Every
so often, a player like this guy comes along. Ever since he entered the
league as a member of the Marlins in 2010 (they were still the Florida
Marlins at the time) Giancarlo Stanton has been one of those special
players. His numbers didn't really start jumping off the page until
about 2012. Then last season, Stanton had a career year, finishing 2nd
in National League MVP voting (behind Clayton Kershaw). Because of his
performances over the past few seasons, the Marlins have locked up their
franchise player to a 13 year contract extension worth a grand total of
$325 million over the life of the contract.
There were
a few interesting points brought about with this long term extension,
at least from a financial perspective. Stanton has the option to opt out
of the deal after six seasons, as the first six years of the deal are a
lock. After that, if he so chooses, Stanton can walk away and opt out
of his contract. In doing so, he could be walking away from a staggering
$218 million over the final seven seasons. Per ESPN, the figures look
like this for Stanton at the start of the deal. Stanton's salaries over
those first three seasons will be only $6.5 million in 2015, $9 million
in 2016 and $14.5 million in 2017, far less than he could have earned
through arbitration in 2015 and 2016 and then via free agency. He would
earn $77 million over the next three seasons and could opt out of the
contract after 2020, following his age 30 season.
So
the Marlins would be on the hook for only $107 million of the deal over
the first six seasons, which computes to an average annual value of just
$17.83 million per season before Stanton would have the right to
exercise the opt-out clause.
If Stanton remains a Marlin, the $218 million he would collect over
those final seven seasons would average out to $31.14 million a year. He
will have a complete no-trade clause through the life of the contract, a
first for the Marlins under the ownership of Jeffrey Loria (ESPN). I
know that's a lot of numbers for you to digest, but don't worry we will
help break it down and make sense of it all.
This
contract is by far the richest every given out in professional North
American sports. By Comparison, the biggest NBA contract is Kobe
Bryant's 7 year, $136.4 million deal, while Calvin Johnson's 8 year deal
worth $132 million tops the NFL and Alexander Ovechkin has the largest
NHL contract at 13 years worth $124 million. Kobe's contract is the 34
biggest in sports, while Johnson comes in at 37 and Ovechkin comes in at
51, for the richest in history. In fact, the top 30 contracts in pro
sports, of the big four anyway, are signed by Baseball players. That
goes to show how outrageous some contracts have become over the years.
Now
that Stanton is locked up, this brings up some more interesting points.
First things first that makes you wonder, is this deal going to work?
From a team perspective, the front half of the contract could work. It
gives the Marlins a six year window to really be able to build around
their star slugger, thus becoming contenders not only in the Eastern
Division, but in the National League as well. So Miami has plenty of
room to work with.
At the same time it leaves one to
wonder about Stanton and his value. They gave him a big deal hoping he
can come back healthy from how last season ended and hoping that he can
not only repeat his production from a season ago, but improve upon it
over the rest of his career. There a very good chance that could happen,
which is why he got the deal to begin with. At the same time though,
what happens if he starts getting hurt? Or getting hurt regularly? What
happens if his production instead goes into a steady decline? Will he be
worth the money at the end of the deal when Stanton will be 38 years
old? There are a few intangibles that need to be taken into account,
which is part of the reason some people aren't in favor of contracts
like this in any sport.
Stanton does have a ton of talent,
we have seen that on display over the last few seasons. Given that, if
he can stay healthy and stay productive, the sky is the limit for both
him and the team!
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