Just a small fun fact about Pujols: He's the only 1B since integration to rack up more than 2.0 dWAR for a season according to BRef. Elite in every facet of the game.
It's a fact that goes overlooked because of all of Pujols' offensive achievements, but his defense is what I think truly sets him apart from all the other power hitters of the 90s and 2000s. He was a . The positional adjustment is so heavy for 1B that putting up positive dwar at the position is a real accomplishment, let alone 2 war.
No doubt in my mind King Albert could've played 3B after Rolen was traded away and he could've pocketed an extra 20 WAR without even trying. He was that good at baseball and the inflation at 3B is nuts.
@@VACATETHE48 I have to disagree bc neither of them can get close to 3000k hits or 700HRs And the reason I put Pujols above Aaron is bc he played in the best era of pitching ever replacement level pitcher in todays league would be all star caliber players in the eras that Hank Aaron played in
I can’t believe I was lucky enough to grow up watching the best player of my generation, and he just happened to play for my favorite team. Watching Albert Pujols play was like playing MLB the show on rookie difficulty because he made everything look that easy. Not only putting up elite numbers, but carrying the team for long stretches, including carrying the team with the worst record ever to win the World Series in 2006. He won 3 MVPs, but that sells him short because he also had 4 second place finishes that just happened to occur during Barry Bonds historic run, Ryan Howard’s 59 HR season, and a great season from Votto. And the man had 3 home runs in a World Series game, which only 4 players have ever done. Oh, and he even put up a 30+ DRS season at first base, lapping the field in 2007. There’s not enough time in the world to talk about all he accomplished in St Louis, truly an all-time player
I've recommend your channel to any of my friends looking to get into baseball. You explain everything so clearly and give a great introduction into advanced stats
Great analysis! The first time the economics of baseball ever hit me was back in the day, when the SF Giants couldn't afford (or claimed they couldn't afford) to keep both Robbie Thompson and Will Clark. Broke my teenage heart!
Amazing work on this man you do an incredible amount of grinding to put out this content. I assume the Braves will be all over this list. Never heard of Rijo what a couple years he had
I’m barely even a casual baseball fan at this stage of life (38 in July), and never understood the economics of baseball even when I was deeper into the game. But watching this and utilizing context clues, I have a better understanding of major league contracts. Good work.
Jose Rijo started a youth baseball team up here in Seattle and he trains his teams at his own facility and everything, always wondered how he got the money to start that program, now everything makes sense😂 good dude
Dude, love your channel. Blows my mind you only have 45k subscribers. Keep grinding, you’ll get there. Your Baseball Movie episode is one of my favorite things on TH-cam.
I'm lucky to have grown up a Cards fan in the 2000s, so I got to watch Pujols in his prime all the time. The man was an absolute monster. Day in and day out, the man made power hitting look easy, and just racked up RBIs like no one else on the planet.
Another thing about Henderson's record, there is not a single active player at the moment in the top 100 of stolen bases all-time. Yeah. The most recent two to retire? Ichiro, aaaaand...Rajai Davis. Both of whom retired in 2019 (Davis played his last game in September 2019, while Ichiro was March, but let's forget the semantics). In addition, Henderson played for 25 years. Vince Coleman, who is in the top 10, played from 1985-1997. Henderson debuted 6 years before Coleman, and played his last game 4 years after he retired. Sometimes, one individual comes along and says, "I have a special set of abilities that will make me set a record that nobody before, now, or in the future will or can ever beat, and there is nothing anybody can do about it." That was Henderson. Some records can't be broken, because the original record still doesn't make sense all of these years later.
Man I know it was so long ago now but I would love a conclusion to the devo-dykstra gambit series on ootp. This video was fantastic as always, and I can’t wait to see more like this.
I would, but OOTP content is REALLY bad when it comes to amount of effort it takes versus how many people actually watch it. Also, I never really got over the hump in the OOTP save file, just made the playoffs for the next 4 years with early exits and the owner actually fired me for not getting past the first round.
