Worst Contracts in MLB: NL East

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  • ThomasTomasz
    • Nov 2024

    Worst Contracts in MLB: NL East

    The Bobby Bonilla thread got me thinking- what other bad contracts do teams have in the MLB? Most teams defer money over the length of the deal of course, but I'm not primarily going to be looking at that, as Bonilla was a special case as a buyout. I'll be naming two players- one "honorable" mention and the "winner."

    Some teams will have obvious players, some teams won't. Feel free to chime in with what you all think as well. I should have a new division done every couple of days.

    This also turned out longer than I expected. So I am also going to bold the names to stand out if you don't care to read it.

    Atlanta Braves

    This was one of the hard teams to come up with, as the Braves have not handed out a lot of bad contracts. Instead, they have been smart with their trades and drafting, therefore always making sure that they have prospects to deal and prospects to grow.

    Still, I have to come up with two. Kenshin Kawakami has a three year, $23 million deal and the Braves spent all off-season trying to unload him. He is currently buried in the minors in the last year of his deal. For a team that has a track record with pitchers, it is quite surprising to see Kawakami go belly-up. Maybe even Leo Mazzone couldn't do anything with him.

    Honorable Mention: After Kawakami, its a bit tricky, but I think this is Derek Lowe. The disclaimer is that he has gotten better in each year with the Braves, but they still gave a 35 year old pitcher a four year, $60 million deal. Sinkerball pitchers also have a long shelf life, and Lowe continues to eat innings.


    Florida Marlins

    Another tough team, as the Marlins have always been very frugal with their money, and like the Braves, draft well and make trades. However, after a career year offensively, they brought back catcher Charles Johnson, who was never any better than (slightly) above average to a five year, $35 million deal.

    Big mistake, as a year after hitting .304 with 31 home runs and 91 RBI, Johnson reverted to form. In his first year back with Florida, he hit .259/18/75. He was even worse the next year, hitting .217/6/36 in 83 games. The Marlins were able to somehow get out of this deal, sending Johnson to Colorado in exchange for another terrible contract in Mike Hampton, and then sent Hampton to the Braves.

    Honorable Mention: For a team that has a lot of young talent, why they went and wasted $7 million this season for Javier Vazquez is beyond me. From 2009 to 2010, his ERA ballooned to nearly double what is was, and he saw a drop in his velocity. This year? Same story, as his ERA is at 7.55, 1.91 WHIP and more walks (24) than strikeouts (20.)

    New York Mets

    I could have a lot of fun with this one. There are so many options to do. Bonilla was already mentioned. That was incredibly stupid on their part for such a small gain at the time. Carlos Beltran and Johan Santana could be mentioned, but both played a part in some of the Mets successes over the past few seasons and are battling injuries, so I will throw them out.

    Therefore, Oliver Perez, you are the Mets worst contract. We all know the story, but a quick recap. Perez had a great year for the Mets in 2007, but an OK year in 2008, where he threw a career high with 105 walks and saw his strikeout rate stay the same. In 2009, Perez struggled, but also went through patella tendonitis and the comeback from that. Then, in 2010 the wheels fell off, with Perez still struggling with tendonitis, being moved to the bullpen and then refusing a rehab assignment later. The Mets decided it would be best to move on and give him $12 million for this season. That is almost $322,000 paid for each MLB inning he threw during that contract.

    Honorable Mention: Again, I won't take the easy way out and say Luis Castillo, caught in the same situation Perez was in. Instead, I'm going with Bernard Gilkey, who had a career year in 1996, hitting .317/30/117, and the Mets gave him a $20 million deal over two years. He struggled the next year, and halfway through 2008, the Mets moved him to the expansion Arizona Diamondbacks.

    Philadelphia Phillies
    Before the Phillies put together "The Big Four" they struggled to put together a good rotation and were stuck in the middle of the East. One of their potential solutions to that was signing Adam Eaton in the 2007 off-season.

