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Eric Hosmer Retires

By Darragh McDonald | February 21, 2024 at 11:41pm CDT

First baseman Eric Hosmer hasn’t been on a major league roster in almost a year and has now decided to hang up his spikes. He tells John Perrotto of Forbes that he has now officially retired and is pivoting into the media sphere.

Hosmer, now 34, was one of many high-profile prospects in the Royals’ system, going back almost a couple of decades. The club leaned into a lengthy period of tanking in the early parts of this century, losing at least 87 games in nine straight seasons from 2004 to 2012. Over that time, they were able to pile up young talent in their farm system thanks to some strong draft picks. The deepest part of the rebuild was 2004 to 2007, with the club losing at least 93 games in each of those campaigns, but also getting a top-three pick in the draft for four straight years.

Those four picks were used on Alex Gordon, Luke Hochevar, Mike Moustakas and Hosmer. Those players combined with other youngsters like Lorenzo Cain, Salvador Pérez and Yordano Ventura to form a promising young core that the club was hoping to use to return to prominence.

Hosmer hit well on his way up the minor league ladder and was considered one of the top 10 prospects in the game going into 2011. He made a strong debut that year and showcased some tendencies that would go on to define his career, namely an ability to avoid strikeouts but also an inability to get under the ball. He didn’t walk much either, so the ball was often in play, with his numbers swaying from year to year depending on whether he was finding holes or not.

He only struck out in 14.6% of his plate appearances in his rookie season, well below that year’s league average of 18.6%. But 49.7% of his balls in play were pounded into the ground, noticeably above the 44.4% league average. Regardless, he still hit 19 home runs and slashed .293/.334/.465 for a wRC+ of 113.

In 2012, he suffered through a sophomore slump, hitting just .232/.304/.359 for a wRC+ of 80. Part of that was batted ball luck, as his BABIP dropped to .255 from .314 the year prior. But his grounder rate also ticked up to 53.6% and he only hit 14 homers. These sorts of oscillations continued into the next few years. In 2013, his batting average was up at .302 and he hit 17 homers, but then those numbers dipped to .270 and just nine long balls in 2014.

Despite the challenges for Hosmer in the latter year, the club’s planned return to contention finally clicked in a big way. The Royals went all the way to the World Series that year, though they ultimate were felled by the Giants in seven games. Hosmer was a big part of that run, as he hit .351/.439/.544 that postseason.

Just about everything went right the next year, despite Hosmer still putting 52% of batted balls into the dirt. He also hit 18 homers and slashed .297/.363/.459 for a wRC+ of 124. The Royals went back to the World Series and finished the job this time, taking down the Mets in five games to hoist their first trophy since 1985.

The club slipped near .500 in the next two seasons as the up-and-down performance continued for Hosmer. His bat dipped closer to league average in 2016, though he rebounded with arguably the best season of his career in 2017. His grounder rate was still very high at 55.6%, but he managed to park the ball over the fence 25 times and slashed .318/.385/.498 for a wRC+ of 135.

That was excellent timing for a career year, as that was his platform season for his first trip into free agency. Despite the inconsistent performance, the Padres took a chance on him, agreeing to an eight-year, $144MM deal. In addition to the offensive questions, his defensive metrics were never strong, in spite of his four Gold Glove awards while with the Royals. But the Padres had been undergoing their own period of insignificance, having just finished the seventh of what would eventually be nine straight losing seasons. The signing of Hosmer, the largest deal in franchise history at the time, was meant to signal an end of the rebuild and a return to relevance.

Unfortunately, the deal quickly went south, as Hosmer’s bat was around league average for most of his time in San Diego. From 2018 through 2021, he hit .264/.323/.415, translating to a wRC+ of 99. He was often the subject of trade rumors in that time, as the Friars looked to get out from under the deal. He was going to be sent to the Nationals as part of the deal that sent Juan Soto to San Diego, but Hosmer had a limited no-trade clause that allowed him to block the deal. That deal went through with Luke Voit taking Hosmer’s place, though Hoz was  flipped to the Red Sox instead, with that club not covered by his clause. The Padres ate the remainder of Hosmer’s contract, apart from the league minimum, and included a couple of prospects in order to get Jay Groome from Boston.

A stint on the injured list due to some back inflammation limited him to just 14 games with the Sox after the deal and they released him in the offseason to clear a path for prospect Triston Casas. The Cubs took a flier on Hosmer, which was essentially a free look since the Padres were still on the hook for his salary. But he hit poorly in 31 games as a Cub last year, producing a batting line of .234/.280/.330, and was released in May. He didn’t latch on elsewhere and has now decided to officially call it a career.

Though there were some ups and downs, Hosmer still has plenty of accolades on his ledger, including four Gold Gloves, a Silver Slugger Award, an All-Star appearance and a World Series ring. He also won the World Baseball Classic with Team USA in 2017. He racked up 1,753 hits in his MLB career, including 322 doubles, 20 triples and 198 home runs. He scored 812 runs and drove in 893. Baseball Reference lists his career earnings just under $175MM. We at MLBTR salute Hosmer on a fine career and wish him the best in his next steps.

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View Comments (277)
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277 Comments

  1. jdizzle ATL Braves

    1 year ago

    He opened the flood gates for the Padres to actually spend money and put a competitive team on the field.

    23
    Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      No he didn’t lmfao

      24
      Reply
      • jdizzle ATL Braves

        1 year ago

        then who the f did HAHAHA. After they signed him, they started spending and players wanted to go play in SD. What you smokin?

        12
        Reply
        • Jm207* 2

          1 year ago

          He might have opened up the gates for the padres to start giving out terrible contracts.

          41
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          @jdizzle ATL Braves Players wanted to go play in SD? Which players left money on the table from other teams to go play in San Diego and of those which ones do we have any proof at all that they did so specifically because of Eric Hosmer?

          4
          Reply
        • KingKen

          1 year ago

          I think that was more a comment about the statement of the Padres putting a competitive team on the field vs them opening the wallets. They’ve certainly spent, but haven’t really reaped a lot of benefits in terms of competing.

          8
          Reply
        • deweybelongsinthehall

          1 year ago

          He was the first to sign and it signaled to others the Padres were open for business. No other way to look at it. The Padres knew they were overpaying but IMO realized they then had to. It doesn’t explain the subsequent decisions but prior to him signing, everyone was looking to SD only as a winter home (if you could afford it). No one who had other options was looking to play there.

          6
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          @deweybelongsinthehall It signaled nothing of the kind. They didn’t “have” to do anything. Are you implying that if they hadn’t signed Hosmer then when they offered Manny Machado $300m, on paper right in front of him, his agent would have laughed Preller out of his office? Are you?

          “No one who had other options was looking to play there.”

          Still aren’t. At least not anyone who has comparable options money wise.

          6
          Reply
        • Deleted Userrr

          1 year ago

          “After they signed him, they started spending and players wanted to go play in SD.”

          Like Aaron Judge and Trea Turner did?