@@BaseballsNotDead honestly, I just appreciate knowing how it ended. Still sad we don’t get a great video out of it, but I’m excited for other projects you’ve got cooking up.
I was wondering if Randy Johnson's extension would have appeared on this list. He was insanely good in 1994, 1995, and 1997 but the first two years were cut short by the strike, he missed almost all of 1996 due to back issues, and he was fairly mediocre in 1998 before he was traded to the Astros. Glad to see that it just missed the top 10. He truly is a Big Unit!
One important thing about the Salary that you may mention later but I figure would have already come up (commenting at 16:44) is that Marvin Miller was an incredibly shrewd negotiator. When fighting for Free Agency, the owners refused to budge and lost the arbitration despite being given every indication by the presiding arbitrators that they would lose if they didnt do something to give a little ground. Miller put on a master class, he actually made the owners think that he was doing them a favor by making players be under a teams control for 7 years. So the wages for the first 7 years were kept relatively stagnant. The owners thought of this as a safety blanket, the familiar and comfortable system they already know, for a time. Realistically though, this made sure that top talent was put on the market at a very slow rate compared to the amount of interested buyers. Effectively he not only created the market, but also artificially created scarcity in that market. He made player salaries go up exponentially by giving the owners what they wanted. I cant think of a more perfectly manipulated situation. He basically made the owners beg him for a golden shower and then made them pay him significant restitution because he felt slightly dehydrated afterwards. It was just so beautiful. Oh and then the owners realized salaries were going up too fast and colluded to break Free Agency and were caught and fined millions of dollars. The owner who was behind that conspiracy? The Impartial Chairman of Major League Baseball, Bud Selig of course. Conflict of interest? Clearly not.
Yount didn't "under perform" before his contract. Robin Yount went straight from high school to MLB. He wasn't 20 years old. Robin Yount was in the major leagues at 18 years old. He played a month or two in the minors and was instantly brought up. That first contract wasn't some huge shock. It was his contract from 23-29. Odd take. I'm old enough to recall this but there was no doubt Yount was going to be a massive star. He was drafted 3rd overall and came directly to the majors as an 18 year old and played like a high quality starting player right out the gate.
The Brewers also drafted SS Tommy Bianco 3rd overall in 1971. Bill Bordley was drafted 4th overall in 1976. Rick O'Keefe was 5th overall in 1975 and Butch Edge and Dan Thomas were taken 6th overall in 1974 and 1972 respectively. Most Brewers fans have no idea who these guys are because saying there "was no doubt" a top draft pick was going to be a star is something you can only say after they become a star. Relative to 1979-1983, from 1974-1978 he absolutely did underperform which got him a cheaper extension relative to what he was going to do. All the talk from 1974-1978 was "he is going to be a star" but he didn't become one until after signing this contract. There was even talk in 1977 of Paul Molitor coming up and taking over at SS and moving Yount to the OF which seems silly in hindsight but was seriously considered at the time.
A comment on the Boggs/Ichiro/Gwynn comparison and the mention of Boggs' high doubles totals. Fenway is a hitter's park, and many Red Sox have a higher home/road split than the normal 4% home boost, but Boggs on the road was a completely different hitter. With Boston, his home vs road slash line is .369/.465/.525 compared to .307/.391/.400, and his doubles split is 281/141 as well. Boggs still deserves credit for taking extra advantage of Fenway and he has a good argument as the best position player of the 1980s, but increasing your isolated power at home by 67% is ridiculous.
Ichiro takes it for me, with Gwynn a close second. Boggs was Hall of Fame, but I'd want the guy with 500 Stolen Bases when it comes to my lead off hitter
It was after his last team control year, so it came in as a free agent contract. I updated that list here after his option was declined... www.reddit.com/r/baseball/comments/17nqvhq/with_cincinnati_declining_joey_vottos_option_his/ It fared as one of the best free agent extensions in the last 10 years.
"I brute forced it and compiled all the data and analyzed it. It took me 2 months, but im proud to say its done." And we all get to watch the fruits of your labor in another 45 minute banger.
