

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    2 hours ago, darwin22 said:

    Upon further review.... as I pay attention to this.....many of the "numbers" quoted for 2022 salaries are incorrect or projections from arbitration.

    My source is:  Spotrac.com/ mlb team payrolls

    Garver is NOT making 3.8mill for 2022.  He's making $1.875 mill this season.  He  could get that increase for 2022, but I doubt it.

    Polanco:  making $5.50 mill for 2022-------not $5.0 mill

    Sano: As noted by another----is NOT making $12 mill next year-----he's guaranteed (ugh!!) $9.25m. Has $14.25m CLUB option for 2023.  

    Buxton:  Is NOT guaranteed $8.5m for next year as he's ARB4 eligible.  Making $5.125mill for 2021.  If Twins can't sign him long term....I wouldn't be shocked to see Buxton (if he can stay healthy for remainder of this season) file for at least $10mill in arbitration.

    Rogers:  Making $6.0 mill this season. Like Buxton is approaching his last year (4) of arbitration. $7.5 mill is a projection.

    Berrios:  Making $6.1mill this season. Entering 3rd year of arbitration. $9.0 mill, again is a projection through arbitration process.  Like Buxton, I could see Berrios filing at $10mill plus in arbitration.

     

     

    Many of these numbers (especially arbitration) can only be estimated right now. That's why it's "back-of-the-napkin". We're trying to find a decent range of overall payroll. In the interest of transparency...

    - Garver is arbitration eligible, so his exact salary will not be know until February, but $3.8M is a decent estimate. It could be lower (maybe $3M?) if he doesn't play the rest of the year, but the Twins haven't placed him on the 60 day IL so I still expect him to come back.

    - Per Cot's Baseball Contracts, Polanco is making $5M next year. 

    - Sano is guaranteed $9.25M but has a $2.75 million buyout on his club option in 2023. Since that is likely to be exercised in November, the Twins will need to budget $12M on him next year.

    - Buxton. No, it's not guaranteed. It's listed in the chart as "arbitration." It's an estimated. If he stays healthy, it would likely be higher than that, but that's a big if.

    - Rogers - also listed as "arbitration" above, so yes, $7.5M is a projection.

    - Berrios - yes, also lised as "arbitration" and as such is a projection. 

    Finally, I'll list one other that others have mentioned and is perhaps the biggest question mark: Maeda and his low guarantee with an enormous incentive clause. You can find details on that on the "Cot's" link above. 

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    38 minutes ago, John Bonnes said:

    Many of these numbers (especially arbitration) can only be estimated right now. That's why it's "back-of-the-napkin". We're trying to find a decent range of overall payroll. In the interest of transparency...

    - Garver is arbitration eligible, so his exact salary will not be know until February, but $3.8M is a decent estimate. It could be lower (maybe $3M?) if he doesn't play the rest of the year, but the Twins haven't placed him on the 60 day IL so I still expect him to come back.

    - Per Cot's Baseball Contracts, Polanco is making $5M next year. 

    - Sano is guaranteed $9.25M but has a $2.75 million buyout on his club option in 2023. Since that is likely to be exercised in November, the Twins will need to budget $12M on him next year.

    - Buxton. No, it's not guaranteed. It's listed in the chart as "arbitration." It's an estimated. If he stays healthy, it would likely be higher than that, but that's a big if.

    - Rogers - also listed as "arbitration" above, so yes, $7.5M is a projection.

    - Berrios - yes, also lised as "arbitration" and as such is a projection. 

    Finally, I'll list one other that others have mentioned and is perhaps the biggest question mark: Maeda and his low guarantee with an enormous incentive clause. You can find details on that on the "Cot's" link above. 

     

    38 minutes ago, John Bonnes said:

    Many of these numbers (especially arbitration) can only be estimated right now. That's why it's "back-of-the-napkin". We're trying to find a decent range of overall payroll. In the interest of transparency...

