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January 30, 2009

In the Fold?

UPDATE:  Heyman/Boras is now saying the a two-year deal has been agreed to.  Good.  Now let's trade for Varitek's eventual replacement and get to playing some baseball.

The Globe's Tony Massarotti has it as a 1-year deal for $5mm and team option for a 1-year, $5mm or a player option for 1-year, $3mm.  Plus incentives for games played starting at 80 games for the 2nd year.  The incentives total $2mm.

Michael Silverman of the Boston Herald just confirmed the parameters of the deal (same as Massarotti's).

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Scott Boras, er...I mean, Jon Heyman is reporting on SI.com that the Red Sox and Jason Varitek are on the verge of a 2-year deal.  To quote "Jason Varitek is on the verge of agreeing to a two-year deal with Boston."

I can see him now.

Theo: "Jason, so what do you think?"

Varitek: "I'm thinking about it.  I'm on the verge, but not quite there yet."

Theo: "Well are you like, say, 90% there or are we going to be here for a while?"

Varitek: "No, 'on the verge' means like 99%, I just like to make a grand entrance with these sorts of things and want to time it perfectly..."

Anyway, Heyman and Boras have never been seen in the same room, right?

Will This Never End?

WEEI is reporting that a Red Sox source indicated today that there was no 8:30am deadline today for Jason Varitek to make up his mind.  In addition, Tony Massarotti said 8:30am here is 5:30am for Scott Boras on the Left Coast and that perhaps the Red Sox were willing to take that into account.

But if WEEI did indeed speak to a Red Sox source, then that is as close as you can get (unless you are assuming the Red Sox are trying to trick Varitek by floating misleading rumors).  And, if so, we are possibly in for a longer wait than expected.  This really is getting old...

Is Carlton Fisk in game shape?

January 29, 2009

Word on the Street

I feel obligated to bring up what has become one of the most tedious negotiations in Red Sox history.  In one corner you have an aging Jason Varitek, he of the poor decision making agent.  In the other corner you have the Red Sox, a team not overly enthusiastic about entering Spring Training with Josh Bard and either George Kottaras or Dusty "No I'm Not a Stripper" Brown.  Tony Massarotti of Boston.com says Varitek has until 8:30am Friday to make up his mind.

Look, the Red Sox need Jason Varitek and he needs them.

If it is pride getting in Varitek's way, please, times are tough right now, and I'm only talking about in the world of baseball.  On the other hand, if the Red Sox are trying to make some point to Varitek or his agent Scott Boras, then they hurting the team and that's no good.

Just get a deal done.  I had suggested 2 years for $15mm a few weeks back and while that seems much higher than the reported offer the Red Sox have made (his choice of a 1-year at $5mm or 1-year at $5mm with a 2nd year team option at $5mm or a player option at $3mm), it would seem to be a deal that both sides could accept.  Even a 2-year, $12mm deal would mean that the Red Sox have a veteran receiver coming into camp along side Josh Bard.

WEEI reported today that Varitek was considering either sitting out the 2009 season or retiring all together.  The "sitting out the 2009 season" idea is crazy as he only needs to sit out until June and then any team can sign him without giving up a 1st round pick.  The retirement scenario is possibly more likely, but after getting divorced this past off-season, I have to assume his pockets are a bit lighter than they were this time a year ago and a few million more in income might help.  Please, he likes playing baseball, right?

At the end of the day, I really don't care the thoughts rattling around Varitek's head.  Just sign the deal and go play baseball for one more year (or two).  Baseball spending is down about 50% this off-season and as such, he shouldn't be too concerned with signing a deal that represents an annual pay cut of 50%.  Especially with the lousy numbers he posted in 2008.

Just agree and go have fun Varitek.  Otherwise, at 8:30am Friday morning, you might be looking for a new line of work.

January 26, 2009

Countdown

The countdown starts.  Sure I could be talking about pitchers and catchers reporting, but I'm really talking about Jason Varitek.

Reports are out that the Red Sox have offered Varitek a 1-year deal with a guarantee base and incentives and a 2nd year option.  Varitek has been given a deadline to accept the offer.

Per WEEI, the offer is a 1-year, $5mm deal with a team option for a 2nd year at $5mm or a player option at $3mm.  The incentive portion of the deal is not known at this time (nor is any of the above necessarily, just reporting on published reporting...).