          6
          Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          This is Harambe’s favorite hill to die on. The very mention of anything akin to “Hosmer signaled a new era” is his very favorite thing to fight about. It was weird at first, but to a couple of us Padre fans, it has become the source of many, many bowls of popcorn. The really funny thing is it’s all semantics; I see exactly what everybody means… (even our favorite gorilla!)
          Cheers fellas

          8
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          Not sure why everyone tries to look for some kind of deeper meaning in the signing. Is it a way of coping with a signing they know was bad or something?

          3
          Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          If I may, LH- I think you’re the only one looking for deeper meaning nowadays. Simply put, no Hosmer didn’t do anything to open the floodgates but rather it was a signal that the Pads were open for business in a manner we’ve never really seen prior. I’m not speaking for anyone, but I don’t think anyone correlates Hosmer’s signing with Manny’s “anymore”
          It’s all good fella, everybody have a great day!

          5
          Reply
        • NYCityRiddler

          1 year ago

          Whatever you do A.J. don’t forget to keep sending those checks.

          Love,
          Eric

          Ahahaha!

          4
          Reply
        • deweybelongsinthehall

          1 year ago

          Legend, in my view, if the Padres hadn’t shown they were trying to win, Machado would have looked to leverage their offer and sign elsewhere. After what he went through in Baltimore, he wanted to both win and get paid.

          1
          Reply
        • Informed Sportsball Discussion

          1 year ago

          I wish the multiverse were real, so I could go to the universe where Manny Machado says no to $300 million because Eric Hosmer is not a member of the San Diego Padres at the time.

          I just want to see that all play out in front of me so I can finally understand what all these people have been insisting would have happened all these years had Eric Hosmer not signed first before Manny.

          7
          Reply
        • SonnySteele

          1 year ago

          The Tigers overpaid for Pudge Rodriguez in 2004 because they hadn’t had a winning season since 1993.

          1
          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          It’s true though. It’s same for when Pudge Rodriguez signed with the Tigers when they were terrible and then Magglio Ordonez signed the following year. Or Jayson Werth for the Washington Nationals.

          Some teams need to get over the free agent hump and sign a bigger name in order to attract other free agents. Most of the time it requires them offering way above market deals. You can try to disagree that this doesn’t exist, but it does.

          1
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          @RodBecksBurnerAccount Just to be clear, you are saying that Manny Machado would have left $50m on the table and gone back on his pre-free agency demand for a $300m guarantee after already having that demand met had the Padres not signed Eric Hosmer first, all other things equal?

          1
          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          I am saying that Machado wouldn’t have signed with a last place team (66 wins in 2018) without them showing that they were willing to spend on free agents (in 2018-2019 they spent $474 million–more than any team). You’re also creating a situation that didn’t happen. He could of earned $40 million more if he had agreed to the White Sox offer.

          Also FYI Trea Turner did leave $50 million on the table to not sign with the Padres last off-season.

          1
          Reply
        • Informed Sportsball Discussion

          1 year ago

          @RodBeck

          I loved watching you as San Diego’s fill-in closer in 2003.

          And I would say the Padres could have demonstrated that commitment without the Hosmer deal. We’ll never know, it’s just been a bit of a stretch these years for people to say Manny never would have signed without Eric having signed first. Manny could have been the tip of that spear instead.

          1
          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          It’s not just Hosmer. It’s the fact the Padres were willing *to spend.*

          Everyone at that time knew they could draft and develop prospects (they had the #1 farm system when they signed Manny). Preller had shown he was super aggressive on the trade market as well. But they had no big long term contracts. So yes, the fact that the Padres–the team with one of the smallest TV markets in the MLB–was willing to have a long term contract, and then turn around and offer Manny a similar style of contract showed they were serious. Before that time, no one took the Padres as a serious free agent destination.

          Reply
        • Informed Sportsball Discussion

          1 year ago

          @RodBeck *shrug* We’re never gonna agree, so I’ll let retired Hosmers go podcast.

          Great handle.

          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          No, we won’t agree, because I remember what the Padres were like before Preller came to town.

          1
          Reply
        • Informed Sportsball Discussion

          1 year ago

          @Rod-man That’s a different argument than “Machado wouldn’t have signed without Hosmer”.

          Although that argument, and the fact Preller already has the farm system back into the top 10 not two years removed from trading Soto, is why I have departed the “fire Preller” bandwagon and would like management to just give him and Shildt three years to operate. So we agree on some things.

          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          No, it’s the same argument. The Padres do not sign Hosmer if not for Preller. The ownership does not approve either Hosmer’s or Machado’s deals without Preller making their farm system #1 at that time. Without Preller, their market cannot handle it. It’s why all the owners were complaining that the Padres were spending so much. And also why now that their TV deal has gone away because of Balley’s mishandling, they’re in financial trouble.

          But I do not worry about Preller. Sometimes he’s too aggressive but he has an amazing eye for talent. Look at a lot of the players that he’s traded away from his farm. They’ve done well elsewhere. Very few teams can say that. And he continues to develop strong players in-house too. I’ve never seen a GM strong in all parts–draft, development, international free agency, free agency, bargain hunting, etc. Usually a good GM is good at a couple of those, not all of them.

          Has he come up short of a WS? Yes. I think he meddles too much. A team has to build chemistry. You can’t add a bunch of players and then expect them to win immediately. It never works that way. I think if he just used his eye for prospects and stayed mostly in-house he’d build a super team for relatively cheap.

          1
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          Preller hasn’t developed any strong players in house. And no. Trading prospects at the upper levels of the minors or shortly after they make their MLB debuts is NOT development.

          Reply
        • RodBecksBurnerAccount

          1 year ago

          What ridiculous arbitrary metrics you insert in your arguments lol. “If he traded them shortly after they make their major league debut then he didn’t develop them!” First you make complete fabrications and now you try to arbitrarily erase a ton of prospects Preller has developed because he traded them.

          You are incapable of having a debate in good faith. Consider yourself muted.

          1
          Reply
        • BleedGreen

          1 year ago

          Monsoon??

          Reply
        • Rally Goose

          1 year ago

          @RodBecksBurnerAccount So again. Are you saying Manny would have left $50m on the table and gone back on his pre-free agency demand for a $300m guarantee after already having that demand met had the Padres not signed Eric Hosmer first, all other things equal?

          And no he could not have earned more if he agreed to the White Sox’s offer. People need to stop floating that garbage on here. The White Sox’s offer was only for $250m. And also had no opt-outs in it. The Padres’ offer curb stomped the White Sox’s offer from a pure financial perspective.

          Trea Turner specifically said he wanted to play on the East coast. Did Manny ever specifically say he wanted to play with Eric Hosmer?

          Reply
        • Rally Goose

          1 year ago

          @RodBecksBurnerAccount How exactly does offering Manny $300m guaranteed, on paper right in front of him, not “demonstrate a willingness to spend?” How does it not “show they were serious?” Is Manny going to assume that the checks will bounce if Eric Hosmer isn’t already in house?

          2
          Reply
        • Rally Goose

          1 year ago

          What prospects has Preller supposedly developed then?

          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          The Soto trade is a perfect reason to be on the “fire Preller” bandwagon. That trade will go down in the same category as “Ruth for $$$” or “Brock for Broglio.”

