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  • STUNNER: Carlos Correa Agrees to Terms with Minnesota Twins


    John  Bonnes

    Third time's a charm?

    The Minnesota Twins, against all odds, have come to an agreement with superstar shortstop Carlos Correa on six-year contract per ESPN's Jeff Passan. The deal brings to a close one of the oddest free-agent pursuits in MLB history and represents a financial commitment greater than any the historically frugal Twins have offered.

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    Carlos Correa's wild offseason journey has led to agreements with both the Giants and Mets that fell through over concerns about his physical. Now, it has led him back to where he started. 

    This time last year, Correa was one of the top names on the free agent market, so much so that he reportedly turned down a 10-year, $270M offer. However, he had to wait out MLB’s lockout, which is when he switched agents to Scott Boras. The market for superstars was less robust when the lockout ended in early March. So, he opted to sign a three-year deal with the Minnesota Twins for $35.1M per year, but the contract also allowed him to opt out after each of the first two years.

    That agreement couldn’t have worked out better for both parties. Correa thrived offensively and defensively, becoming the Twins MVP and earning rave reviews for his leadership and mentorship. He opted out of his contract, again positioned as one of the top free agents available. 

    But the usually thrifty Twins declared their intention to pursue him, eventually offering a 10-year $285M contract. Alas, that appeared to be nowhere near enough. Correa agreed to a deal with the San Francisco Giants for 13 years and $350M, but that deal fell apart a week later when the Giants expressed concerns about a plate in Correa’s right leg from a 2014 injury. 

    It didn’t take long for Correa to find another suitor. The same night, he agreed to a 12-year deal with New York Mets' owner Steve Cohen for $315M. However, shortly thereafter, the Mets had a similar concern, jeopardizing that deal.

    Correa and the Mets worked on resolving that concern for more than two weeks, with varying levels of optimism that a deal would get done. Thursday night, that optimism was shaken when Jon Heyman revealed that Boras had engaged with at least one other team. The talks stalled when the two sides could not agree on language protecting the Mets if Correa’s career or production were cut short due to the old injury. Lenient terms on a team opt-out midway through a 12-year deal can quickly turn a guaranteed contract into a not-so-guaranteed contract.

    Enter the Twins. They had re-engaged with a similar contract to the one they previously offered, though the guaranteed amount is unclear. Also, while Correa's old injury surely could provide some concerns, they had the advantage of having already observed Correa and his right leg up close for the last year. Their offer was less dependent on a physical, a key component Boras needed before walking away from the Mets’ offer. 

    It was unclear to the Twins whether they were truly a serious contender or were being used as leverage for Boras against the Mets. Correa may have enjoyed his time with the Twins, but the Mets have a loaded roster, an owner willing to spend whatever it takes, and the City that Never Sleeps. Were the Twins just being used to drive up the dollars? Or to get the Mets to bend on contract language regarding the opt-out? Or did they really have a chance to land Correa?

    The Twins and Boras traded multiple offers over the weekend, and confidence their status varied from hour to hour and executive to executive. They knew that Boras was also doing the same with the Mets, and it should be obvious that negotiations with the super agent Boras can be intense. Several times, the pendulum swung from “optimistic” to “pessimistic” and back again, even over the last 24 hours. 

    With that said, this is obviously a stunning turn of events in terms of optics. The Mets and Giants are among the most free-spending, impulsive, uninhibited franchises in baseball regarding free agency. The Twins are on the exact opposite end of that spectrum.

    Correa has quickly become one of the most publicized high-risk free agents at this level of caliber/price we've ever seen. Minnesota's front office – despite its litany of existing injury concerns – said ‘screw it’ and bypassed the inhibitions that held back big-market titans. Why? Because they feel the shortstop is everything their team needs to take the next step.

    The only times the Twins have even approached swimming in waters this deep financially was when they were previously faced with losing longtime Twins fixtures like Kirby Puckett, Joe Mauer, and Byron Buxton. In 1992, Puckett was the top free agent on the market but re-signed with the Twins for 5 years and $30M. In 2010, entering his last year of team control, Mauer agreed to an 8-year, $184 million contract extension to stay with the team. Finally, last year, also entering his final year of team control, Buxton agreed to a 7-year, $100M contract with almost another $100M in possible incentives.

    While Correa was with the team for only one year, he has this in common with those players: the organization didn’t want to lose him. 