WEEI also pulled quotes from ESPN's Buster Olney who wrote over the weekend that Varitek is asking for $10-$12mm annually over 2 years.

Wow.  If Varitek thinks he is going to get anything close to that, he's nuts.  I cannot imagine that is really what he is looking for and must have come to the conclusion that if he wants to play for the Red Sox, or any other MLB team, he is going to get a big hair cut in 2009.

Jorge Posada signed one of the most absurd deals prior to the 2008 season.  There is no way to argue that it was a good deal, especially since year one is in the books and Posada could only provide 168 at bats.  Varitek must have seen that deal and thought he was worth something close to that.

But times have changed.  Mix in the fact that Varitek had a bad year with the bat in 2008, the economy is in the pits and teams are spending accordingly (most anyway) and the biggest fact that most teams have always known is that catchers don't age well.  Carlton Fisk was a freak of nature, but he is not the norm by any means.  These factors essentially mean Varitek can take whatever the Red Sox offer,  walk away and sign with someone else, or...retire.

I hope he signs.  I think he is a good person to have teach the other catchers in the organization.  But if the Red Sox do manage to re-sign him, I hope they also trade for a better future option at catcher than they presently have in their system.  What good is Varitek working with Josh Bard?  None.  Varitek needs to work with his eventual replacement.

January 21, 2009

More Arbitration Gripes

Peter relayed his concerns about the Yankees signing of Melky Cabrera and I agree.  Voicing a similar concern, Jonathan Papelbon yesterday agreed to a $6.25mm deal a year after making $775k.  That's an 800% raise.

Before you go and tell me how important Papelbon is, save it.  He is important, but he also is part of the MLBPA and his union agreed to a system that rewards more senior players.

Back to the 800%.  Is that his fault, no.  The Red Sox were in line to perhaps go to $3mm at most (similar to Kevin Youkilis last year), but $6.25mm?!?  How can they justify that?  My only guess is that that Red Sox told Papelbon after last year that they'd take care of him (during the time they had control over his deal, there was friction), but to go this far is crazy.  I have to assume that a long-term deal is in the works and that the details just have to be hammered out.

Otherwise, what, do they offer him $48mm in 2010?  An 800% raise?  Please.

There has to be more to this than meets the eye.

Lastly, with the departure of George W Bush, the Boston sports scene watches a presidential tenure that gave us 6 Championships conclude.  That's a ton of trophies.  This is not any kind of partisan commentary, trust me, but it is interesting that that the 2 prior presidents (covering 12 years) generated no championships, and that included both a democrat and a republican.  Wonder that an Independent would do?  Green party?  Anyone?

Oh yeah, Javier Lopez signed for $1.35mm, a year after signing for $840k (and with the same service time as Papelbon).  Papelbon is better, but the compensation still doesn't make sense.

January 16, 2009

John Henry: "O Captain My Captain"

The Boston Globe is reporting that Red Sox Principal Owner John Henry is schedule to meet with Jason Varitek tonight in the Atlanta area.  Varitek apparently requested the meeting and Scott Boras will not be there.

My guess is that this is an attempt for both sides to get a read on things.  Because of what Varitek has meant to the Red Sox, I wouldn't be surprised that if they do have enough common ground, this will lead to a deal, a deal that will not make look Varitek look foolish while at the same time giving the Red Sox some value.

I don't think the Red Sox are an overly sympathetic group, but in this case I think they are willing to help Varitek save face.  Perhaps a 2-year deal at $7.5mm per year.  Just my opinion.

Let's just hope the Red Sox captain hasn't met the same fate as Whitman's captain.

January 15, 2009

Lock 'em Up

ESPN's Peter Gammons is reporting that the Red Sox and Kevin Youkilis have agreed to a 4-year, $40mm extension with a team option for a 5th year.  The Boston Globe is suggesting that while terms have been outlined, an agreement has NOT been reached.

If this is true (that a deal is done or is all but done), the Red Sox will have signed Youkilis through his 33rd birthday or 34th birthday if they exercise the option.  Interesting, I knew Youkilis was that old but not really.  Seems like he should be 26 or 27.

