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The Yankees’ (Brief) History Of Contract Extensions

By Mark Polishuk | March 29, 2020 at 11:38pm CDT

Twenty-eight different contract extensions were signed between teams and players between February-April 2019, and the Yankees were one of the many clubs that joined in on this rush.  Aaron Hicks was a season away from free agency at the time, though the outfielder chose to forego the open market in favor of a contract that paid him $64MM in new money through the 2025 season.  Right-hander Luis Severino inked a four-year, $40MM deal that covered his four arbitration-eligible years as a Super Two player, and the deal also contains a $15MM club option for the 2023 season, which would have been Severino’s first free agent year.

Another extension came after the season, as the Yankees worked out an agreement with Aroldis Chapman that would see the closer decline his opt-out clause in favor of a three-year, $48MM extension that essentially added an extra year (and another $18MM) onto the final two seasons of Chapman’s previous contract.

Three extensions in less than a year is a pretty notable amount of business for any team on the long-term front.  In the Yankees’ case, however, it counts as an absolute flurry given how rarely the Bronx Bombers have engaged in such internal long-term deals.  New York’s three extensions in 2019 came on the heels of only six extensions in the previous 18 years.

The reason for this lack of extension action is simple — it was against team policy.  “I just don’t believe in contract extensions, and that’s throughout the organization, no matter who it is,” managing partner Hal Steinbrenner told the Associated Press and other reporters in 2010.  “Hopefully nobody takes that personally. It’s just business.”

Between the time Steinbrenner officially became the Yankees’ control person in November 2008 and the start of 2019, his anti-extension stance stayed almost completely intact, with two exceptions that somewhat mirrored the Chapman and Hicks situations.  C.C. Sabathia also had a contractual opt-out decision following the 2011 season, though he and the Yankees worked out a new deal that gave the southpaw five years and a guaranteed $122MM to overwrite the previous four years and $92MM remaining on his previous contract.  Prior to the 2014 season, Brett Gardner (like Hicks) was also just a year away from free agency before New York locked him up for a four-year, $52MM extension.

Beyond the Sabathia and Gardner contracts, however, that was it on the extension front.  As Steinbrenner noted, the “no matter who it is” edict even stretched to the likes of Mariano Rivera or Derek Jeter, who both reached the open market before eventually (and, in Jeter’s case, not without some contentious words) re-signing with New York.  Even general manager Brian Cashman’s last three contracts have only been signed after the GM’s previous deals had expired.

Why would the team take such a hard line?  In short, the Yankees always wanted as much flexibility as possible in deciding their future moves, since they had the financial resources to immediately pivot to a better option in free agency or the trade market if such an upgrade was available.  Whereas other teams pursued extensions as a way of locking up young talent into their free agent years or at least getting some cost certainty through arbitration years, such concerns simply weren’t on the Yankees’ radar given their free-spending ways.

Of course, the franchise has become somewhat more cost-conscious in recent years, which likely explains the Bombers’ openness towards extensions in 2019.  After 15 years of overages, the Yankees finally ducked under the Competitive Balance Tax threshold during the 2018 season, allowing them to reset their penalty clock for 2019 (when they surpassed the threshold again).  Though New York didn’t go to the extremes of other big-market clubs like the Cubs or Red Sox in limiting or eliminating their luxury tax payments, the Yankees saw value in getting under the tax line once, plus they had the additional bonus of being able to cut their tax bill while still remaining competitive since so many of the club’s young stars seemingly broke out at the same time.

With the CBT penalty reset, the Yankees had the freedom to explore a tactic like signing Severino through his arbitration years.  The deal was seen at the time as very canny, given that Severino seemed to be a burgeoning ace, and thus in line for an escalating arb price tag.  In Hicks’ case, he may have had extra motivation to sign an extension given how the restrained 2017-18 and 2018-19 free agent markets left a lot of players settling for below-market deals or having long waits on the open market.  Hicks could have preferred the security of just remaining in New York, and his price was apparently satisfactory enough for the Yankees to make the long-term commitment to a player they obviously wanted to retain.

The early returns on both deals, however, haven’t been good.  Injuries limited Hicks to only 59 games in 2019 and he underwent Tommy John surgery last October, putting him out of action until at least June (though he might not miss any game time at all, given the delayed start to the season).  The news was even worse for Severino, who tossed just 12 innings last season due to injuries and then underwent a Tommy John procedure of his own in late February.  The righty now won’t be back on the mound until early in the 2021 campaign.