          Reply
        • Informed Sportsball Discussion

          1 year ago

          @Rod, you moved the goalposts off of “Machado would not sign without Hosmer” to talking about AJ Preller in general. Those are not the same discussions.

          Preller has come up very well short of the WS. As much as I wish ownership were giving him one last long leash, that is the last leash he shall get either way. He has to prove he can do more than have the major league roster perpetually underachieve while he manages to stockpile good minor league talent. There has to be a sustained period of major league success.

          Reply
    • Jm207* 2

      1 year ago

      If that’s the case, it didn’t work

      3
      Reply
      • jdizzle ATL Braves

        1 year ago

        Didn’t work filling the seats up, spending on other free agents, making trades for good players? They have been competitive. and they will continue to be competitive imo. Y’all are delusional.

        5
        Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          @jdizzle ATL Braves Could have done all that without the Hosmer signing.

          5
          Reply
      • filihok

        1 year ago

        JM

        TROLL

        2
        Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        2020 and 2022 playoffs. It worked.

        2
        Reply
        • PadresWSChamps2025

          1 year ago

          If the Dodgers’ 2020 championship doesn’t count then neither does the Padres making the playoffs that year.

          1
          Reply
        • Pads Fans

          1 year ago

          Did I say it didn’t count? Nope. You did.

          1
          Reply
        • PadresWSChamps2025

          1 year ago

          Maybe not you specifically.

          Reply
      • User 2079935927

        1 year ago

        @JM207-why do you have to be such a ass? You act like a 12 yo

        Reply
    • maxmilna

      1 year ago

      He started San Diego’s bad contracts.

      9
      Reply
      • filihok

        1 year ago

        Max

        Troll

        1
        Reply
        • maxmilna

          1 year ago

          Dodgers fan

          1
          Reply
        • filihok

          1 year ago

          Max

          The two are not mutually exclusive

          Reply
    • holecamels35

      1 year ago

      It was an awful contract but I think this is true. Same with the Nats and Jayson Werth. Deal out of left field but brought credibility to the team and made way for future moves.

      10
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        @holecamels35 It did nothing of the kind.

        2
        Reply
      • vikingbluejay67

        1 year ago

        @holecamels35, I gave you a thumbs up just for the username.

        2
        Reply
        • holecamels35

          1 year ago

          Thanks. I randomly chose it so many years ago which is weird because I’m a Pirates fan but I liked watching him pitch and it was just random.

          Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          You’re always well read into the Padres’ situation, I just took you for another San Diegan holecamels! I’m a closet Pirates fan haha, good luck this year amigo. Go win the Central!

          1
          Reply
    • Tom the ray fan

      1 year ago

      *put a competitive team on the field for one year.

      1
      Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        Two playoff teams.

        Reply
        • Tom the ray fan

          1 year ago

          My Rays went to the “World Series” in 2020 and I don’t even count it bud, but whatever lie you need to tell yourself to make yourself feel better by all means.

          1
          Reply
        • Pads Fans

          1 year ago

          Pull your head out of your behind. It counts. I have no time for day drinkers and the willfully ignorant and hateful.

          2
          Reply
        • Tom the ray fan

          1 year ago

          Lmao alright

          Reply
    • PartManPartMonkey

      1 year ago

      Padres are still on the hook for $26 million for ‘24 and ‘25. Per the SD Union Tribune.

      2
      Reply
      • scjohn92

        1 year ago

        I don’t understand why the Padres would still be obligated to pay Hosmer $26 million through 2025. He voluntarily retired and not because of injury.

        1
        Reply
        • deweybelongsinthehall

          1 year ago

          Because he was released (and couldn’t be sent to the minors). The contract was guaranteed.

          1
          Reply
    • Arnold Ziffel

      1 year ago

      Seems ironic that many of these guys retire when nobody wants them,

      2
      Reply
  2. Wagner>Cobb

    1 year ago

    A quality career no doubt.

    Cue absurd complaints about how he’ll probably get in the HOF.

    9
    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      1 year ago

      Only you @deGromTR.

      Reply
    • Not a clever name

      1 year ago

      First ballot, hall of fleecers for the way he did AJ Preller.

      9
      Reply
      • hiflew

        1 year ago

        What did he do? Accepting an offer freely given to him? It’s not like he conned Preller into doing it. Preller just made another of his many many mistakes since becoming GM in 2015.

        Reply
    • hiflew

      1 year ago

      He has no chance of getting into the Hall, but I do believe if he had played 40 years earlier that he would more highly thought of. Probably still a starting 1B in the league. He kind of reminds me of Steve Garvey, just with a shorter career. A very consistently good hitter and more importantly consistently on the field. He was rarely on the DL/IL and rarely took days off. Just a very entertaining player, even if he was a Padre.

      2
      Reply
      • Smelly_Cobb

        1 year ago

        Padre players are generally boring to you, or just a doyer fan?

        1
        Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          Pretty sure hiflew is a Rockies fan, he’s cool for being *ahem* “one of them” 😉

          3
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          Matt Holliday didn’t touch home plate

          5
          Reply
      • Troutahni

        1 year ago

        Really? Garvey was way better. Karros was also a better all around player than Hosmer. Both had way more extra base power.

        Reply
    • kcmark

      1 year ago

      The Royals HOF

      1
      Reply
    • Tdat1979

      1 year ago

      He has a small chance for the Royals Hall of Fame.

      1
      Reply
      • hiflew

        1 year ago

        More than a small chance, he make the Royals HOF without a doubt. So will Gordon, Moose, Perez, and maybe a few others from that 2015 team.

        Reply
  3. vaderzim

    1 year ago

    Seeing him run home to tie Game 5 of the 2015 World Series was one of the greatest moments of my life, not only because I was rooting for Kansas City, but because it exposed the 2015 Mets as frauds.

    7
    Reply
    • Astros2017&22Champs

      1 year ago

      Why did it expose them as frauds? That Mets team had the greatest young nucleus of pitchers we’ve seen in years. Sure it didn’t work out that way but they weren’t frauds. The Royals were just better.

      18
      Reply
      • Sdubs

        1 year ago

        Cespedes was hurt and Murphy couldn’t keep up that pace. This dude sounds like a Yankee fan crying about the Astros doing the same level of shady to get the winning edge.

        Reply
      • Troutahni

        1 year ago

        Was Bobby V their manager that season?

        Reply
    • gowings2008

      1 year ago

      Greatest moments of your life? You take this way too seriously if that’s the case. Yikes.

      2
      Reply
  4. 30 Parks

    1 year ago

    Always enjoyed watching Hosmer play. Congrats on retirement (retired at 34 is amazing). Well earned.

    10
    Reply
  5. Now Yu Know

    1 year ago

    “We at MLBTR salute Hosmer on a fine career and wish him the best in his next steps.”

    Agreed.

    15
    Reply
  6. GASoxFan

    1 year ago

    By officially retiring, isn’t he leaving $13m/yr on the table the next couple seasons?

    I’d think this boosts the Pads budget for FAs though.

    4
    Reply
    • Charlie III

      1 year ago

      Yeah, I wondered about that too. Maybe being released no longer obligates him to play or try to play?