Anyway, another great move in my mind as it buys him out of 2 and maybe 3 years of free agency.  I think any Red Sox fan has to agree that IF Youkilis maintains his recent production, this is a team friendly deal.

He made $3mm in 2008 and would have made at a minimum $6mm in 2009 and in 2010, what, $12mm?  Again that assumes he does as well or close to what he did in 2008.  For Youkilis, this provides him with a bunch of money should his career go into the crapper.

Reports also surfaced over this past weekend that the Red Sox were looking into talking with Jason Bay about extending his contract as well.  He is schedule to be a free agent after the 2009 season.

January 13, 2009

Congratulations Jim Ed

As an unabashed Jim Rice fan, I can say with complete and total bias, he is a fantastic pick to be in baseball's Hall of Fame.

As a kid, for whatever reason I zeroed in on Rice and followed his every move.  My baseball card collection contains my cards and then a special notebook filled with nothing but Jim Rice cards.  Which reminds me, that collection probably just bumped up in value a bit.

Jim Rice Topps Rookie Card

I remember being crushed when I started hearing stories about Rice not being the nicest person in the world.  The media was really tough on him and that in turn bothered me.  But it never turned me against him.

It was sad to see his career quickly tail off after a superb 1986 season.  But even in 1986 I recall seeing warning signs.  His power had diminished and he went to the opposite field much more often.  Normally an admirable skill, but his opposite field hits seemed almost by accident.  I don't know if there is a way to check my memories as I was only 14 at the time, but he seemed late on his swings and lacked the brute strength he'd had prior.

Again, it pained me to read articles that perhaps he was a conditioning freak and his rapid decline was the result of refusing to wear glasses.  There was always something negative surrounding Rice.

As many have argued, had he stuck around another 2-3 years and put up bad numbers he just might have reached 400 home runs and 1500 RBI, but instead he hung 'em up.  Many years have passed since Rice played baseball, but it seems like just yesterday to me.

My good memories of Rice were many, but the ones that stuck with me were the day game in which a Dave Stapleton liner hit a young boy sitting in the short left field stands.  Rice saw the injury, hopped into the stands and carried the blood covered boy into the dugout for faster treatment.  If I recall correctly, Rice played the rest of the game with a blood stain on his uniform.  Here's what Peter Gammons had to say about it while still writing for the Boston Globe:

RED SOX NOTEBOOK\ FENWAY ROUGH AGAIN

PETER GAMMONS

August 9, 1982

Covering this place has become like "Guadalcanal Diary." Saturday there was the sickening beaning of a 4-year-old New Hampshire boy and a subsequent injury to another fan on another foul ball. Yesterday one fan in the left- field grandstands was hurt by a foul ball, Carlton Fisk was struck twice by Dwight Evans' bat and, in succession in the ninth inning, Ron LeFlore flipped his bat and caught Gary Allenson square on the right (throwing) elbow and Tony Bernazard flipped his and caught home plate umpire Mike Reilly flush on the back of the head.

"Fans love Fenway," said Dave Stapleton, "but one of the reasons is that they're so close - but it makes it awfully dangerous." Stapleton was advised by doctors at Children's Hospital not to see Jonathan Keane, the boy struck by Stape's liner Saturday, until after yesterday's game, which he did. Chicago manager Tony LaRussa and Allenson visited the boy early yesterday morning. If only every cynic in America could have 1) observed Jim Rice's reaction to crisis and 2) seen how concerned players from both teams were. Keane, incidentally, was reported in good condition yesterday.

End

The other memory I am fond of was a 1986 game in Yankee Stadium.  It was my first game there and in the 8th or 9th inning there was a foul into the short left field stands.  Rice had reached the area in an attempt to make a play.  While at the wall, a fan reached out and grabbed Rice's cap.  He didn't like that and leapt the wall and went after the fan to get his cap back.  Good times, except for the fact that the family that had hosted my family at the game (and drove us) decided to get an early exit and we were on the drive home when the event went down.  I was grumpy not to have witnessed it.

Here is Leigh Montville's take on that episode.  I had most of the facts correct, but didn't realize Rice made the catch and that the whole team swarmed the scene:

 

HATS OFF TO RICE

Leigh Montville

Globe Staff September 14, 1986

NEW YORK -- Don't try to rollerskate in a buffalo herd. Don't mess with Superman's cape. Don't -- absolutely don't -- take Jim Rice's baseball cap.