    I'm sure that most Philly fans want to forget Eaton, and for good reason. He received a $24 million, three year contract despite only starting 13 games for Texas in the previous year. Going prices were high during that off-season for everyone, but that is just not a smart investment. A 6.10 ERA and 14 wins later, Philadelphia ate the last year and $9 million of Eaton's deal.

    Honorable Mention: Raul Ibanez is almost a turnstile in left-field, all the while getting paid a cool $11.5 million in the last year of his three year, $31.5 million deal. His bat does not make up for it either, as Ibanez is hitting .223 on the year and he's very close to losing at bats. Case in point- don't give 35 year old outfielders who already struggle defensively huge money. It always comes back to bite you.

    Washington Nationals
    Most people are going to say Jayson Werth, and I will probably agree with you- he has struggled out the gate, and at the end of his deal, I will probably say the same things about him that I did about Ibanez. Still, Werth received a superstar deal, and the Nationals are expected him to be one for them- the verdict will be out on this for at least another year and a half.

    I'm going to go with another free agent instead, Adam LaRoche. He received a two year, $15 million to upgrade Adam Dunn's defense at first, and come back with comparable offensive numbers. While Dunn has struggled this season, LaRoche has been bad, hitting .182 and his slugging percentage (.277) is lower than his OBP (.298.) That is the only thing that LaRoche seems to have improved, and I'm sure the Nats would trade it for a better offensive player.

    Honorable Mention: Oliver Perez. Yeah, I'm grasping, but the Nationals haven't made a lot of free agent moves (and I'm not looking at the Expos for this.) After how bad Perez was with the Mets and how he handled himself professionally, I'm surprised that a team would take a risk on Perez, especially a team with a lot of youngsters.
  • NAHSTE
    Probably owns the site
    • Feb 2009
    • 22233

    #2
    You can't judge LaRoche on his early stats. He doesn't join the major league season until June or July of every season, at which point he turns into a HOFer.

    Comment

    • Primetime
      Thank You Prince
      • Nov 2008
      • 17526

      #3
      Originally posted by NAHSTE
      You can't judge LaRoche on his early stats. He doesn't join the major league season until June or July of every season, at which point he turns into a HOFer.
      Truf.

      A guy I loved and hated on the Braves. No matter the situation though, he's a dangerous batter in the line-up.

      Comment

      • Warner2BruceTD
        2011 Poster Of The Year
        • Mar 2009
        • 26142

        #4
        Originally posted by Primetime232
        Truf.

        A guy I loved and hated on the Braves. No matter the situation though, he's a dangerous batter in the line-up.
        Adam LaRoche dangerous?

        Anyway, can't wait until this guy does the Cubs.

        Comment

        • FedEx227
          Delivers
          • Mar 2009
          • 10454

          #5
          You can just put the Werth deal on there now, you could've put it there two seconds after he signed the deal, that's one of the worst value deals I've ever seen.
          VoicesofWrestling.com

          Comment

          • manchild24
            Kyle got fired
            • Nov 2008
            • 5863

            #6
            Originally posted by FedEx227
            You can just put the Werth deal on there now, you could've put it there two seconds after he signed the deal, that's one of the worst value deals I've ever seen.
            Werth needs to hit 310 30 110 to live up to that. Nats were doing anything to show fans they want to win and to get asses in the seats. Philly is missing his bat now.

            Comment

            • ThomasTomasz
              • Nov 2024

              #7
              Originally posted by FedEx227
              You can just put the Werth deal on there now, you could've put it there two seconds after he signed the deal, that's one of the worst value deals I've ever seen.
              It is, but I can't put him as a bad contract right now. His production is down, but that's also with LaRoche hitting terribly, and Zimmerman on the DL, leaving Werth with no protection at all. I'll at least give it a year, and I'll extend the same benefit to Carl Crawford when I look at the Red Sox even though I thought that deal was worse than the Werth signing.