      Reply
    • InsertWittyName

      1 year ago

      Most likely he and the Padres have renegotiated the terms and restructured the payment schedule but allow him to officially retire.

      5
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        No reason for him to do that. Since he was released, he doesn’t actually gain anything by “officially retiring” that he would feel compelled to renegotiate his contract. It’s not like Strasburg.

        Reply
        • InsertWittyName

          1 year ago

          The article implies that he wants to get into media work so perhaps the it allows for him to start now rather than wait year.

          Purely hypothetical

          1
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          It doesn’t “allow” him to do that. He was already allowed to do that.

          Reply
        • deweybelongsinthehall

          1 year ago

          Wow. Legendary actually makes sense. Wow!

          Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      1 year ago

      Sounds like it.

      2
      Reply
    • 101reklaw

      1 year ago

      Don’t think so. Hos was released before he retired, so he gets the guaranteed $13 mil per year til the original contract ends.

      1
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        If he officially filled out the retirement paperwork I’m prsr he forfeits any remaining money he was owed even if he was released. Not 100% sure though. And there’s no objective reason for him to nor is he the type of person that would leave that money on the table.

        Reply
      • YankeesBleacherCreature

        1 year ago

        Not if he has officially retired which means he has chosen to not to fulfill his contractual obligations.

        3
        Reply
        • CardsFan57

          1 year ago

          He was released from the contract. He has no obligations under the contract.

          2
          Reply
        • deweybelongsinthehall

          1 year ago

          Exactly Cardsfan. What is so hard to understand?

          2
          Reply
    • Fever Pitch Guy

      1 year ago

      GASox – If he was still under that contract, you’d be right. But once he got released by the Cubs, it means he gets paid out the remainder of his Padres contract …. which also means the Red Sox are still on the hook for $740K this year.

      Best way to look at it, when you’re released nobody can force you to play for any other team just because you’re still getting paid on an old contract from two teams earlier.

      2
      Reply
    • thefallensoldier

      1 year ago

      Depends on how the contract was written. Strasburg still got paid because his retirement was forced by injury.

      For Hosmer, any deffered money or bonuses still will need to be paid, or even the entire contract if the language stipulates it.

      Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        Strasburg is not retired. He is still on the Nationals 40-man roster.

        mlb.com/nationals/roster/40-man

        2
        Reply
      • Gwynning

        1 year ago

        Strasburg isn’t retired. He is on the 40 Man by necessity, but can be IL’ed at any moment (but not during the Offseason!)

        1
        Reply
      • Fever Pitch Guy

        1 year ago

        fallen – Doesn’t matter how the contract was written. Once a player is released, he is entitled to the guaranteed portion of his contract even if he chooses to never play another MLB game with any team.

        3
        Reply
    • Cleon Jones

      1 year ago

      Nope:
      sandiegouniontribune.com/sports/padres/story/2024-…

      Reply
      • Zippy the Pinhead

        1 year ago

        Thanks, Cleon. That should put an end to this thread. Meanwhile, congratulations on 1969.

        Reply
  7. rf_sdn8v4life

    1 year ago

    Congrats on a fine major league career. Having a ring isn’t something everyone gets.

    As a Padres fan, it didn’t work out as hoped for either side but did signal a change.

    So does that mean Padres now off the hook for paying the remainder of his contract?

    5
    Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      It signaled nothing.

      3
      Reply
      • deweybelongsinthehall

        1 year ago

        Stop the BS. No matter how many see things differently, why always respond?

        1
        Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      It was a good question rf. His trade to the Red Sox triggered a payment clause which guaranteed his contract. The Padres never released him, so those rules don’t necessarily apply here, per se.

      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        Only clause I know it triggered is a full NTC. And NTC’s do apply to waiver claims in case you didn’t already know that.

        Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          Hos didn’t have a full NTC. I think he had 8 teams not listed iirc? Anyways, moot point(s) with regard to “how” Hos is getting paid. I surmise more news will come out about the indicated clause.

          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          Contract stipulated that if he was traded his limited no-trade protection was upgraded to full no-trade protection (Red Sox wouldn’t have been able to trade him to anyone without his consent).

          Reply
        • Gwynning

          1 year ago

          Ah yeah, I see what you meant. My bad. Full NTC post-Padres, yes. In this case, both clauses were triggered.

          Reply
  8. FanDan

    1 year ago

    One of Preller’s worst deals.

    6
    Reply
    • PattheBat

      1 year ago

      One of the worst deals ever

      12
      Reply
      • hiflew

        1 year ago

        He was an above average hitter in 4 of the 5 years he was in San Diego. His OPS+ in SD was 103. There have been FAR worse outcomes to contracts that that.

        2
        Reply
        • PattheBat

          1 year ago

          He was also a 1B and a disastrous one at that, which usually equates to negative value

          2
          Reply
        • stephaniebpetagno

          1 year ago

          It’s a genuine mystery how he won four gold gloves.

          2
          Reply
  9. Scream_name

    1 year ago

    Does this mean the Padres don’t owe him the remaining balance of that contract?

    1
    Reply
    • InsertWittyName

      1 year ago

      Most likely he and the Padres have renegotiated the terms and restructured the payment schedule.

      (Much like Washington are trying to do with Strasburg)

      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        Nope. Already released. Hosmer has nothing to gain by doing that.

        3
        Reply
        • Brew’88

          1 year ago

          sure glad they signed Hoz, such a Padre icon and SD trailblazer. If not Manny wouldn’t have signed, nor Musgrove, Darvish, Cronenworth, Bogaerts, Pomeranz, etc… We are indebted to him., the Dominozmer

          just kidding silly wabbit

          6
          Reply
  10. Gmen777

    1 year ago

    Had to be one of the single most baffling contracts I’ve ever seen given out considering he wasn’t even close to a superstar or anything. He seems like a really good dude though, got to play the game he loved for a long time and even got a WS ring. Enjoy retirement Hoz

    5
    Reply
    • closetball

      1 year ago

      The rationale for the massive overpay was for Hosmer to mentor that fab farm system into a winning culture as they got called up for this great period of dominance foreseen for 2020-ish. What a joke. I remember the Patino, Gore etc BS narrative with the rose colored glasses optimism. Then Preller goes into ADHD swap mode and the rest is history.

      Reply
      • Gmen777

        1 year ago

        I also recall they brought up his age and that he still hadn’t reached his peak

        Reply
  11. spooky

    1 year ago

    1738

    1
    Reply
    • Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

      1 year ago

      Huh, I had never hear about this before. This seems like the type of thing I would have known about in 2014-2015

      Reply
    • Pads Fans

      1 year ago

      Put down the bottle of Remy Martin unless you are Fetty Wap

      Reply
  12. 2183281

    1 year ago

    Wizard of Hoz.

    Reply
  13. Wheels & The Leg Man

    1 year ago

    Good riddance.

    4
    Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      Rude! Happy retirement Hoz!

      2
      Reply
      • Wheels & The Leg Man

        1 year ago

        The best of the turtles was rude.

        Stay gone Hoz

        1
        Reply
  14. Deleted Userr

    1 year ago

    “Officially” retired? Does that mean the Padres are off the hook for the remaining 2/$26m he is owed?