Jim, you see, has some friends. "The old story about the Boston Red Sox always has been that they needed 24 cabs for 24 players," Red Sox designated hitter Don Baylor said yesterday afternoon after the American League leaders lost, 11-6, to the Yankees during one of the strangest days in the long and storied history of this series between rival teams. "Well, you saw everyone moving in one direction today. That was a team."

Have you ever? Did you ever? The direction this team was traveling on this day was into the left-field stands to rescue their captain, who had gone there first to rescue his baseball cap. Have you ever? Did you ever?

Part ice hockey, part junior high school rumble, part swimming against a strong tide in an angry sea, this was a picture that will be remembered for a long time. Half the Red Sox team was in the middle of the stands filled with people who hate them worse than anyone or anything on this earth.

"You think about it now and you say, 'I shouldn't go in the stands,' " centerfielder Tony Armas said. "A lot of trouble could happen to you there. People could have guns, knives.

"You think about it at the moment it happens, though, and you just think that you have to get in there to help Jimmy."

First things first. The trouble began at the start of the Yankee half of the eighth inning with one of those high and lazy fly balls that causes infielders and outfielders to collide. The ball was foul, close to the left- field stands and Rice ran a long way for it and shortstop Spike Owen ran a long way and they arrived at the ball at the same time.

"You couldn't hear anything because we were so close to the stands," Spike Owen said. "I thought it was my ball. I didn't have an idea where Jimmy was until we hit."

The collision -- in the words of Red Sox trainer Charlie Moss -- was "like a Cadillac hitting a Volkswagen. The Cadillac caught the ball and somehow held on to it. The Volkswagen careened off to one side and hit his head on the padded fence.

Spike Owen never lost consciousness, but he felt a pain in his chest.

"Something happened to my ribs," he said later, a giant bandage wrapped around those ribs. "I guess it's not serious, but it still hurts when I breathe."

Both Owen and Rice stayed on the ground for a while, and in the confusion a 27-year-old genius from Brooklyn named Thomas J. Nihill reached over the railing and stole Rice's cap. The television replay clearly showed him making the grab, picking up the hat as the two ballplayers still rolled in pain.

"It's like going to a funeral home and taking the good teeth from a corpse," a man in the press box exclaimed. "Isn't that something?"

Owen was helped off the field. Rice wiped dirt from his uniform and prepared to go back to his post in left. The game was ready to resume.

Then Rice realized he didn't have his hat.

"The fans started pointing at the guy who had the hat," Tony Armas said. "The guy was trying to get away. He stuffed the cap in the front of his pants. Then he said something. I think he said a bad word."

"I guess he said some racial epithet," manager McNamara said. "Jimmy even was offering the guy another cap. That's when the guy apparently said what he said."

Rice, who refused to comment on his reasons, vaulted the railing and began to chase Thomas J. Nihill, the 27-year-old genius from Brooklyn. The rest of the players saw Rice disappear and they followed.

"You just go," Tony Armas said. "I didn't want Jimmy hitting the guy and getting in some kind of lawsuit."

"When one of my players goes into the stands, I know there'll be at least one guy going with him," McNamara said. "I think I was the first one out of the dugout. I wasn't first into the stands, though. There are some younger legs than mine around here."

"I was on the mound, warming up," pitcher Joe Sambito said. "I was in my motion when I looked at the plate and saw that Rich Gedman, the catcher, wasn't there. I wondered where he went. Then I saw what was happening. Everyone went."

Rice wound up wrestling the hat free from the 27-year-old genius. McNamara wound up behind pitcher Oil Can Boyd, who suddenly was having trouble with someone stealing HIS hat. McNamara went to help Boyd and then Don Baylor came along to help McNamara.

"My bodyguard," McNamara said. "He ended it right there. He pulled away the hat and the guy just sort of sat in a seat and Baylor said, 'Stay there.' "

LaSchelle Tarver, the rookie outfielder, won immediate points for good planning. He carried his bat with him into the stands. ("I don't know," he said, "it just followed me out there.") Marc Sullivan went in wearing a batting helmet. Roger Clemens, in what must be his arguing style, turned his hat backward, and vaulted the railing in a rush.

