Here is some notes from the GM meetings courtesy of the Lohud Yankees Blog. I put my own thoughts mixed in there. It really is laying the groundwork because no real trades or anything get done but this will set up the Winter meetings where most of the action takes place.
Surrounded by media standing four or five deep, Scott Boras just spoke in the
hotel lobby and left little doubt that his client, Rafael Soriano, will decline
the Yankees qualifying offer.
“Most qualifying offers are really for players of the highest value,” Boras
said. “When teams make them, they’re acknowledging the value and other teams
know that, as well. I don’t anticipate many players accepting single-year
contracts that are in that arena.”
I would agree that for the most part they won't take the offer. I don't think the Yankees want him too take it though, they just wanted to protect themselves from him leaving.
As for current value, Boras made the case that Soriano might have been the
difference in some teams making or missing the playoffs this season, and he
played up the idea that the Yankees shouldn’t easily let go of such late-inning
comfort.
“If you look at the Angels, Dodgers, White Sox, Milwaukee; those teams would
have been in the playoffs if they had a closer that had the efficiency rating of
Soriano,” Boras said. “The Yankees took advantage of that. If that was a really
good business decision for the Yankees two years ago, and it proved to be so
valued today, it certainly would be a wiser decision when (Mariano) Rivera is
older and coming off an injury.” It sounds wise but the Yankees are trying to get under the cap and also Soriano wants to close and he won't be a closer with the Yankees unless Rivera gets hurt.
Brian Cashman said he hasn’t heard and hasn’t asked whether Soriano, Nick
Swisher or Hiroki Kuroda will accept or decline their qualifying offers — “We’d
be very happy (if they accept), let’s put it that way,” Cashman said — but it’s
becoming clear that the Yankees are setting priorities this offseason. One-year
deals are one thing, but with $189 million in mind for next year, the Yankees
have to pick and choose where they allocate funds. It sounds like tonight that Swisher and Soriano will definitely decline, Kuroda is still up in the air.
That alone might be enough to keep the Yankees out of the Soriano bidding
should he hit the open market.
“It would be great if we had them both (Soriano and Rivera),” Cashman said.
“The only bad side to having them both — and I don’t have Mo, and I don’t have
Soriano (right now) — but obviously it would affect dollars to be spent
elsewhere. But bullpens are big time, so do I have to replace him? I think it’s
relative to how that would impact the other side of it.”
Boras certainly sounded as if he’s not expecting to
come to terms on a contract extension for Robinson Cano any time soon. “He’s
there for another year,” Boras said. “I talked to Randy (Levine) a few times
this week. I talked to Cash. These are things that, I’m sure as time goes
forward, we’ll continue to talk about. But nothing current.”
Just to be clear, Cashman said that if Soriano does happen to accept the
qualifying offer, he has no problem with paying both Soriano and Rivera closer
money next season. “That would happen,” Cashman said. “If he accepts, yeah,
absolutely. We made that decision when we tendered the offer.”
Because Tino Martinez was serving as a senior advisor in the Yankees
organization, he had to receive permission to interview for the Marlins hitting
coach job. “You combine the great player with that type of experience in seeing
how things get done, and I think he’s got a tremendous amount to offer,” Cashman
said. I am sure they are happy he went to Miami and not Boston.
The Yankees never talked about making Martinez their hitting coach. “We
didn’t have any vacancies,” Cashman said. “The Yankees, we’ve been blessed to
have some tremendous hitting coaches, from Don Mattingly to Kevin Long, so it’s
not an area that’s needed to be addressed at all.”
Although he hasn’t asked whether Kuroda will accept a qualifying offer,
Cashman said he has spoken to Kuroda’s agent. “Yes,” Cashman said. “I wouldn’t
say, and I couldn’t say (what exactly the conversation was about).” I have a feeling Kuroda will come back but if he gets a two year offer somewhere and it is pretty significant money you never know he could go there.
Just something to keep in mind: Ken Davidoff brought up that the $189
million luxury tax threshold includes more than player salary. There’s a certain
amount of money — something around $10-12 million, Cashman said — that’s
automatically factored in for things like travel expenses. So in terms of player
contracts, the Yankees have to get closer to $177 million to stay below the
luxury tax.
Cashman dismissed the idea that the Yankees can’t get better while also
working to control spending. “Didn’t we get better this year?” he said.
“Ninety-five wins. Won the American League East. Went farther in the playoffs
(than the year before). Got older, probably. … Improved flexibility. Kept
financial costs in check. Lined ourselves up for the long term going that route
in certain areas, and we’re better.” I agree with him, pitching is the most important, they still have a lot of good players and if they get good bench players and have good pitching they will be fine.
See the Ball, Hit the Ball
6 years ago
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