The Big Deal of the Day
Neither Wayne Brady nor Monty Hall ever gave away a prize this big.
Tuesday's big story from baseball was the mammoth contract between Nolan Arenado and the Rockies. Eye-popping numbers: eight years and $260-million. In an era when teams pay for production and analytics-driven stats, Arenado checks off all the boxes. Power, defense and a high on-base percentage. Plenty of bold-face type: three NL home run titles, two seasons leading his league in RBIs and an all-star four years running.
With an average annual value of $32.5 million, the other beneficiary of this deal is likely Bryce Harper. Odds are he'll want his deal, wherever it is, to provide more every year, while running longer -- before the expected opt-outs.
But this moment belongs to Arenado, who won't turn 28 until April.
Tuesday's big story from baseball was the mammoth contract between Nolan Arenado and the Rockies. Eye-popping numbers: eight years and $260-million. In an era when teams pay for production and analytics-driven stats, Arenado checks off all the boxes. Power, defense and a high on-base percentage. Plenty of bold-face type: three NL home run titles, two seasons leading his league in RBIs and an all-star four years running.
With an average annual value of $32.5 million, the other beneficiary of this deal is likely Bryce Harper. Odds are he'll want his deal, wherever it is, to provide more every year, while running longer -- before the expected opt-outs.
But this moment belongs to Arenado, who won't turn 28 until April.
(My image of Nolan Arenado is from the Rockies/Mets game at Citi Field on July 16th, 2017.)
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