              Comment

              • SethMode
                Master of Mysticism
                • Feb 2009
                • 5754

                #8
                Originally posted by ThomasTomasz
                It is, but I can't put him as a bad contract right now. His production is down, but that's also with LaRoche hitting terribly, and Zimmerman on the DL, leaving Werth with no protection at all. I'll at least give it a year, and I'll extend the same benefit to Carl Crawford when I look at the Red Sox even though I thought that deal was worse than the Werth signing.
                Dude, I think his point was, and I agree, that even if his production was what it was for the Phillies, it wasn't worth THAT contract.

                Comment

                • FedEx227
                  Delivers
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 10454

                  #9
                  No, there's no way he'll ever be worth that money, it's impossible. If he suddenly has a career year at age 31 and becomes an elite defender and run producer then yes, but taking his entire career there simply is no way he ever makes that deal look even remotely good.
                  VoicesofWrestling.com

                  Comment

                  • ThomasTomasz
                    • Nov 2024

                    #10
                    Originally posted by FedEx227
                    No, there's no way he'll ever be worth that money, it's impossible. If he suddenly has a career year at age 31 and becomes an elite defender and run producer then yes, but taking his entire career there simply is no way he ever makes that deal look even remotely good.
                    Fair enough. I still think its a deal they had to make to improve the team for one, and also to prove that they are a viable spot for a free agent. He won't be worth the money in five years, but it is a deal they had to do. It sucks, but that is how MLB works now.

                    Comment

                    • EmpireWF
                      Giants in the Super Bowl
                      • Mar 2009
                      • 24082

                      #11
                      But that deal doesn't really make them a viable FA spot. When you overpay like they did, it's strictly about money. It's not like if there's a bidding war between them and a more well thought-of team, the player won't require more money to come to Washington.

                      Similar in a way with the Mets a few years back. They gave Pedro more years than Boston was willing to go and that's why he signed with them. And they needed Pedro, even though everyone knew by the end of the contract he wouldn't be worth the money. Signing Pedro changed the culture at the time. With Beltran, they offered him more money/years than the Yankees were willing to offer and that's how they got him. Same with Jason Bay more recently, Boston was not going to go to 4 years for him, the Mets did and signed him.

                      I guess all teams have to overpay (like Boston has done with some of their talent) but it's trying to minimize long-term damage that's the key.


                      Comment

                      • NAHSTE
                        Probably owns the site
                        • Feb 2009
                        • 22233

                        #12
                        Upon re-reading the list, I don't see how the contract the Mets handed Mo Vaughn doesn't get mentioned. For $17 million in 2002, the Mets got 96 plate appearances out of Vaughn, 3 home runs, and a cool .652 OPS.

                        Comment

                        • EmpireWF
                          Giants in the Super Bowl
                          • Mar 2009
                          • 24082

                          #13
                          That fat fuck.


                          Comment

                          • Blade
                            Walking SAM site
                            • Feb 2009
                            • 3739

                            #14
                            After last night.......I am puttin Kyle Kendrick ahead of Ibanez. He's gotta have naked pictures of Ruben Amaro to be still on this roster, when he probably wouldn't even crack the D-Backs rotation.

                            Goddamn fuckin Kendrick!!!

                            Comment

                            • SethMode
                              Master of Mysticism
                              • Feb 2009
                              • 5754

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Blade
                              After last night.......I am puttin Kyle Kendrick ahead of Ibanez. He's gotta have naked pictures of Ruben Amaro to be still on this roster, when he probably wouldn't even crack the D-Backs rotation.

                              Goddamn fuckin Kendrick!!!
                              Oh come on...I'm far from a KK lover but be serious. The guy was ONLY starting because Blanton is hurt. He's basically a 6th guy or long reliever, and in that sense, they could do worse. Nothing beats Raul's awful contract.

                              It sucks that KK gave up 5 runs but what difference does that really make when the Phils have only scored 5 runs TOTAL in their last 4 games?

                              Comment

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