The fact people believe Henderson’s SB record is breakable is mind blowing. Only 3 players in MLB history have more than 900 SB and only one player has over 950 being Rickey Henderson with 1406 SB. For Lou Brock (2nd all time in SB) to catch Henderson it would take nearly 4 seasons of his highest single season SB with 118. For a player nowadays to get the record with the most SB in a season being around 70, it would take 20 seasons of 70 SB in a season to even get to the record.
The thing the Cards were missing from 2012 - 2015 was that MOTO bat Pujols provided. They couldn’t win another Title without him. So it’s not the best decision they’ve ever made. It’s debatable considering they haven’t won jack squat for titles since the day he left.
Dodgers fan here. Will be 62 this upcoming May. The leather for the finger webbing is gone, replaced by shoelace, but I still have my Mike Schmidt glove. Sadly, will be cremated, but if buried that would be buried with me (along with one of my Titan TPM2010s).
I debated putting him on the thumbnail because he was #1 and it could be a spoiler, but he is such an obvious inclusion that I couldn't NOT put him on the thumbnail.
I have a vivid memory of watching an ESPN story in the late 2000s...I can't remember which year, but Pujols had come up to bat several times that year with the bases loaded and he just couldn't miss. Hit 5 grand slams, and plenty of other good outcomes. Anyway, the talking heads were gawking at his numbers with the bases loaded, and OPS wasn't something most people knew at the time. One of them said something like, "And look at that OPS! An OPS of 1.000 is elite by the way. This small of a sample size, this great of a hitter, you wouldn't be surprised to see a 1.000, but DAMN SURE NOT A 2.000. The man is a legend." EDIT: Looked it up. It was 2009. Ended the year with a 2.171 OPS when the bases were loaded. sOPS+ of 441, lmao
As a Reds fan I agree about Larkins contracts. Drove me crazy back when he was playing when fans would bitch about his contract being a bad one. And I loved me some Jose Rijo.
The Braves had three players in the top 25, and one of them concluded as recently as 2021. They also have 4 candidates currently signed that could show up on this list within the next ten years. I'm a huge Braves fan, but I don't know if this information is an endorsement, or an indictment of their front office. Its good that they are savvy with their deals, but sometimes, I wonder if they go too far.
I agree. No one is EVER gonna break Rickey's stolen base record. Breaking it down numerically, if a player stole 50 bases a year for the next TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS...Rickey would still have more.
Kind of like Ryan's SO record. Randy Johnson and Roger Clemens might be two of the most dominant pitchers ever and both played well over two decades and despite being second and third on that list are still nowhere close to Ryan.
Just curious, how does Griffey's 1993-1996 contract with the Mariners rank? I know 1995 brought him down a bit, and he was one of the highest-paid players, but I'm shocked he didn't pass $100M.
The Best Arbitration Extensions: Felix Hernandez, 5 Year 78 Million in 2010. This got The Mariners his Cy Young, and his robbed Cy Young. Another Year was 4th in voting and 8th in voting.
@@BaseballsNotDead True, but thats still 3 Years 47 Million coming off a Robbed Cy Young in 2009 and got 3 All Stars, a Cy Young, and 4th in Cy Young voting. That extension was a "Shit, Sorry we suck Felix. Here's the highest pitching contract in the league".
Not that it makes any difference, but you could call “ok/fine” as “fair” since the player got what they deserved for their production and the team paid market value for the production.
The owner collusion didn't really happen until 1985 when the players DID start getting paid their worth and the owners freaked out especially with new commissioner Peter Uberroth having a meeting with the owners and saying it was dumb to sign long-term free agent contracts. They didn't have to collude prior to 1985 because players weren't getting paid their worth out of ignorance.
Tigers fan here, and yes most of us don't even think Morris was a HOFer (but congrats to him getting in... I won't rain on his parade anymore) but Lou & Tram not going in together is just a complete miscarriage of justice!
Morris is a crazy HOF inductee because if you remove 3 games from his career, he comes nowhere close to sniffing the hall. He's probably the one player where you could remove the smallest percent of his career to make him not even considered.