It isn’t yet clear if the disastrous starts to both of these extensions may have once again made the team wary of such longer-term deals, or if Steinbrenner and the Yankees front office still consider the process to be sound — after all, there’s still plenty of time for Hicks and Severino to make good on their deals.  Since big-picture concerns likely inspired the club’s decision-making towards those extensions in the first place, it’s safe to assume that inevitable changes to the sport’s financial structure will also impact the Yankees’ future approach more so than a pair of Tommy John surgeries.

Both baseball and the world at large are gripped with the uncertainty of the coronavirus pandemic, plus there’s also the fact that the current Collective Bargaining Agreement between MLB and the players’ union is up in December 2021.  With these factors in mind, it isn’t a stretch to say that the way baseball does business could be vastly different two years from now, which could leave the Yankees and several other teams hesitant about committing any more long-term money until things can be figured out.

Working out an extension for, say, Aaron Judge seems to pale in comparison to such matters.  But, when trying to guess whether or not New York will (once the roster freeze is lifted) seek out multi-year deals for the likes of Judge, Gleyber Torres, Gary Sanchez, DJ LeMahieu, Miguel Andujar, or any number of other players, it’s worth noting that the Yankees generally don’t extend players very often, and it wouldn’t be a shock if they return to their old wait-and-see approach.

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New York Yankees Aaron Hicks Aroldis Chapman Hal Steinbrenner Luis Severino

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Post a Comment

44 Comments

  1. pasha2k

    5 years ago

    This season should spell out what swill happen. I really care, as a RS fan about the others, but I hope Judge gets a well deserved Ext.

    Reply
    • Badfinger

      5 years ago

      Why extend a player who has not proven he can stay on the field? I like Judge but I’d let him walk when he becomes a FA. Gleyber is the only one of this group I would try to extend.

      2
      Reply
      • jonnyzuck

        5 years ago

        Well both sides know he’s had injury problems so presumably that will be factored into the contract. It might even make Judge more likely to sign so he can lock in enough money to be set for life when his age and injuries might make him more risky than most players of his caliber

        Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      5 years ago

      As a NYY fan, I don’t see how it makes sense for Judge to want to sign an extension. He will be better off proving that he can keep putting up big numbers while staying healthy to gain more leverage. He has three (well maybe two) seasons to do that. Judge also makes a good deal off of endorsements currently.

      Reply
      • The Human Rain Delay

        5 years ago

        In theory your correct but that ” while staying healthy” has some pretty significant weight- Also you would have to imagine those endorsements are higher in NY which probably helps him stay in the end and the fact he’s so loved out there-

        Big fan of Judge but Id personally wait a bit longer if I was NY to extend knowing he probably wants to stay if all things being equal or even a little less (unlike the Mookie sitch)

        Reply
      • Gasu1

        5 years ago

        “A bird in hand is worth two in the bush.”

        Reply
  2. AssumeFactsNotInEvidence

    5 years ago

    Is Hal not believing in facial hair or not believing in extensions more dumb?

    Good thing his daddy was a rich old boy!

    1
    Reply
    • julyn82001

      5 years ago

      Bless the Steinbrenners for having no facial hair policy. What in the world gives some of these athletes? This is a sport not a downtown street full of hillbillies… Kids are watching, good parenting or otherwise…

      1
      Reply
    • brucenewton

      5 years ago

      What you look like matters to the yankees. While the rest of the world preaches that what’s on the inside counts. They have some 1930’s Germany mentality going on.

      Reply
  3. jorge78

    5 years ago

    Does this really matter anymore? Grocery and convenience store clerks, municipal employees, food delivery people, postal workers, trash collectors, first responders, medical personal all putting their lives on the line so idiot millennials can go to the beach and spread disease and we can wonder what millionaire athletes are going to do!!?? This pandemic, hopefully, leads to a reordering of global society on the principles JESUS expounded:
    Love others as you love yourself. Help the poor and helpless. Don’t judge. Pay your taxes. And pray the Mets get new ownership…..

    Reply
    • AngelDiceClay

      5 years ago

      I was with you until you involved the Mets

      5
      Reply
    • Afk711

      5 years ago

      You’re just as mad at people coming here as you are the beach LOL. Sorry were not all scared of our minds. This isn’t the plauge dude. Thank you MLBTR for still posting content! Can’t wait for Sports to come back in June.

      1
      Reply
      • michael serra

        5 years ago

        Ever notice how sucky some millennials spell? Too much time on the beach instead of English class?

        Reply
        • youngTank15

          5 years ago

          So there’s only two generations?

          1
          Reply
        • Afk711

          5 years ago

          This isn’t english class grammar cop.