    Reply
    • 101reklaw

      1 year ago

      Nope, guaranteed money. He still gets paid.

      2
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        Not if he files the retirement paperwork I don’t think.

        1
        Reply
        • LordD99

          1 year ago

          He’s simply announcing he’s no longer planning to play. He was traded and then cut from his last team. He’s not obligated to try and play to collect his money.

          1
          Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          @LordD99 I assume that that is the case but the article says he has “officially” retired.

          Reply
    • CardsFan57

      1 year ago

      I’m 99.9% certain Hosmer isn’t doing anything that would cost him $26 million. I don’t think he has any obligation to attempt playing in order to get that guaranteed money.

      1
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        @CardsFan57 he doesn’t have to attempt to play. No one is arguing that. The question is whether he still gets his money if he officially files the retirement paperwork. If he doesn’t do that he’s in the same position that, say, Blake Snell or Cody Bellinger are in right now only difference is he’s getting paid $13m each in 2024 and 2025.

        Reply
        • CardsFan57

          1 year ago

          I’m saying either he isn’t filing official paperwork or he can file it and still get paid. I think he can file it and still get paid because he was completely released from the contract. Strassburg is different because he’s not been released.

          2
          Reply
  15. Yanks2

    1 year ago

    Most handsome player of this generation

    But was terrible after he left the Toyals lol

    Reply
    • Wheels & The Leg Man

      1 year ago

      This article isn’t about 5-time world’s handsomest man winner, Alejandro Kirk, he never played for the Royals.

      Reply
      • Yanks2

        1 year ago

        Bartolo Colon 2.0

        1
        Reply
  16. HalosHeavenJJ

    1 year ago

    That was a fun Royals team. Hosmer was integral to their success.

    I’m interested to see him in the media.

    7
    Reply
  17. Tom the ray fan

    1 year ago

    Another great move by Preller, Padres fans are so blinded by the guy it’s incredible.

    1
    Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      Dude it’s OK Manny Machado wouldn’t have signed with the Padres if they hadn’t signed Hosmer first!

      /s

      2
      Reply
      • Tom the ray fan

        1 year ago

        One playoff appearance since he signed, I don’t count 2020

        Reply
        • Smelly_Cobb

          1 year ago

          No one should count 2020, honestly

          5
          Reply
    • Blue Baron

      1 year ago

      @Tom the ray fan: I’m sure you could have done better given your 20/20 hindsight.

      4
      Reply
      • Tom the ray fan

        1 year ago

        Not the point I’m making blue but I would’ve just simply by not signing him lmao.

        Reply
        • Blue Baron

          1 year ago

          “Another great move by Preller.”

          If criticizing him for signing Hosmer wasn’t your point, what was?

          1
          Reply
    • Pads Fans

      1 year ago

      .318/.385/.498/.882 and a 133 OPS+ with a 4.3 WAR at age 27

      But you had a crystal ball in February 2018 that told you he was not going to be that good of a player after that.

      Put down the haterade.

      3
      Reply
      • Tom the ray fan

        1 year ago

        Lots of guys have one good year dude. Multiple sources said this is a bad deal at the time of signing. Guess the press in San Diego didn’t see it that way.

        1
        Reply
        • mizzourah87

          1 year ago

          It really wasn’t just one year though. Sure 2017 was heavily babip fueled, but from 2013-2017 he had a .292/.351/.449 line with a 115 ops over that 4 year stretch and he was still young. Not to mention his 4 gold gloves. No reason to believe he’d fall off as hard as he did.

          Reply
      • PadresWSChamps2025

        1 year ago

        For me, the issue was he only played well in odd numbered years (yes even with the Royals) and the Padres already had a first baseman signed to an immovable contract and one of the game’s better first base prospects at the time.

        1
        Reply
      • Brew’88

        1 year ago

        hindsight is 20/20 might be the most used cliche but it really does ring true

        1
        Reply
  18. straightuphonestguy

    1 year ago

    The only thing I will say about Hosmer is I will never forget seeing a 1B try to dig out balls on the foul side of the bag as long as I live. An awful, awful contract.

    7
    Reply
  19. Logjammer D"Baggagecling

    1 year ago

    I hope he succeeds un all his future endeavors. Are the Padres now off the hook? Or are they still paying him?

    1
    Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      “No salary relief”

      =(

      Reply
      • Brew’88

        1 year ago

        No salary relief = opportunity for rookies that they otherwise might not get. I like it!

        3
        Reply
    • Cleon Jones

      1 year ago

      They are. Reds are still paying Ken Griffey Jr I believe. Strange world these MLB contracts.

      1
      Reply
  20. RynoChaser

    1 year ago

    The summation of his career reads like someone that has a bit of grudge against royals/hosmer.

    1
    Reply
  21. AL34

    1 year ago

    He had no heart when he was traded to Boston at the trade deadline in 2022. He could have resurrected his career and did not. He immediately went on the Disabled List after he was traded and stayed there until almost the end of the season. His contract was an albatross to the San Diego Padres.

    3
    Reply
  22. Old York

    1 year ago

    139th best first baseman in the history of the game according to BR JAWS. Ahead of HOF greats like Ben Taylor, Charlie Comiskey & Buck O’Neil.

    Career wRC+

    Hosmer: 107
    Ben Taylor: 135
    Charlie Comiskey: 84
    Buck O’Neil: 98

    Eric Hosmer for Hall Of Fame!!!

    1
    Reply
    • Doral Silverthorn

      1 year ago

      Since the HoF has been reduced to an if/then statement, time to do your thing, voters.

      2
      Reply
      • Old York

        1 year ago

        @halloffamernobodycares

        Given how ridiculous most of the inductees into the HOF are, I don’t see why he shouldn’t be in there. I’d say there are probably a solid 20 to 30 guys that should be in there and the rest are just putting guys in for the namesake and memories of a few great seasons. We got guys like Pie Traynor and Ray Schalk who really shouldn’t even have been anywhere close to Cooperstown. Then you get guys like Frankie Frisch who ran the committee to sneak in his Giants & Cardinals teammates into Cooperstown. To name a few of them, they are Dave Bancroft, Chick Hafey, Jim Bottomley & High Pockets Kelly.

        3
        Reply
        • Cleon Jones

          1 year ago

          Agreed. HOF has become legendary for all the wrong reasons.

          1
          Reply
  23. Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

    1 year ago

    I expected this thread to be filled with grateful Royals fans and not just bitter Padres fans. But I suppose the Royals fans will be here soon enough.

    2
    Reply
    • SupremeZeus

      1 year ago

      I expected this thread to be filled with grateful White Sox fans.

      Reply
      • Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

        1 year ago

        …Why? Am I missing something?

        Reply
        • brushbackmlb

          1 year ago

          The White Sox have made an offseason of signing former Royals. Him retiring takes one name off the board.

          4
          Reply
  24. Clofreesz

    1 year ago

    Farewell, Eric. You have had a career that most major leaguers do not get.

    3
    Reply
  25. acoss13

    1 year ago

    Nice career, nice guy and got almost 175 million in the bag, congrats to him.