Funny you should mention that because Trammell and Morris both got elected by modern day committee the same year. Also fun fact, the guy that wrote that fluff/hit piece on Trammell and Morris is the same guy that wrote Tuesdays with Morie.
Alan Trammell may have short changed himself by negotiating without an agent, but at least he seemed to have a rudimentary understanding of inflation, unlike his peers.
If you really want to see a funny thing, when Morris made the HOF a writer talked about how he respected Morris, especially when Morris bought a 10,000 farm in Montana and tried to work it himself. IT WAS THE SAME WRITER! www.mitchalbom.com/alan-trammell-jack-morris-always-belonged-in-baseball-hall-of-fame/
@@BaseballsNotDeadelected the same year as Trammell no less. And the funny thing is, for all of Albom's insistence about how much people clearly hate Morris and love Trammell, Morris got considerably more ballot votes even if he couldn't get in that way. Neither one got elected until Modern Day selection in which Morris still got more votes. Maybe Albom had been too busy writing his hokey books to remember his hypocrisy.
40:36 I don't know what that writer was smoking when he spewed out that hate speech against Jack Morris. I can't speak for any Tigers fans out there, but as a Twins fan, you'd be hard pressed to find anyone around here who doesn't consider Jack Morris a local hero and a legend of the Game. All of this comes from his single year with the team. I can only imagine how much he is revered in Detroit, where he spent a decade and a half and helped bring in a World Series Championship to Detroit. What did he do in that World Series? He picked up two wins, both complete games, allowing just four runs total. Sure, Trammell had a great series and rightfully won the MVP, but who else was going to pick up a big pair of Ws for the Tigers? Certainly not Dan Petry. (Dan Petry had two terrible starts in that Series, losing one and on his way to giving another away before he was pulled. Nothing against Petry, but the numbers don't lie.) Interesting side note about that fateful Game 5: all three of the Hall of Famers who participated had horrible games. Trammell and Gwynn combined to go 0 for 9, and Rich Gossage gave up 4 runs in the late innings. Kirk Gibson, a notable member of the Hall of Great, had 2 home runs and 5 RBI.
9:00 is comparing a position player to a starting pitcher really valid in these scenarios? Seems like different markets. The mid level FA SPs get about what players many MVP caliber players get these daya, 25-30 a year
I think for Longoria v Price it's comparable because Price was a top 10 starting pitcher during his pre-arb and arbitration years while Longoria was perhaps the best position player in the league during that time.
No other baseball youtuber is putting this much effort. Spending months on this is crazy. Quality work here.
Foolish baseball
Both are goated
@@RupertMumphrey no
@@llhean3753 I agree
@@RupertMumphreynah he doesn't go in depth on this kind of stuff, he does his own kind of thing that's definitely less intensive
Just a small fun fact about Pujols:
He's the only 1B since integration to rack up more than 2.0 dWAR for a season according to BRef.
Elite in every facet of the game.
Best player of the century easy
It's a fact that goes overlooked because of all of Pujols' offensive achievements, but his defense is what I think truly sets him apart from all the other power hitters of the 90s and 2000s. He was a . The positional adjustment is so heavy for 1B that putting up positive dwar at the position is a real accomplishment, let alone 2 war.
No doubt in my mind King Albert could've played 3B after Rolen was traded away and he could've pocketed an extra 20 WAR without even trying. He was that good at baseball and the inflation at 3B is nuts.
I think Trout and Ohtani both have Pujols beat, but he can easily go down as the best infielder.