          Reply
        • Gasu1

          5 years ago

          It’s because the education vogue when they first learned writing was to ignore spelling completely until they felt comfortable writing. The term was “creative spelling”. Then, as they got older, they had spellcheck. So throughout their education they got multiple reinforcement that spelling doesn’t matter.

          Reply
      • taxman

        5 years ago

        June 2021.

        Reply
    • jimmertee

      5 years ago

      Love this jorge…

      Reply
    • Just_a_thought

      5 years ago

      Oh Jorge, falling into the trap of blaming the wrong generation based on nothing but fear and the sheer lack of ability to perform a simple google search. I’m afraid your mind has confused your index finger’s ability to control the power button, volume, and guide with the ability to think.

      Reply
      • YankeesBleacherCreature

        5 years ago

        Dude! How many accounts do you have here???

        Reply
        • Just_a_thought

          5 years ago

          Uno.

          Reply
    • tyler saladino

      5 years ago

      Not defending anyone rebelling against social distancing, but I don’t believe the absurdly long lines of boomers at my local home improvement store waiting to purchase “essential” gardening supplies and paint to cure their boredom is much better…

      Reply
      • JP8

        5 years ago

        haha this is 100% true. Lowes and Home depot have been slammed for 3 weeks straight. Everyone loves opinions untill someone else’s opinion is different.

        Reply
    • its_happening

      5 years ago

      Jorge, people need an escape. Baseball is supposed to be that, and we don’t have it. The guys writing on this site have to find ways to help US get through this by pounding out material.

      To the writers: keep up the good work and thank you for helping us through this ordeal.

      1
      Reply
      • The Human Rain Delay

        5 years ago

        Well said Guests

        Reply
    • Badfinger

      5 years ago

      Jorge, it’s a nice thought but we’re talking about humans here. Humans are really good at two things; reproducing and killing each other. I don’t have high hopes for our species. As George Carlin said, it’s circle the drain time for humans.

      2
      Reply
    • mfm420

      5 years ago

      and yet, the disease is spreading fast and hard among the churches that refused to shut down services, despite overwhelming evidence that they’re spreading it.

      funny how you failed to mention that while whining about millennials.

      of course, if you did what your jesus said, you wouldn’t actually wash your hands (he hated that).

      1
      Reply
      • JP8

        5 years ago

        Thou shalt not wash thy hands… I remember the 11th commandment now.

        Reply
      • youngTank15

        5 years ago

        That’s false

        Reply
    • DarkSide830

      5 years ago

      um…what and why?

      Reply
    • dynamite drop in monty

      5 years ago

      Millennials are almost 40, bud

      2
      Reply
      • The Human Rain Delay

        5 years ago

        Yup 39.5 years old right now is the cut off

        Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      5 years ago

      In the grand scheme of things, no it doesn’t. However, the folks who run MLBTR still have a job to do and that is to keep readership up while still being able to collect ad dollars. They also have families to feed. I think most of us here are already appreciative of all the frontline essential workers making huge sacrifices and taking risks for everyone else. Baseball will be back at some point and I want MLBTR to still exist when that happens.

      Reply
    • Gasu1

      5 years ago

      I’m laughing, because you don’t know what a millennial is. Most millennials are in their 30s and have been paying taxes for years. Almost all those food delivery people who you laud are millennials; as well as plenty of first responders, clerks, and municipal workers.

      Reply
    • Show all 24 replies
  4. YankeesBleacherCreature

    5 years ago

    “The measure of intelligence is the ability to change.” ― Albert Einstein

    Reply
  5. 8

    5 years ago

    They are good even if they are injured half the time cuz the Yankees use that time to create value in another player.

    Reply
  6. DarkSide830

    5 years ago

    ah Hicks. yet another one-year wonder. bad extention.

    Reply
    • 8

      5 years ago

      One year wonder? How?

      Reply
  7. Astros44

    5 years ago

    yankees used electronics to steal signs in 2017

    1
    Reply
    • Doug Dueck

      5 years ago

      says the experienced sign stealer

      1
      Reply
    • pinstripes17

      5 years ago

      prove it moron

      1
      Reply
    • brucenewton

      5 years ago

      Probably. They hired Beltran to be their video room guy for 2018 and 2019. Mmm really? Manfred stated he refuses to investigate his lifelong fav team. Yanks are free to do whatever, he’ll turn the blind eye.

      Reply
      • MoRivera 1999

        5 years ago

        All unsubstantiated hogwash.

        Reply
  8. brucenewton

    5 years ago

    Cashman is pretty much awful.

    Reply

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