    3
    Reply
  26. aTouchOfSarcasm

    1 year ago

    And there it is…

    Reply
  27. Never Remember

    1 year ago

    He will not be missed.

    2
    Reply
  28. Birdieman2

    1 year ago

    Pitchers retired him years ago.

    9
    Reply
    • Monkey’s Uncle

      1 year ago

      And commenters here retired him not long afterwards.

      1
      Reply
  29. Doral Silverthorn

    1 year ago

    I say third ballot he gets in.

    Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      *spit take irl*

      He can get in anytime he wants, $30 at the foyer.

      3
      Reply
  30. Captainmike1

    1 year ago

    Another poster child for a screwed up contract that he should be embarrassed about
    I hope he donated millions to charity and does what he can to help people who struggle to eat like many of the elderly in this country

    3
    Reply
    • Old York

      1 year ago

      @Captainmike1

      Those people don’t need to struggle to eat if they worked hard and got a job where the contract is guaranteed, regardless if you perform or not.

      Reply
  31. This one belongs to the Reds

    1 year ago

    Good luck in retirement, Eric.

    2
    Reply
  32. Aaron Sapoznik

    1 year ago

    One less Royal to fret over on the southside of Chicago.

    1
    Reply
  33. LordD99

    1 year ago

    A fine career. 1700+ hits, a World Series championship, and $175 million in the bank.

    2
    Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      Nice guy, great family, still has his ok looks, getting paid 13 large to play The Show on his couch overlooking La Jolla… yeah he’s aight.

      2
      Reply
      • Brew88

        1 year ago

        Personally I liked him even though he grounded out incessantly

        3
        Reply
  34. Syd Thrift

    1 year ago

    Love him. Delivered a title for kc and set the fashion standard for Mohawk that now inspires Mahomes. We are forever grateful

    1
    Reply
  35. C-Daddy

    1 year ago

    It’s upsetting when guys the same age as you start retiring.

    2
    Reply
  36. daysauce

    1 year ago

    I wonder if he’d stick on the Nats’ roster if he didn’t veto that trade

    2
    Reply
  37. jorge78

    1 year ago

    He finally took the hint.
    He was among one of AJ Prellers most baffling free agent signings (and AJ has done a lot of baffling things)…..

    p]

    1
    Reply
    • Pads Fans

      1 year ago

      .318/.385/.498/.882 and a 133 OPS+ with a 4.3 WAR in 2017 at age 27 before he was signed by the Padres for the 2018 season. I guess Preller was supposed to have a crystal ball that told him Preller would not play that well going forward. Are the people that hate on him really that stupid? Or just like drinking that haterade?

      1
      Reply
      • J32

        1 year ago

        While those stats aren’t bad by any means, it was largely buoyed by a 351 babip that well exceeds his career 314 babip. As the article suggests, his offense was entirely at the whim of whether his ground balls poked through defenses and you can see in his career that he swung up and down like a yo-yo prior to his good platform year. Add in the middling defense that got vastly overrated from gold gloves given primarily through reputation than merit, and no one needed a crystal ball to think that contract was ridiculously overpriced for a possibly good but highly risky player. Don’t think Preller has been all bad but there’s no way you can justify the Hosmer contract as a smart decision that you can excuse with “but no one can see the future coming!”

        Reply
        • Pads Fans

          1 year ago

          In HINDSIGHT it was a bad deal. Based on his platform year it was probably still not a good deal, but it was justifiable in that it showed other FA that the Padres were willing to spend. As you can see on here I was not a fan of the deal at the time of the signing, but not because of the amount of money. I thought Myers should have been left at 1B and not moved around each season.

          Reply
  38. jorge78

    1 year ago

    He did lead the league in games played once. 162
    in 2017. Yippee?

    Reply
  39. Monkey’s Uncle

    1 year ago

    Congrats on a nice career. But he shouldn’t even be mentioned in the same paragraph as the HOF and there really shouldn’t be any debate about it.

    4
    Reply
    • Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

      1 year ago

      Who on earth is suggesting that he should be in a debate about him in the HOF?

      1
      Reply
      • Monkey’s Uncle

        1 year ago

        Scroll up, or read previous Hosmer articles here. Someone always mentions it, it seems.

        1
        Reply
  40. AC Surf Baseball

    1 year ago

    Whatever happened to Y. Ventura?

    Reply
    • Rsox

      1 year ago

      He was killed in a car accident in the D.R.

      1
      Reply
    • brushbackmlb

      1 year ago

      He died in a car accident in 2017.

      Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      Died in a drunk driving accident.

      Reply
  41. guille

    1 year ago

    hahahaa such an overrated player. Can’t believe he made all that money. GOod for him I guess

    1
    Reply
  42. Sunday Lasagna

    1 year ago

    Earned $175M and produced 18.4 career WAR

    Came close to $10M per win above replacement.

    Thinking he might hold the record for most pay per win above replacement.

    If so, dubious honor indeed.

    3
    Reply
    • Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

      1 year ago

      Ryan Howard made $13M per win above replacement

      2
      Reply
      • Baseball’s Topics on Baseball Today

        1 year ago

        And Chris Davis made $16M per win above replacement.

        3
        Reply
        • Deleted Userr

          1 year ago

          That include the deferrals?

          Reply
        • Sunday Lasagna

          1 year ago

          Thanks @Baseball Topics on Baseball Today. Incredible how much these guys were overpaid.

          1
          Reply
  43. nostocksjustbonds

    1 year ago

    I’m sure some Royals fans could gripe (in retrospect) about taking him and not Posey, but he was a good Royal and leader on those teams and won them a ring, so there should be no complaints, especially since they didn’t end up overpaying for the downside of his career.

    As a Giants fan, I appreciate him sliding into first in 2014.

    1
    Reply
    • cuffs2

      1 year ago

      Had he stayed in KC there would likely not have been a significant downside in his next 7 years. His style of hitting was ideal for a larger stadium. It seems most hitters see a decline in their stats when moving to San Diego.

      Reply
    • John Bird

      1 year ago

      @nsjb My favorite memory of Hosmer. Panik to Crawford to Belt.

      Reply
  44. Johnny utah

    1 year ago

    I was there game 5 ws 2015
    He broke the hearts of alot of mets fans that nite…

    2
    Reply
  45. wallabeechamp

    1 year ago

    Eric Hosmer was the type of player the Pobres have never needed, but always deserved

    Reply
  46. Rsox

    1 year ago

    Decent player with the Royals, never lived up to the big contract with the Padres. When his bat skills were gone they were GONE…

    1
    Reply
  47. HiredGun23

    1 year ago

    He retired the day he signed the contract with the Padres…

    6
    Reply
  48. Billg7987

    1 year ago

    It’s a bit generous to say the Royals were tanking all those years. By all accounts, they were trying to win many of those years but simply failing badly at it.