    Correa's impact on the team was clearly evident in 2022, when he put forth stellar production on the field and earned rave reviews of his wide-reaching impact on the organization. He’s a Gold Glove caliber defender at a premium position. He’s averaged 28 home runs over 162 games while getting on base at a .359 clip. He’s also just 28 years old, entering the prime of his career. Like those previous players, he is now positioned to be the face of the Twins franchise. 

    In terms of his future fit, obviously, Correa is lined up to play shortstop for now, which pushes Kyle Farmer into more of a utility role while giving Royce Lewis plenty of time to work his way back from knee surgery. It's interesting that the Mets were planning to immediately shift Correa to third base (and he seemed totally open to it), so that could be the plan somewhere down the line for Minnesota. 

    But as a 28-year-old former Platinum Glover still fielding short at a high level, there's no rush for now. The Twins got their shortstop. And more than that, they got their guy and turned around a wayward offseason with the biggest and boldest contract in franchise history.

    The Twins are in it to win it. Let's go.

     

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    First who cares?  Secondly what makes the Twins doctors better than those of the Mets and giants?  Pending physical just like the other two signings.  What's to get excited about?  Why should we assume a deal will go through here when he couldn't get signed in San Francisco or New York?  Why wouldn't the Giants or Mets able to sign him at a reduced rate of 6 at 200 million?  Plus this team needs a lot more than Correa to be a legit contender.  Unless this a new commitment from ownership and they also invest in other players, I think they will rue the day they agreed to this.  Pending physical.

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    I guess it makes the team better overall, so in that I'm glad. I'll want to puke every time they play up the "I really like it here and wanted to be here", "this was really my 1st choice", "these are the guys I want to win with"  LIES, LIES, and more LIES. You wanted max dollars, period. Don't even try to lie about it. You literally agreed to deals with two other teams already, so don't go trying to blow smoke up everyone's ass.

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    Just now, Whitey333 said:

    First who cares?  Secondly what makes the Twins doctors better than those of the Mets and giants?  Pending physical just like the other two signings.  What's to get excited about?  Why should we assume a deal will go through here when he couldn't get signed in San Francisco or New York?  Why wouldn't the Giants or Mets able to sign him at a reduced rate of 6 at 200 million?  Plus this team needs a lot more than Correa to be a legit contender.  Unless this a new commitment from ownership and they also invest in other players, I think they will rue the day they agreed to this.  Pending physical.

    I think the Giants and the Mets were concerned how the leg would hold up at the end of the deal, not as much when he's in his prime. 

    The 6 years avoids that, and the vesting options give the team some security if his leg goes bad.  If something happens, he likely won't reach the vesting options.  

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    3 minutes ago, Mike Sixel said:

    I know most won't agree, but I think this means they aren't dealing Kepler, unless it's part of a deal for an impact starter. They are all in.

    We agree on a lot, but not this one. Seems more likely they'll be interested in getting his salary off the books now. 

    And personally, I don't want both him and Gallo manning the corners. I don't want Miranda to be the only young upside player in the lineup, I really want to make room for the young bats.

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    2 minutes ago, Whitey333 said:

    First who cares?  Secondly what makes the Twins doctors better than those of the Mets and giants?  Pending physical just like the other two signings.  What's to get excited about?  Why should we assume a deal will go through here when he couldn't get signed in San Francisco or New York?  Why wouldn't the Giants or Mets able to sign him at a reduced rate of 6 at 200 million?  Plus this team needs a lot more than Correa to be a legit contender.  Unless this a new commitment from ownership and they also invest in other players, I think they will rue the day they agreed to this.  Pending physical.

    That didn't take long...

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    2 minutes ago, I wish the twins were good said:

    This is a great contract for the Twins compared to what others signed for. Bogaerts is a half step below, two years older, and signed for 80 million more than that. 

    Color this fan impressed. If they can figure out a way to get Lewis and Lee into the same infield, the Twins might really have something special here. 

    That could be a pretty intriguing level of talent there :)

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    Just now, nicksaviking said:

    We agree on a lot, but not this one. Seems more likely they'll be interested in getting his salary off the books now. 

    And personally, I don't want both him and Gallo manning the corners. I don't want Miranda to be the only young upside player in the lineup, I really want to make room for the young bats.

    I mean, I'd trade him..... But I'm not the front office. 

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    Just now, nicksaviking said:

    We agree on a lot, but not this one. Seems more likely they'll be interested in getting his salary off the books now. 

