Author Topic: Numbers Go That High? Tigers Sign Miguel Cabrera to 10-Year, $292 Million Contract  (Read 480 times)

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Offline flowers

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http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Sports/2014/03/28/Detroit-Tigers-Sign-Miguel-Cabrera-to-a-10-year-292-million-Contract

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The Detroit Tigers rewarded Miguel Cabrera with the biggest baseball contract in history. The 10-year, $292 million contract is $17 million more than the contract the New York Yankees gave Alex Rodriguez in 2007.

The new contract includes the current contract's last 2 years and $44 million, and he still needs to pass a physical exam. There is an option for two more years that are worth $30 million each. That would bring the contract to a total of $352 million.

Cabrera is not young. He turns 31 in April, but has been a consistent and dominant player. He is a two-time American League MVP and is the only player with 100 or more RBIs in the past 10 seasons. He is the first Tiger to win three consecutive batting titles.

But the contract is receiving a lot of criticism. Jeff Passan at Yahoo! Sports thinks this “could be the biggest contract mistake in MLB history.”

    No sport plays the fool like baseball. None is close. Baseball loves guaranteeing ridiculous amounts of money and years to players well past their primes and girding for the steep decline that accompanies them in their mid 30s all the way through their 40s. This is written off as the cost of doing business, which is an insult to the business. This is the cost of being stupid, and organization after organization repeats the mistakes of the past, ignoring what the game teaches about aging players.

    They are bad investments. Bad. Investments. Because you know what happens to old