    Reply
  49. Deleted Userr

    1 year ago

    “It’s terrible. Terrible how they treated him. Absolutely terrible. Just, they just didn’t understand what they had. And if you ask any of his teammates there, throughout that whole time, 100% of the ones that I’ve talked to would say the exact same thing I’m saying right now. And the thing that that guy brought to a room, to a team is, it’s worth wins. Umm… and you know. But if your, but if your OPS isn’t, isn’t sexy enough for, for some of the, for some of the nerds, then umm…You’re just not a valuable player. And in my mind, Eric Hosmer is an extremely valuable player, and still is.” – Austin Hedges

    2
    Reply
  50. User 2161944466

    1 year ago

    He still owes me a steak dinner

    2
    Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      As does LeoLuna93 from Gaslampball owe me for saying 2 years ago that Hosmer would opt out because he wouldn’t want to play for a team that isn’t going to let him play.

      Reply
      • Deleted Userrr

        1 year ago

        And Manny Machado owes that Dodgers fan his entire contract.

        1
        Reply
  51. DockEllisDee

    1 year ago

    Thank you for helping me win my fantasy league championship in 2017!

    1
    Reply
  52. Pads Fans

    1 year ago

    That saves the Padres $13 million per year in 2024 and 2025

    Reply
    • PadresWSChamps2025

      1 year ago

      Only if he officially files the retirement paperwork with MLB.

      1
      Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        True. He can “retire” by simply not even attempting to play and the Padres are still on the hook for his salary.

        I have seen him at Board & Brew in Del Mar recently and he has put on some serious weight since he last played. I think he just quit.

        Reply
    • PattheBat

      1 year ago

      lol nice try

      Reply
  53. Ezpkns34

    1 year ago

    Hall of Famer at the bank

    2
    Reply
  54. raulp

    1 year ago

    Not Pensky material

    3
    Reply
  55. TrueOutcomeFan

    1 year ago

    Jason Park’s spring training update from years gone by is still the best thing ever written about Eric Hosmer. Bless whoever dives into the depth of the internet’s buttcrack to find that thing. Fun career to get to watch with some really cool high points.

    1
    Reply
  56. CrikesAlready

    1 year ago

    Mr “every other year” turned into Mr. “sucks all the time.”

    Selfish a$$ wouldn’t wave his no trade clause either.

    He was one of the players that I clamored for the Padres front office to give him an all-terrain vehicle and a case of Jack Daniels so he could have a non-baseball injury so they could unload his lead bat and concrete glove.

    Reply
    • Gwynning

      1 year ago

      Yikes, Crikes. Yikes.

      Reply
  57. tangerinepony

    1 year ago

    Probably one of the most over rated players in quite sometime. His salary didn’t match his production but he had the benefit of having boras as his agent and he got paid. Still he put in over 10 years of service time and won a WS

    1
    Reply
  58. Mdsavage

    1 year ago

    According to the Sane Diego Tribune once the Padres traded him it triggered a clue that they had to pay him playing or retired. So he still gets paid. Hope he enjoys retirement I am glad I got to see him play he looked like he enjoyed the game

    1
    Reply
    • Pads Fans

      1 year ago

      What the Saunders article doesn’t say is whether the Padres get CBT relief from his retirement only that he will continue to get paid.

      Reply
      • Gwynning

        1 year ago

        Nothing changes, still the CBT hit through ’25.

        Reply
  59. DugoutJester

    1 year ago

    Wish the guy the best but never been a fan. He always had an attitude and there was a reason most of any clubhouse he was with had issues with him. Hosmer was always a premadonna.

    Reply
    • Fever Pitch Guy

      1 year ago

      Jester – Hosmer was a slutty woman before Madonna?

      Reply
  60. jumps

    1 year ago

    “Why won’t anyone sign one of the Boras 4? They’re all-star level players out there looking for a team to play for?!”

    This guy’s contract is one of those that didn’t age well and will be shown as an example why teams aren’t negotiating with Boras for his current crop of free agents. Hosmer was a very good player with some peaks into all-star level. Just like all of the guys out there this winter.

    With that said, I’ve only heard nice things about Hosmer as a person. It’s a shame he couldn’t finish his career in KC as he seemed fit for that franchise for life. But he got a ring, a fat contract, and got to play in one of the most beautiful cities in the US. Good on him and best of luck in retirement!

    2
    Reply
  61. Yanks2

    1 year ago

    I’m a male and I’m straight but I just figured I would make the following comment. Hosmer was hot af and I’m a male. Does anyone disagree lol? He’s possibly the most attractive baseball player in recent history. Don’t even bring up Kiermaier, he doesn’t even come close

    Reply
    • Fever Pitch Guy

      1 year ago

      Cute – You hafta be talking about Kacie Hosmer, right?

      Totally agree with you on her, right up there with Heidi Watney!

      1
      Reply
  62. Cora the Destroya

    1 year ago

    If I had a wife as hot as his, I’d probably retire too

    Reply
    • Brew’88

      1 year ago

      c’mon, you’re wife is beautiful!

      2
      Reply
      • Deleted Userr

        1 year ago

        you are wife is beautiful?

        1
        Reply
        • Brew88

          1 year ago

          y’ore

          Reply
      • Cora the Destroya

        1 year ago

        If I was even married…

        Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        linkedin.com/in/kellyeshaffer/

        Reply
  63. The Voices

    1 year ago

    Outside chance at Hall of Fame but possible

    Reply
    • Deleted Userr

      1 year ago

      lol

      Reply
    • Tdat1979

      1 year ago

      I think only Salvy and Alex Gordon make the Royals Hall of Fame from that team. But I wouldn’t be surprised if Hosmer and Moose do as well.

      1
      Reply
      • Doug Jones

        1 year ago

        dougdeb. No there’s Lorenzo Cain Ace Ventura Alcedies Escobar Greg Holland Wade Davis Kelvin Herrera to go in with Moose and Hoz. they will all make Royals HOF

        Reply
  64. Salzilla

    1 year ago

    I’ll always remember Hosmer as a dude I wanted nothing to do with in fantasy. Definition of boring player.

    But he won that ring and made that money, so respect, and much luck.

    Reply
  65. Liberalsteve

    1 year ago

    After supporting Trump, karma will come his way

    1
    Reply
    • Informed Sportsball Discussion

      1 year ago

      Hatred is bad for you. You should try love. Eric Hosmer has done nothing to earn your hatred. Having opinions that differ from yours should not earn your hatred.

      Also, your statement doesn’t even pass the internet search test. Perhaps you are just a strange person.

      4
      Reply
  66. jagonza

    1 year ago

    Tristan Cosas went to the same high school ! Trivia !

    Reply
  67. Pads Fans

    1 year ago

    There is nothing on MLB or Padres.com showing an official transaction.

    Reply
    • PadresWSChamps2025

      1 year ago

      Why would there be?

      1
      Reply
      • Pads Fans

        1 year ago

        Retirements are shown under MLB transactions.

        Reply
        • PadresWSChamps2025

          1 year ago

          Only if the player retires while technically still under contract and not released. Like Jered Weaver or Buster Posey. It doesn’t show anything for, say, Derek Jeter.

          Reply
  68. reflect

    1 year ago

    The greatest con artist of our generation. Props to him and he has my vote for the hall of fame, just on the merit of swindling the padres as a mediocre first baseman.

