July 8, 2024

SIAdvance on X: "'Baseball is dying?' Oft-injured ex-Yankees pitcher's  contract refutes narrative, insider says https://t.co/brffHASIZb" / X

‘Baseball is dying’? Oft-injured ex-Yankees pitcher’s contract says no way

Even though four of baseball’s marquee free agents — Blake Snell, Jordan Montgomery, Matt Chapman, Cody Bellinger — remain unsigned weeks before spring training, teams have spent more than $2.5 billion on about 97 other free agents, per ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

But the deals given out by the Los Angeles Dodgers to premier free agents Shohei Ohtani ($700 million) and Yoshinobu Yamamoto ($325 million) are only pieces to MLB’s power puzzle. The contracts paid to lower/mid-tier players are perhaps more illustrative of baseball’s healthy place.

Baseball is dying'? Oft-injured ex-Yankees pitcher's contract says no way -  nj.com

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One recent example came to mind for ESPN MLB insider Buster Olney on the “Baseball Tonight” podcast.

“If anybody is saying that baseball is dying, look at James Paxton’s ($11-13 million) contract,” Olney said Wednesday. “This is someone who’s 35 years old, right? It’s been five years since he’s thrown 100 innings in any season. Last year, he had a 4.50 ERA with the Boston Red Sox. He allowed 18 home runs in 96 innings.”

Baseball is dying'? Oft-injured ex-Yankees pitcher's contract says no way -  nj.com

Paxton can earn up to $13 million with incentives, including making 20 starts for the Dodgers, per the Associated Press.

Paxton, while armed with a mid-90s fastball from the left side, has never been a model of durability, and his two-year tenure with the New York Yankees played out like the rest of his career. He threw 150 2/3 innings with a 3.82 ERA in 2019 and then pitched 20 1/3 innings in 2020 because of injuries. In fact, including 2023 with the Red Sox, Paxton has thrown a total of 117 2/3 innings since 2019.

“For the most part in the last five years, James Paxton has either been hurt or not very good,” Olney said. “He got $12 million to pitch in the back end of the Dodgers rotation. That money — they’re not just doling it out as charity. The sport right now is absolutely rich in money.”

Baseball is dying'? Oft-injured ex-Yankees pitcher's contract says no way -  nj.com

Now, who’s willing to spend it is another story, but we digress.

During the 2022 season, MLB team values increased on average by 12% — to $2.32 billion, per Forbes, with revenue at an all-time high of $10.3 billion. It would surprise nobody to see larger numbers in 2023, especially as MLB implemented rule changes such as the pitch clock to much success.

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