@@VACATETHE48 I have to disagree bc neither of them can get close to 3000k hits or 700HRs And the reason I put Pujols above Aaron is bc he played in the best era of pitching ever replacement level pitcher in todays league would be all star caliber players in the eras that Hank Aaron played in
I can’t believe I was lucky enough to grow up watching the best player of my generation, and he just happened to play for my favorite team. Watching Albert Pujols play was like playing MLB the show on rookie difficulty because he made everything look that easy. Not only putting up elite numbers, but carrying the team for long stretches, including carrying the team with the worst record ever to win the World Series in 2006. He won 3 MVPs, but that sells him short because he also had 4 second place finishes that just happened to occur during Barry Bonds historic run, Ryan Howard’s 59 HR season, and a great season from Votto. And the man had 3 home runs in a World Series game, which only 4 players have ever done. Oh, and he even put up a 30+ DRS season at first base, lapping the field in 2007. There’s not enough time in the world to talk about all he accomplished in St Louis, truly an all-time player
Ronald Acuna Jr and Ozzie Albies. Absolute bargains extensions for the talent level that those 2 have.
No idea how you don’t have at least 500k+ subscribers, incredible content love the analytical side of contracts.
Thanks!
I agree
97-03 Pedro was the best pitching Ive ever seen in my life. Could have extended him by eleventy billion dollars and Id call it smart.
Starting pitcher yes 🙌 I agree
Eric Gagne for 1 inning may have been the best ever
Red Sox’s fan or well at that time I was petey el duro may be my favorite player ❤but idk 🤷♂️ they where both unhittable
I've recommend your channel to any of my friends looking to get into baseball. You explain everything so clearly and give a great introduction into advanced stats
Awesome! Thank you!
Great analysis! The first time the economics of baseball ever hit me was back in the day, when the SF Giants couldn't afford (or claimed they couldn't afford) to keep both Robbie Thompson and Will Clark. Broke my teenage heart!
The best intro song in all of TH-cam. So happy to get more content from this awesome channel.
Thanks!
Amazing work on this man you do an incredible amount of grinding to put out this content. I assume the Braves will be all over this list. Never heard of Rijo what a couple years he had
Jose was a beast. I was too young to enjoy him as a young Reds fan, but I remember his comeback and the hype around it.
😂😂
Thanks!
averaging 8 war for as long as pujols did is insane on its own, but him doing it as a first baseman is whats really impossible
It’s always a good day when Baseball’s Not Dead uploads
Glad I made your day!
The movement on Greg Maddux's stuff from 22:40-22:48 is NASTY work 😮💨
this, THIS, is a BASEBALL FAN video. not a team fan, a fan of the sport. great video
I’m barely even a casual baseball fan at this stage of life (38 in July), and never understood the economics of baseball even when I was deeper into the game. But watching this and utilizing context clues, I have a better understanding of major league contracts. Good work.
I would love a breakdown of each category as its own video
YES a breakdown of terrible would be amazing lol
The terrible contracts will get a breakdown after I get back from my current holiday vacation.
@@BaseballsNotDead 👍🏻 I’ll have notifications on
Man I love each new video. I'm a newbie to the sport living in the UK and each video is great entertainment and a great education.
Thanks!
Jose Rijo started a youth baseball team up here in Seattle and he trains his teams at his own facility and everything, always wondered how he got the money to start that program, now everything makes sense😂 good dude
Dude, love your channel. Blows my mind you only have 45k subscribers. Keep grinding, you’ll get there. Your Baseball Movie episode is one of my favorite things on TH-cam.
Appreciate it!
This is one of the best baseball channels on TH-cam.
Appreciate it!
I'm lucky to have grown up a Cards fan in the 2000s, so I got to watch Pujols in his prime all the time. The man was an absolute monster. Day in and day out, the man made power hitting look easy, and just racked up RBIs like no one else on the planet.
Another thing about Henderson's record, there is not a single active player at the moment in the top 100 of stolen bases all-time. Yeah. The most recent two to retire? Ichiro, aaaaand...Rajai Davis. Both of whom retired in 2019 (Davis played his last game in September 2019, while Ichiro was March, but let's forget the semantics). In addition, Henderson played for 25 years. Vince Coleman, who is in the top 10, played from 1985-1997. Henderson debuted 6 years before Coleman, and played his last game 4 years after he retired. Sometimes, one individual comes along and says, "I have a special set of abilities that will make me set a record that nobody before, now, or in the future will or can ever beat, and there is nothing anybody can do about it." That was Henderson. Some records can't be broken, because the original record still doesn't make sense all of these years later.
