Right-hander Alex Cobb entered free agency among the best available players, a 30-year-old destined to land one of the offseason’s richest contracts. While a hefty payday should still come, Cobb – like the rest of this year’s premier free agents – continues to wait for a deal nearly three months after the market opened. Cobb acknowledged to Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times that his trip to free agency during this famously plodding winter hasn’t gone according to plan, noting that “somewhere between November and December you realize how slow things are going and you kind of start reading the writing on the wall that this is a little bit of a different offseason than years before.” Cobb added that there has been frustration along the way, though he realizes he’s in the same situation as so many other unsigned players. “You just kind of change your frame of mind to accepting the fact that this thing is going to go down to the wire and you get comfortable with that,” he told Topkin in a piece that features other interesting quotes.
- Reliever Koji Uehara also seems perturbed with this offseason’s free agent process. And at 42 years old (43 in March), he’s unsure if he’s going to receive a major league offer. If one doesn’t come, Uehara could call it quits. “I’ll retire if I’m only offered a minor league deal,” he said (via the Kyodo News). “There have been some talks, but no offers have been forthcoming. It seems like something’s on the horizon and then it isn’t. I can be patient for a little longer.” In the event Uehara does secure a big league pact for 2018, he’s “more than 90 percent certain” he’ll stick with his previously stated goal to retire after the season. That would give him 10 major league campaigns and 10 years as a pro in his native Japan. Despite his age, Uehara remained a major league-caliber reliever in 2017. As a member of the Cubs, the righty registered a 3.98 ERA with 10.47 K/9 and 2.51 BB/9 across 43 innings.
- As MLB and the MLBPA spar over the league’s forthcoming implementation of a pitch clock, Buster Olney of ESPN writes that the two sides’ relationship may be at its worst point since the 1994-95 labor stoppage. The current collective bargaining agreement (which expires in December 2021) is seemingly a key reason, as many agents have suggested to Olney that the MLBPA “lost enormous financial ground” when it agreed to the CBA a year ago. As mentioned earlier, there’s a lack of movement in free agency; some agents believe the market inactivity has helped lead to the union’s close-mindedness toward the league’s ideas to speed up pace of play, per Olney, who argues that would be senseless on the MLBPA’s part. While there are plenty of theories about what has caused the offseason to go the way it has, one agent opined to Olney that collusion on the part of teams isn’t an issue. “I don’t think for one instant that this is collusion,” stated the agent. “[The union] negotiated the terms of this CBA, and it’s up to us [the agents] to adjust and give the best possible advice to our clients based on the market.”
- Continuing with the slow winter theme, Travis Sawchik of The Athletic observes that teams’ growing skepticism toward paying for free agents’ decline years is among the primary reasons for the glacial pace (subscription required/highly recommended). Indeed, one executive told Sawchik that “it’s not if you will lose on free agency, it’s how much you will lose.” Sawchik goes on to posit that the longer the offseason stays this way, the more likely it is low- to mid-spending teams could land quality players at discounted costs. He points to the Pirates’ signing of David Freese in 2016 and the Indians’ addition of Edwin Encarnacion last winter as recent examples of that happening.
IloveMACfootball
I don’t understand why Cobb was ever considered a “premier free agent”.
wiggysf
This offseason sucked. That’s why.
User 4245925809
Agree, then he’s battle proven in the AL East which is more than Lance Lynn is another mid roation starter at best who some think is worth a ton of money and isn’t
bastros88
Let’s be honest, all the free agents available isn’t really worth the money
dimitriinla
Exactly.
aloliver16
Alex Cobb left 42 million dollars on the table when he declined an offer from the Chicago Cubs. The opportunity to play with a contender in front of real baseball fans for a former manager just wasn’t compelling enough, I guess. When the almighty dollar becomes the only reason to sign with a new club, I have no sympathy for the player involved.
jh8913
As opposed to fake baseball fans?
brucewayne
When it comes to these new Cub fans , I don’t think there’s any difference really !
jh8913
Ever considered that he just didn’t want to play there?
ducksnort69
Pre-Tommy John Cobb would be premier, but the new one doesn’t use (or can’t) his split change. He’s not worth 15-20 mil a year.
greg 14
You’re assuming that 3/60 for EE is a discount. It’s only a discount as compared to other stupid deals. But maybe it’s the new normal.