    - Garver is arbitration eligible, so his exact salary will not be know until February, but $3.8M is a decent estimate. It could be lower (maybe $3M?) if he doesn't play the rest of the year, but the Twins haven't placed him on the 60 day IL so I still expect him to come back.

    - Per Cot's Baseball Contracts, Polanco is making $5M next year. 

    - Sano is guaranteed $9.25M but has a $2.75 million buyout on his club option in 2023. Since that is likely to be exercised in November, the Twins will need to budget $12M on him next year.

    - Buxton. No, it's not guaranteed. It's listed in the chart as "arbitration." It's an estimated. If he stays healthy, it would likely be higher than that, but that's a big if.

    - Rogers - also listed as "arbitration" above, so yes, $7.5M is a projection.

    - Berrios - yes, also lised as "arbitration" and as such is a projection. 

    Finally, I'll list one other that others have mentioned and is perhaps the biggest question mark: Maeda and his low guarantee with an enormous incentive clause. You can find details on that on the "Cot's" link above. 

    John:  Appreciate your clarification on the players I cited in my post.  Good work on your salary observations as things stand right now.  A lot of big decisions for the front office to make.

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    John and others...do you think it is realistic to expect the Twins to approach both/either Buxton and Berrios about an extension this summer?  So often we hear that players don't want to deal with negotiations while the season is under way.  But should the Twins be approached about a trade for either, I would think they would have to at least run the flag up the pole to see if an extension is possible.  If the answer is no, expect they would listen to offers.  If the answer is yes, would hope they proceed to get it done.

    When healthy this team may be proving that they aren't so far away that a retooling is possible, perhaps as soon as next year.  Sure would make sense to lock in their two best players.

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    20 hours ago, beckmt said:

    Look at Cleveland, they always seem to find enough pitching to be above .500, we need to go that route.

    Cleveland can’t win in the playoffs, though. That’s because they don’t invest anything into their lineup.

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    38 minutes ago, roger said:

    John and others...do you think it is realistic to expect the Twins to approach both/either Buxton and Berrios about an extension this summer?  So often we hear that players don't want to deal with negotiations while the season is under way.  But should the Twins be approached about a trade for either, I would think they would have to at least run the flag up the pole to see if an extension is possible.  If the answer is no, expect they would listen to offers.  If the answer is yes, would hope they proceed to get it done.

    When healthy this team may be proving that they aren't so far away that a retooling is possible, perhaps as soon as next year.  Sure would make sense to lock in their two best players.

    It's been reported that they've approached Berrios about extensions the last few years and talked with Buxton and his people about one during ST this year. I'd hope they have a decent idea of what those 2 would be expecting. As they are so close to free agency now I'd think the Twins would need to offer pretty close to the player's desired money to get a deal done.

    Berrios seems more than happy to take it year by year and hit the open market if the Twins don't give him what he expects to make on the market. Maybe he's way off on his estimate of what he'll get, but he still likely doesn't sign for less than he thinks he'd get on the market.

    Buxton may be the hardest extension, trade, whatever candidate in baseball history. He's a top 3-5 player in the sport when healthy now. But he's never healthy. He could demand Trout-esque money based on talent, but can't imagine any team gives him anything crazy.

    Hopefully the Twins have an idea of what the contract demands for both are and have done a great deal of budget work trying to determine if they can sign one or both. As we approach the deadline I'd hope they reach out to the player's agents with a final contract offer before making any trade. Or if they know they're not going to meet their money demands then trade them. Worst case scenario is having both for 1 more year and only getting 2 comp picks out of the whole situation. Twins need to play the Rays game of trading big name guys before losing them for nothing sometimes. Not every big name guy as they can spend much more than the Rays, but they'll never be NY or LA so they can't sign them all and need to maximize returns on the ones they can't/don't resign.

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    5 minutes ago, cHawk said:

    Cleveland can’t win in the playoffs, though. That’s because they don’t invest anything into their lineup.

    They did make it to game 7 of the World Series not too long ago.