Amazing work and research! Always love your videos.
Thanks!
Man I know it was so long ago now but I would love a conclusion to the devo-dykstra gambit series on ootp. This video was fantastic as always, and I can’t wait to see more like this.
I would, but OOTP content is REALLY bad when it comes to amount of effort it takes versus how many people actually watch it.
Also, I never really got over the hump in the OOTP save file, just made the playoffs for the next 4 years with early exits and the owner actually fired me for not getting past the first round.
@@BaseballsNotDead honestly, I just appreciate knowing how it ended. Still sad we don’t get a great video out of it, but I’m excited for other projects you’ve got cooking up.
This was such a good video, thank you for all the effort!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Oh my gosh kuddos to you to do all this work man
Thanks!
I was wondering if Randy Johnson's extension would have appeared on this list. He was insanely good in 1994, 1995, and 1997 but the first two years were cut short by the strike, he missed almost all of 1996 due to back issues, and he was fairly mediocre in 1998 before he was traded to the Astros. Glad to see that it just missed the top 10. He truly is a Big Unit!
Love the effort and continued long form videos
Thanks!
The amount of effort you put into each video is staggering to me. You deserve any success you get sir!
Thanks! 👍
Your vids make me so happy!
Your comments make me so happy!
Great content as always
This is how you earn a new subscriber. Great content
As always, your data nerd videos make this baseball nerd happy
Thanks!
This is great work. For a second there I thought Baseball's Not Dead was dead. But nah, he was just grinding.
Thanks!
The goat is back
I'm pretty sure Ruth is dead.
One important thing about the Salary that you may mention later but I figure would have already come up (commenting at 16:44) is that Marvin Miller was an incredibly shrewd negotiator. When fighting for Free Agency, the owners refused to budge and lost the arbitration despite being given every indication by the presiding arbitrators that they would lose if they didnt do something to give a little ground. Miller put on a master class, he actually made the owners think that he was doing them a favor by making players be under a teams control for 7 years. So the wages for the first 7 years were kept relatively stagnant. The owners thought of this as a safety blanket, the familiar and comfortable system they already know, for a time. Realistically though, this made sure that top talent was put on the market at a very slow rate compared to the amount of interested buyers. Effectively he not only created the market, but also artificially created scarcity in that market.
He made player salaries go up exponentially by giving the owners what they wanted. I cant think of a more perfectly manipulated situation. He basically made the owners beg him for a golden shower and then made them pay him significant restitution because he felt slightly dehydrated afterwards. It was just so beautiful.
Oh and then the owners realized salaries were going up too fast and colluded to break Free Agency and were caught and fined millions of dollars. The owner who was behind that conspiracy? The Impartial Chairman of Major League Baseball, Bud Selig of course. Conflict of interest? Clearly not.
I’m a huge stat nerd but not a baseball guy. I am now balls deep in $ per WAR and have no idea how I got here but this guy is incredible.
Phenomenal video, commenting just to help with algorithm because you deserve to be seen more
Appreciate it!
Great stuff as always
Thanks!
The GOAT returns!
Yount didn't "under perform" before his contract.
Robin Yount went straight from high school to MLB. He wasn't 20 years old. Robin Yount was in the major leagues at 18 years old.
He played a month or two in the minors and was instantly brought up.
That first contract wasn't some huge shock. It was his contract from 23-29.
Odd take. I'm old enough to recall this but there was no doubt Yount was going to be a massive star. He was drafted 3rd overall and came directly to the majors as an 18 year old and played like a high quality starting player right out the gate.
The Brewers also drafted SS Tommy Bianco 3rd overall in 1971. Bill Bordley was drafted 4th overall in 1976. Rick O'Keefe was 5th overall in 1975 and Butch Edge and Dan Thomas were taken 6th overall in 1974 and 1972 respectively. Most Brewers fans have no idea who these guys are because saying there "was no doubt" a top draft pick was going to be a star is something you can only say after they become a star.