    Reply
  69. Mikenmn

    1 year ago

    At the time of the signing he was a solid if unspectacular player coming off a platform year of 4.3BWAR. He was also erratic, every-other-year type who got a contract that assumed he’d stay at 4 WAR player, every year. It never happened, and became a far bigger albatross than many

    Reply
    • PadresWSChamps2025

      1 year ago

      Contract should have paid him $20m per in odd numbered years but the league minimum in even numbered years lmfao.

      1
      Reply
      • Informed Sportsball Discussion

        1 year ago

        A reverse Star Trek movie effect.

        Come to think of it, put pointed ears on Hos and he’d make a convincing Vulcan.

        1
        Reply
        • Pads Fans

          1 year ago

          Or Romulan

          Reply
  70. James Midway

    1 year ago

    Had some good years with the Royals and even a handful of highlights with the Padres. The last few years my wife and I would bet how many times he would ground out to second before the game. I was usually at 3-4 and was right a lot of time. He for some reason couldn’t get the ball in the air.
    I don’t know what the clubhouse was like but if they are willing to pay you 30+M to go away I think that says a lot. I’m sure they were not fond of him being Kevin Acee’s guy in the clubhouse.

    2
    Reply
    • Informed Sportsball Discussion

      1 year ago

      That miracle 3 run shot or whatever it was that either tied the game down to the final out or won it was cool.

      So was the 2020 “season”, and April and May of 2022.

      Give Boras credit. He sold Hosmer’s clubhouse presence up the wazoo. One of his greatest coups.

      2
      Reply
      • James Midway

        1 year ago

        Very true that’s all we used to hear about.

        Reply
      • Homer_Heins

        1 year ago

        Yeah good point. Club house leadership is valuable when you’re above average. If you suck, players resent you making 20 million and pretending you’re a leader.

        Reply
  71. Downtheline802

    1 year ago

    Those 2014-2015 KC teams were something else. The last true small market team to win a World Series. That team meshed so well together and that bullpen changed the game. Teams shaped and overspent for premium bullpens after KC success.

    2
    Reply
    • Homer_Heins

      1 year ago

      He was good when he wasn’t making as much money. He couldn’t live up to the hype and kept putting up negative WAR seasons.

      Reply
  72. PartManPartMonkey

    1 year ago

    It was awesome when the Padres finally got rid of Hosmer and Hedges. Those guys are “eye wash” kings, trying to be part of the cheerleading crew but all the while just plain sucking as MLB players. I am so glad that I never have to see Hosmer’s long ass swing ground out to second base ever again.

    Reply
    • Informed Sportsball Discussion

      1 year ago

      Hedges still has a roster spot for a reason. He is one of the best, if not the best, defensive catchers in the game.

      Eric Hosmer was never nearly as good a first baseman as Austin Hedges is a catcher. Hedges will probably never catch Hosmer in WAR total, but in terms of ability at his position, he has had the better career.

      EDIT: Then again, Hosmer is retiring at 9.9 WAR, according to Fangraphs, Hedges is at 6.2 WAR. It’s not impossible, depending on how many more years Austin can play. He’s only 31.

      Reply
  73. User 4014041831

    1 year ago

    I am kinda surprised. I know he has plenty of money I thought just for the love of the game he might have wanted to play for maybe 3+ years in a part time 1B and DH capacity. I didn’t think his skills had deteriorated and or chronic health problem. He got one WS championship in 2015.I saw more of a Joey Votto, Brandon Belt end to his career.

    1
    Reply
  74. Dock_Elvis

    1 year ago

    I spent a lot of time being very real about Hosmer’s deficiencies. But he’s a God in the KC region…and he earned it. There are old women BURIED in his jerseys. Beloved in the way that might not make sense to outsiders on the surface. There was an entire generation of people who couldn’t recall the Royals even winning…much less making the playoffs. Hos was a cog in those sum is greater than its parts Royals teams that gave those people all they’ve ever had…even until now.

    I guess Eric Hosmer was always my Dave Grohl….never liked Foo Fighters. But really like Grohl.

    Hosmer seems built to do TV work. We’ll probably see him for a long time now.

    1
    Reply
  75. Informed Sportsball Discussion

    1 year ago

    Eric Hosmer’s announcement he will no longer seek an MLB roster spot has no bearing on what the Padres still owe him.

    sandiegouniontribune.com/sports/padres/story/2024-…

    Ergo, this is a “retirement”, not him officially filing the papers for MLB retirement. Hosmer is still officially a free agent through the end of the 2025 season.

    1
    Reply
  76. Tdat1979

    1 year ago

    One of the few players who didn’t buy into the whole launch angle fad. It was ground ball or nothing with him

    Reply
  77. JeffMann

    1 year ago

    I am looking forward to seeing his podcast. It sounds interesting.

    Reply
  78. cuffs2

    1 year ago

    Leaving kc was definitely a mistake for Hosmer. He hit okay the first few years in San Diego but never at the level expected. He had a role in KC that said he couldn’t replicate elsewhere. Some of his decline in San Diego probably was related to aging and slowing down. He tended to get a lot of infield hits and was an aggressive baserunner. Any weight gain at all would have taken those things away from his game. I think he expected power to offset that as he put on weight but that never happened. The player he replaced in KC also retired early after weight gain. That being Billy Butler. Of course Butler never relied on quickness the way Hosmer did.

    Reply
  79. Nats ain't what they used to be

    1 year ago

    Hats off to anyone that earns 175 million dollars and can retire at 34.

    2
    Reply
    • User 1855579867

      1 year ago

      Does he have the record for rolling over grounders to second?

      Reply
  80. EM41

    1 year ago

    It’s too bad for SD that Hosmer is retired and Preller is still GM. SD has MLB’s biggest collection of bad contracts. In a few years SD will be paying more and more millions (actually tens of millions) to players who need to retire.

    1
    Reply
  81. Shawn W.

    1 year ago

    We all knew the 8 year, $144 million contract was a terrible idea the day Hosmer signed it. For the Padres and not Hosmer.

    Reply
  82. Homer_Heins

    1 year ago

    He was an extremely overrated player. Compare him to Paul Goldschmidt who has been an underrated player, and the fact that Hosmer started in WBC games over Goldy.

    AJ Preller so good at kissing butt because he is terrible.

    Reply
  83. Mustard Tiger

    1 year ago

    Thief.

    But he stole from the Padres so I don’t care.

    Reply
  84. GarryHarris

    1 year ago

    My 2011 Rookie All Star Team:

    C WSN Wilson Ramos
    1B ATL Freddie Freeman
    2B WSN Danny Espinosa
    3B NYM Justin Turner
    SS LAD Dee Gordon

    LF TOR Eric Thames
    CF MIN Ben Revere
    RF LAA Mark Trumbo

    DH KCR Eric Hosmer

    SP TBR Jeremy Hellickson
    SP SEA Michael Pineda
    SP PHI Vance Worley
    SP ARI Josh Collmenter
    SP NYY Ivan Nova

    RP ATL Craig Kimbrel
    RP CLE Vinnie Pestano
    RP KCR Greg Holland
    RP LAD Kenley Jensen
    RP CHW Chris Sale*

    Reply
  85. bestrong

    1 year ago

    0verrated! For a guy his size he never hit for power and he should have. Made alot of money though.

    Reply

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