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    7 minutes ago, chpettit19 said:

    They did make it to game 7 of the World Series not too long ago.

    That run is looking more and more like a fluke by the day. The Indians haven’t been anywhere close to the WS since then, they’ve even lost 8 straight playoff games.

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    I just want to point out that they can spend how ever much they want.  There is no cap.  However, if the point is how much do they have to spend and not be crazy in the red then the numbers seem accurate based on pass seasons.  The thing to remember though, no team should spend on FA just because they have money.  That gets teams into bad contracts.  If you cannot get the guy you want for long term deal then fill what you need with 1 year deals if you can.  Too often teams that want to spend used to spend big on the top FA on the market, not thinking about they may not actually be wroth top FA money.  Being the best of average players does not mean you should get superstar money.  There are some high end SS and starting pitchers in this class.  The rest is pretty thin in my opinion.  The issue with the starters are most are getting older and could still demand high level contracts. We will see what they do when they do it. 

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    I did not realize there was so little money invested in the bullpen.  This is like the end of the Dennis Green era, where the team was spending nothing on defensive backs... and the outcome is equally predictable.

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    2 minutes ago, cHawk said:

    That run is looking more and more like a fluke by the day. The Indians haven’t been anywhere close to the WS since then, they’ve even lost 8 straight playoff games.

    All their hitting prospects have basically been complete busts since that run and it's crushed them the last few years, but that doesn't make their WS run a fluke. That's the nature of the playoff beast. The Dodgers couldn't break through the WS ceiling until last year despite having invested in every part of their team for nearly a decade. The Yankees haven't been a playoff threat for years. Tampa doesn't invest in anything but data analysts and scouts and they're one of the best teams in baseball year after year.

    Cleveland is clearly a flawed team, and I don't want the Twins to be a team based around 3 big time starters, 2 bullpen studs, and a bunch of hopes and prayers, but they've been a competitive team for a while now. Was just pointing out that their strategy did work and got them right to the doorstep of a championship. They just have very little room for error when it comes to hitting and missing on prospects.

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    Among committed 2022 salaries to trade out of, Sano is the obvious choice. Beyond that, you are starting to trade away pieces that you need to be competitive.

    So, the question becomes, do you:

    - trade Donaldson, sign Berrios and Buxton, and hope that 2023 dawns with 2 starter prospects having proven worthy, OR

    - keep Donaldson, stay in arb with Berrios and Buxton, and buy one amazing starter and take your championship shot before everyone becomes a free agent?

    - surprise birthday pony option 3: increase payroll by $20M

    I can't see option 2 being a good idea, unless you think the White Sox are frauds

     

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    1 hour ago, cHawk said:

    Cleveland can’t win in the playoffs, though. That’s because they don’t invest anything into their lineup.

    we have an owner with more resources than Cleveland, so this should not be an issue

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    32 minutes ago, Vanimal46 said:

    Are we sure $130 million is the new baseline to budget for? I’m not so sure after 2020 without fans, and depleted attendance this year because of an underperforming team. 

    Payroll should be higher next year. Hopefully $160M-170M.

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    So much of next year depends on Buxton and Berrios and whether they sign extensions or are traded.  Until that point, all of this is just a snap shot observation based on current information.   I think the piece does suggest some stark realities for this club's prospects for competitiveness next year.  Their inability to sign high impact arms through free agency does not bode well for next year.  We have learned that the team is not competitive for top end starters and that the relief pitching market is a crap shoot.  

    All of this suggests that the team is really dependent on the development of the arms in their system.  Next year may be more about building for 2023 with the hope that their young arms emerge next year - but probably not being high impact contributors until 2023.

    That reality speaks volumes about how the team will look at the current roster, which in my opinion, means dealing some very valuable assets to get high impact arms that have years of team control ahead.   As a result, I don't see Garver, Buxton and Berrios all being on the roster next year.  I suspect one or more will be playing elsewhere next April - if not sooner.