"What did you expect to find in there?" the pitcher was asked.

"I didn't know," he said, "but if anybody came at me, there was going to be trouble. We were going to get Jimmy. No prisoners in that kind of situation."

The meeting between fans and players mostly was a jumble. There were no real fights. Security people came along to arrest the 27-year-old genius and another fan. All the hats were saved. All the players were alive and well when they finally returned to the field.

"You think, though, about what could happen," McNamara said. "You go out there and you look at who's around you. Rice. Baylor. Clemens. Can. The potential of things that can happen is really dangerous. Not just for the players, either. There's little kids out there. Women. I'll tell you, it's scary."

Before the game resumed, a third fan was arrested when he dropped his cigarettes over the railing and came onto the field to retrieve them. A second cap also came flying onto the field, thrown by a fan. A rubber chicken also was thrown onto the field.

A rubber chicken?

"I just told the umpire to have someone remove the chicken," Sambito said. "I said I'm not going to pitch with a rubber chicken on the field."

The chicken was removed. Jim had his cap. The genius from Brooklyn had his citation for disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing. Play ball.

Baseball began again.

End

Always entertaining.  Good work James Edward Rice.

January 10, 2009

Takashi Saito

Fox Sports Ken Rosenthal is reporting that the Red Sox have come to terms with former Dodger closer Takashi Saito.  According to Rosenthal the deal is for a base between $1.5mm and $2.5mm (I assume we will eventually learn which) and incentives that that will give him a chance to earn a total of $7mm.  In addition, the Red Sox have a 2010 team option.

I have to assume that the only way Saito gets a sniff at $7mm is if he steps into the closer role should something happen to Jonathan Papelbon.

Finances aside, I love this signing.  Saito is far from a guarantee given his health issues at the end of last year but he has been a very good reliever since coming to the States.  His career ERA+ is 229 (1.95 ERA).  He has allowed 121 hits in 189.2 IP while striking out 245 (52 walks).  He has 81 career saves in his 3-year MLB career.

Saito turns 39 next month, so the combination of his age and health make this a potential dud of a deal and if so, the Red Sox are only on the hook for one year (like all of their deals this off-season), but if he comes back anywhere close to his performance of recent past, it is great.  My guess is that this deal signals the end of David Aardsma's stay in Boston.

As things stand, here's the make-up of the pitching staff:

Starters:  Lester, Matsuzaka, Beckett, Wakefield, Penny & Smoltz

Pen:  Papelbon, Saito, Okajima, Delcarmen, Masterson, Lopez & Ramirez

That's 13 players, but Smoltz will be on the DL to start the year making it 12.  Given the fact that Mark Kotsay can play 1b, I think the Red Sox will go with a 12 man staff.

Things can change of course, but I like this bullpen much more than last year's edition.  Aardsma (5.55 ERA) and Timlin (5.66 ERA) out and Saito (2.49 ERA) and Ramirez (2.64) are in.

My unofficial tally on recent deals:

$5.5mm Smoltz, $5mm Penny, $0.5mm Baldelli, $2mm Saito, $1.5mm Kotsay, $1.7mm Bard ($15.7mm).  With possible incentives: $4.5mm Smoltz, $6mm Penny, $7mm Baldelli, $5mm Saito, $0.8mm Bard ($23.3mm).

So they've spent money, and with the exception of Kotsay, each player has a big ? over his head.  That said more than half of the money on the table is "pay for play."  That I like.  What I don't like is the idea that if any of these guys excels in 2009, he likely won't be back in 2010 or if he is, it'll be for a big contract.  But if they do leave in 2010, it means they played well in 2009.

One observation, the pitching staff is 25% Japanese born.  I wonder if that is a first on an MLB team.

January 09, 2009

The Bench

Reports are out indicating Mark Kotsay has been signed to a $1.5mm deal to be the Red Sox primary back-up at 1b and to complement Rocco Baldelli as a back-up OF.

Good glove guy, not too much to offer with the bat.

In a matter of hours, the Red Sox have shown their cards and the team is really taking shape.  I'm not suggesting it is taking an ideal shape, but a shape nonetheless.

Still needed:  Catcher, utility infielder (Nick Green, might he be good enough to win that job?) and a very good HMO plan.