ChiSoxCity
All I know is, if the Yankees get Darvish along with Stanton, you can call it a wrap. No other team gets gifted championships like the New York Yankees. They’re the sole reason why most other teams can’t compete anymore.
jbaker3170
Your statement is based on nothing but assumptions. Name the last time NYY won a WS…we’ll all wait
tonypro7
2009. With a store bought team.
brucewayne
Store bought team? LoL! Do the players on your fav team play for free? I don’t think so! This stupid
brucewayne
and lazy commentary on buying championships is ludicrous ! All teams pay their players
getright11
“lazy commentary,” you say lol
whereslou
On paper NY looks really good the problem with paper is it tears, it burns, and it folds. Super teams have been made before but injuries or other things have derailed them. The Yankee fans can count another trophy on their shelf which I hope they do because it will be all the better when they don’t win it.
Jamespk
They’ll have to go through Houston first. Their rotation is the best in the AL IMO.
reflect
So why are the MLBPA mad at the league for the current CBA when they all agreed to it?
If anything they should be mad at Tony Clark.
jkim319
True … anyone could have seen the consequences of the ‘draft pick’ penalty compounding the luxury tax escalation ..
I always thought the union ‘over valued’ the negotiation for Qualifying offer Free Agents .. (it only affects 12-20 players/yr). They never ‘did the math’ on poor Luxury cap escalations
pjmcnu
It seems as though management has maneuvered the free agency situation so that teams have control over most, if not all, of a player’s peak years (and therefore are able to pay a fraction of the value of those years), and then (aided by new metrics & views) declare those players “to old” to be worth big money when they hit free agency. Not necessarily “collusion”, as it’s allegedly a common view based on data, rather than an agreement, but mighty financially convenient. Only guys that reached the majors super-early, 19/20/21, hit FA with a few “not old” years left. If those views are truly based on data, and not a tacitly universal view based more on financial advantage, then the control rules need to be changed. Otherwise, there will be a significant shift of revenue from players to owners, creating a large imbalance. Reduce control so FA hits more during what is now viewed as a player’s prime. Teams can still have savings at the very beginning & post-prime, but don’t squeeze the players’ marketable prime into virtual non-existence.
steelerbravenation
Cut the commercial times between innings and pitching changes and get the umps to call the strike zone and I feel the batters getting into the box is more of a problem I could see a limit on catcher mound visits though
rondon
Uehara is kidding himself if he’s posturing about a major league deal. He was worthless in the second half for the Cubs.
Pedro Cerrano's Voodoo
Best of luck to Koji whether in the Majors or in retirement. Loved that guy on the Sox. 2013 was a bunch of 8 inning games because of him.
Connorsoxfan
The 6 years of control that can become 7 if you wait a month or whatever it is screws over everyone who can drink a beer (legally) before they play their first MLB game when it comes to free agency. MLBPA has to fight to get this down to 4, split 2 pre arb and 2 arb. Or at least work on some sort of RFA system that’s better than the QO system even with the revised compensation, as long as it gets players to FA in less than 6 years. NFL has 4, NHL has 2-3, and the NBA has 2 with 2 options. MLB is way different in this aspect and it’s starting to cost the players.
andrewgauldin
I’m in support with your idea, but costing the players? MLB players are one of the highest paid athletes in the world. Connor McDavid, the best player in the NHL is making about 12 million I think. Zack Greinke is a top 50 player but not in the top 20, and yet he’s making over 34 million…. and this is costing the players? I think clubs should have less control over the players in terms of years, so I agree with you, but cmon man.
dbec72
Cobb should have told the Cubs 3yr 45mil, and I bet he’d have had a good deal with a great team.
Hiro
Twins or Royals sign Uehara on a one year deal. Why not?