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    42 minutes ago, cHawk said:

    Payroll should be higher next year. Hopefully $160M-170M.

    If that’s the case that signals to me we’re keeping Buxton/Berrios/Rogers for 2022 and going for it. I’m not sure that’s realistic if we miss the playoffs this year. 

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    19 hours ago, Brandon said:

    I can see the Twins resigning Pineda, and Cruz.  if they let Cruz leave, I think they would plan on trying to sign one of the SS in FA.  I think Pineda holds appeal because he can be had on a shorter term deal with his age and injury history.  I can see a 2 year 26-30 million for him.  I am not ready to give up on this season either as I think the Twins could get back in it with their key players coming back from injury.  They would need one of Ober or Dobnak to step up but if the Twins would go out and trade for a shut down reliever they could climb up the standings. What ever happened to the Twins top pitching prospects Balazovich and Duran?  Are they close to helping?

    I have to quote myself as the Twins did go sign a reliever yesterday. (Kyle Barraclough)  Twins Sign Kyle Barraclough - MLB Trade Rumors Ha.  A guy who at best is a solid middle reliever from 2 or 3 years ago.  but seriously, I hate tanking.  And the offense has been on the rise.  if we can get some improvement in the rotation from a healthy Maeda and a rising Ober and if Dobnak can just get back to a being a decent if unspactacular pitcher I think the pitching staff would be almost there as well.  I believe we can get back to 10 games over .500 the question is can we rise enough to make the playoffs?  I would rather push to find out then crash on the season and give up.  Getting back over .500 will do some good for our attendance figures which will help with the budget for next year.  

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    I would love to speculate on trades and pick ups, rosters, and payroll, but the 400 pound gorilla in the room is the looming union contract status.  From what I have read, there may be a lockout or strike if the contract is not settled and no one knows what this will do to any free agent signings.  Add to that the fact Jim Pohlad has lost a considerable amount in 2020 and stands to lose a bundle this year as well, it might mean a cut back in contract commitments until all is settled.  Might be going with a lot of younger players making the minimum or close to it in the near future.   

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    45 minutes ago, Mark G said:

    I would love to speculate on trades and pick ups, rosters, and payroll, but the 400 pound gorilla in the room is the looming union contract status.  From what I have read, there may be a lockout or strike if the contract is not settled and no one knows what this will do to any free agent signings.  Add to that the fact Jim Pohlad has lost a considerable amount in 2020 and stands to lose a bundle this year as well, it might mean a cut back in contract commitments until all is settled.  Might be going with a lot of younger players making the minimum or close to it in the near future.   

    I was surprised by how much the Twins spent this year, so there is the tiniest of glimmers of hope that they will at least stand pat.  But yes, if history is any indication, spending will go down.

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    1 hour ago, Mark G said:

    I would love to speculate on trades and pick ups, rosters, and payroll, but the 400 pound gorilla in the room is the looming union contract status.  From what I have read, there may be a lockout or strike if the contract is not settled and no one knows what this will do to any free agent signings.  Add to that the fact Jim Pohlad has lost a considerable amount in 2020 and stands to lose a bundle this year as well, it might mean a cut back in contract commitments until all is settled.  Might be going with a lot of younger players making the minimum or close to it in the near future.   

    Exactly my thoughts too, that new agreement is a huge factor to consider.  I'm not sure how they will do this but I expect owners to find a way to get closer to something like a salary cap.  Maybe it's just a higher luxury payroll tax but the sport has to get some level of control over the spending (both threshold and ceiling) to get some more competitive balance.  Players want the years shortened to free agency, maybe that's the key for them.  

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    2 hours ago, heresthething said:

    Exactly my thoughts too, that new agreement is a huge factor to consider.  I'm not sure how they will do this but I expect owners to find a way to get closer to something like a salary cap.  Maybe it's just a higher luxury payroll tax but the sport has to get some level of control over the spending (both threshold and ceiling) to get some more competitive balance.  Players want the years shortened to free agency, maybe that's the key for them.  

