I would think the inverse is true, I.e., that players closer to becoming UFAs (especially star player me like Correa) are less likely to sign extensions than players who are still in the early years of arbitration battles (see Bregman). I doubt Correa’s agent will seriously consider any extension, at this point, unless it’s a ludicrous amount. Correa is not signing a hometown discount extension here. He is primed to hit the market at a great time. I’m sure he and his agent want Machado money. He’s going to bet on himself to prove he can be healthy and produce during the bulk of a full regular season to help secure the bag. I would be shocked if he signed an extension here with just one year to go. Alvarez and Tucker extensions would be interesting. DHing really hampers Yordan’s arbitration value, so I could see us hitting a sweet spot with him. Tucker is a good young player, and maybe we buy out his arbitration years and first or second otherwise UFA years, but I don’t see that happening with so many other vets on the team. His payday will come, but for now we may prefer the arb process on him.
Correa might accept 90% of what he perceives as his open market value to secure a deal now and stay in Houston. But paying 90% value to a guy who thinks he’s worth $250M is nowhere near as valuable to the Org as paying Alvarez, Valdez, or Tucker 40% of their value to extend control 2 years (just as they did with Bregman). Both Tucker and Alvarez received huge bonuses when they signed as amateurs, so they’re not poor kids who need to secure a payday. But they are pretty much in the exact same situation Bregman was in when he signed his deal, except Alvarez now has an injury history and both guys are limited defensively. Valdez has made almost no money so he may be even more motivated to sign a team friendly extension. Who knows what’ll happen, but just based on Click’s background I think it’s much more likely we see young guys sign extensions rather than Correa.
Man, teams seem to be declining team options on players left and right. Seems to indicate teams will be fairly desperate to shed payroll.
Generally, extensions are signed a season before arbitration to a season before free agency. During that span, I do think the earlier the better, but not many extensions are signed before a year before arbitration. Arbitration tends to be the driver that gets the player and team willing to negotiate.
So are you saying Framber will suck next year? Or do you generally agree that Framber looks like a pretty good pitcher?
Can you imagine the media’s reaction if the Astros won the World Series, and one of our players, who was pulled mid game for a positive COVID test, disregarded league orders and continued to celebrate maskless with the team and family members? that’s worse than sign stealing by a LONGSHOT.
At this point I will be really really surprised if he is offered a QO. Would not shock me if he signed with Houston though. But it would have to be a paycut from what he made this season and he’d have to sign it before free agency began.
It is going to be historically bad for a number of reasons. The Cardinals are especially going to be hit hard. This off season may be a lot better for not signing a higher profile guy but spreading that money across multiple guys. There are going to be some relievers and good starter quality bats that will slip through the cracks.
So basically, you are calling projections that suggest Framber will likely be a pretty good pitcher crap, but when pressed for what you think, you deflect. Anyone that watched Framber should agree that he will likely be a very good pitcher and that there is enough data that statistical projections should concur.
Oddly enough, I'd want him on the team. He has meltdowns, but certainly can pitch. It would kind of be like having Beverly on the team, but not quite Derek Fisher level.
Baltimore seems like a good potential trade match for Houston. I could see Houston adding Cobb, Severino, and an OF (Santander and/or Mancini). And Baltimore’s GM is familiar with Houstons pitching depth so he’d probably be willing to make that swap. Astros get: SP Alex Cobb C Pedro Severino OF Anthony Santander $3M Orioles get: RHP Luis Garcia RHP Jairo Solis RHP Rogelio Armenteros Houston would then only be looking for a closer and a CF.
Why is Houston looking for a closer? We have a top 5-7 closer in Osuna who’s been progressing and throwing for a month now. No way do the Astros lose Springer AND Brantley. We also don’t need a catcher.
You think they will tender him not knowing what his status is? He's throwing from flat ground. Verlander was doing that as well. Also, Maldonado can't catch 162 games.