    And personally, I don't want both him and Gallo manning the corners. I don't want Miranda to be the only young upside player in the lineup, I really want to make room for the young bats.

    Agree.  I'm thinking this makes it more likely that they try to trade Kepler for some pitching. I'm assuming the pones are ringing in Miami as soon as the contract is signed (if not before).

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    Am I understanding this correctly?  We get CC for the next 6 years (his prime age) at $33.34M per year, and then can keep him longer at a lower rate if he hits a certain number of plate appearances?

    How is this not a great deal for us??!!

    This sounds like an outstanding deal for the future of the Twins.  Not only what he provides on the field, but what he provides in clubhouse leadership.

    Allows Farmer to be our infield utility role (plus super utility Gordon who can play OF), don't have to rush Lewis back - win/win.  Lets keep this train going.

    What am I missing that any fans might not love this?  Sure injury history, but really have any players made it this far into their careers without any injury concerns?

     

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    WOW!

    I was one of the few who was hopeful Correa didn't return.  My concern is whether or not the Twins will have the dollars to retain/extend Lewis, Lee, Miranda, AK, Larnach and some of the young pitchers.  You see, I believe most of those guys are going to become very good/and/or/great ballplayers.

    Assuming this actually gets signed, gonna have to think about how this affects the Twins in both the short and long term.  Money isn't a problem for the next few years.  But where will guys like Lewis, Lee and perhaps a few others (Julien, Martin) play with Carlos at short?  Expect that could become a good problem.  Also expect it increases the liklihood that one of those young studs is traded.  Probably will wait until summer to give someone like Martin a chance to improve his value.  Hopefully, Lee and Lewis ain't going anywhere, hopefully.

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    I sure hope it all goes down as planned, but I'm not holding my breath after seeing what happened with SF and NY. If he does indeed sign...what ELSE are we going to do. We need more than CC staying to make this team competitive. 

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    1 minute ago, roger said:

    WOW!

    I was one of the few who was hopeful Correa didn't return.  My concern is whether or not the Twins will have the dollars to retain/extend Lewis, Lee, Miranda, AK, Larnach and some of the young pitchers.  You see, I believe most of those guys are going to become very good/and/or/great ballplayers.

    Assuming this actually gets signed, gonna have to think about how this affects the Twins in both the short and long term.  Money isn't a problem for the next few years.  But where will guys like Lewis, Lee and perhaps a few others (Julien, Martin) play with Carlos at short?  Expect that could become a good problem.  Also expect it increases the liklihood that one of those young studs is traded.  Probably will wait until summer to give someone like Miller a chance to improve his value.  Hopefully, Lee and Lewis ain't going anywhere, hopefully.

    Lewis to the outfield. Lee to third. Miranda to DH or first. It's pretty easy to find space for them, imo. 

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    4 minutes ago, roger said:

    WOW!

    I was one of the few who was hopeful Correa didn't return.  My concern is whether or not the Twins will have the dollars to retain/extend Lewis, Lee, Miranda, AK, Larnach and some of the young pitchers.  You see, I believe most of those guys are going to become very good/and/or/great ballplayers.

     

    AK and Larnach are corner players and oft injured ones at that. If they're lucky enough to get an extension, they'd likely only get a Kepler/Sano kind of deal.

    Lewis, Lee and Miranda are still years away from free agency. They certainly COULD extend them now, but if they did, the players would be taking a discount, if they wait to extend them (assuming any end up being worthy) the bulk of their extensions won't bump up against Correa's commitment. You'd likely only have a year or two where it gets tight.

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    8 minutes ago, James said:

    I think the Giants and the Mets were concerned how the leg would hold up at the end of the deal, not as much when he's in his prime. 

    The 6 years avoids that, and the vesting options give the team some security if his leg goes bad.  If something happens, he likely won't reach the vesting options.  

    I think the question answers itself. They didn’t think Correa was worth 6/200.

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    "Major part" of physical already done for Twins, I'm guessing they would have signed him up on the original 285MM offer before the drama. Boras talked his way out of 80MM for his client on this one. Is that the first huge L Boras has ever taken in his career? Must be others that didn't become public but this is pretty embarrassing for him I'd think. Correa fired his last agent and his new one cost him an incredible amount of money. 

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    wow, this so awesome, but unexpected. really like the 6 year contract and most important part oto me about keeping Carlos is his leadership/club house presence. Twins have alot of young potential gusy coming next few years and guy like CC to mentor them to play/do/act the right way is needed. Plus he's one of the games best players obviously

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