    What they do with service time is going to be very interesting.  The big market teams might not mind from a competitive standpoint but revenue from gate sharing is going to be hurt if parity gets worse.  Oakland and Tampa have managed to field competitive teams but the rest of the league is putting more value on prospects.  I would think the small market teams would absolutely dig in there heals on keeping something close to what we have now.  If those teams lost a year of service it's going to be even harder for them to compete.  In our case, Buxton and Berrios would be gone next year.

     

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    25 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    What they do with service time issue is going to be very interesting.  The big market teams might not mind from a competitive standpoint but revenue from gate sharing is going to be hurt if parity gets worse.  Oakland and Tampa have managed to field competitive teams but the rest of the league is putting more value on prospects.  I would think the small market teams would absolutely dig in there heals on keeping something close to what we have now.  If those teams lost a year of service it's going to be even harder for them to compete.  In our case, Buxton and Berrios would be gone next year.

     

    I'm hoping they give the players freedom earlier, and to help lower revenue teams do at least two things:

    increase revenue sharing. TV and non-attendance items are more important for revenue.....and that requires more good teams.

    Give some kind of advantage to lower revenue / bad teams in acquiring amateur talent. Like, an extra pick in round 1, or something. The faster a team can acquire talent, the less losing a player costs them.

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    28 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    I'm hoping they give the players freedom earlier, and to help lower revenue teams do at least two things:

    increase revenue sharing. TV and non-attendance items are more important for revenue.....and that requires more good teams.

    Give some kind of advantage to lower revenue / bad teams in acquiring amateur talent. Like, an extra pick in round 1, or something. The faster a team can acquire talent, the less losing a player costs them.

    Why should one company have to give revenue to a competitor so that competitors employees can get get paid more?  How is that even remotely fair to the large market teams.  Why is it so hard for you to understand this is a business?  Why don't the highest paid players share their income with lower paid players?  That makes about as much sense.  Player compensation has risen at an incredible rate for 50+ years.  Things are just fine as is.  Raise 1st year salary to 800K, 2nd year to 900K and 3rd year to $1M.  Leave the rest the way it is or perhaps make the 3rd year arbitration eligible.  I don't want our team or teams with lesser revenue to be at an even bigger disadvantage.

    The one other thing I would change would be MilB comp and in a big way.  Max signing bonus would be $1M for 1st overall and the amount decreases by 2% per pick.  Milb payroll is increased equal to the amount formally used for bonuses.  With this change they could pay Milb players and average of $85K.  It could be something like 75K for A, 85Kof A+/AA and $100K for AAA. 

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    11 minutes ago, Major League Ready said:

    Why should one company have to give revenue to a competitor so that competitors employees can get get paid more?  How is that even remotely fair to the large market teams.  Why is it so hard for you to understand this is a business?  Why don't the highest paid players share their income with lower paid players?  That makes about as much sense.  Player compensation has risen at an incredible rate for 50+ years.  Things are just fine as is.  Raise 1st year salary to 800K, 2nd year to 900K and 3rd year to $1M.  Leave the rest the way it is or perhaps make the 3rd year arbitration eligible.  I don't want our team or teams with lesser revenue to be at an even bigger disadvantage.

    The one other thing I would change would be MilB comp and in a big way.  Max signing bonus would be $1M for 1st overall and the amount decreases by 2% per pick.  Milb payroll is increased equal to the amount formally used for bonuses.  With this change they could pay Milb players and average of $85K.  It could be something like 75K for A, 85Kof A+/AA and $100K for AAA. 

    Because it isn't a normal business. Amazon would make more money if they drove everyone else out of business. If there are no other baseball teams, or they are like the globetrotters, no one will watch. I'm not sure why that is hard to understand. They need competitors. I mean, if only the Yankees show up at the stadium, who do they play?

    As for players sharing money....that's apples and screw drivers (i.e., more absurd than apples and oranges).

    Again, it would be great if we could disagree respectfully. 

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