Relative to 1979-1983, from 1974-1978 he absolutely did underperform which got him a cheaper extension relative to what he was going to do.
All the talk from 1974-1978 was "he is going to be a star" but he didn't become one until after signing this contract. There was even talk in 1977 of Paul Molitor coming up and taking over at SS and moving Yount to the OF which seems silly in hindsight but was seriously considered at the time.
another banger video, keep it up
A comment on the Boggs/Ichiro/Gwynn comparison and the mention of Boggs' high doubles totals. Fenway is a hitter's park, and many Red Sox have a higher home/road split than the normal 4% home boost, but Boggs on the road was a completely different hitter. With Boston, his home vs road slash line is .369/.465/.525 compared to .307/.391/.400, and his doubles split is 281/141 as well. Boggs still deserves credit for taking extra advantage of Fenway and he has a good argument as the best position player of the 1980s, but increasing your isolated power at home by 67% is ridiculous.
Ichiro takes it for me, with Gwynn a close second. Boggs was Hall of Fame, but I'd want the guy with 500 Stolen Bases when it comes to my lead off hitter
This paired with a worst is really cool
Absolutely great video
Glad you enjoyed it
Best intro in sports TH-cam debate a wall
Hell yeah, baseball content
Hell yeah, baseball comment.
31:41 Got to have that 23-22 game when talking about Schmidt
Phenomenal video. Just curious, where does Joey Votto's extension land on the list tier wise?
It was after his last team control year, so it came in as a free agent contract. I updated that list here after his option was declined... www.reddit.com/r/baseball/comments/17nqvhq/with_cincinnati_declining_joey_vottos_option_his/
It fared as one of the best free agent extensions in the last 10 years.
Best intro on TH-cam. I will never not say it
"I brute forced it and compiled all the data and analyzed it. It took me 2 months, but im proud to say its done."
And we all get to watch the fruits of your labor in another 45 minute banger.
The fact people believe Henderson’s SB record is breakable is mind blowing. Only 3 players in MLB history have more than 900 SB and only one player has over 950 being Rickey Henderson with 1406 SB. For Lou Brock (2nd all time in SB) to catch Henderson it would take nearly 4 seasons of his highest single season SB with 118. For a player nowadays to get the record with the most SB in a season being around 70, it would take 20 seasons of 70 SB in a season to even get to the record.
I'm still struggling with the fact Wade Boggs is no longer with us. RIP legend
The thing the Cards were missing from 2012 - 2015 was that MOTO bat Pujols provided. They couldn’t win another Title without him. So it’s not the best decision they’ve ever made. It’s debatable considering they haven’t won jack squat for titles since the day he left.
Dodgers fan here. Will be 62 this upcoming May. The leather for the finger webbing is gone, replaced by shoelace, but I still have my Mike Schmidt glove. Sadly, will be cremated, but if buried that would be buried with me (along with one of my Titan TPM2010s).
Waited the whole video to see where Pujols was gonna come in at on the list. Glad to see I wasn’t disappointed
I debated putting him on the thumbnail because he was #1 and it could be a spoiler, but he is such an obvious inclusion that I couldn't NOT put him on the thumbnail.
Amazing job!
Thanks!
As a stlouis boy back then, looking at that baseball reference page for Pujols with a new set of eyes was a trip. Insane. It feels like a dream.
I have a vivid memory of watching an ESPN story in the late 2000s...I can't remember which year, but Pujols had come up to bat several times that year with the bases loaded and he just couldn't miss. Hit 5 grand slams, and plenty of other good outcomes. Anyway, the talking heads were gawking at his numbers with the bases loaded, and OPS wasn't something most people knew at the time. One of them said something like, "And look at that OPS! An OPS of 1.000 is elite by the way. This small of a sample size, this great of a hitter, you wouldn't be surprised to see a 1.000, but DAMN SURE NOT A 2.000. The man is a legend."
EDIT: Looked it up. It was 2009. Ended the year with a 2.171 OPS when the bases were loaded. sOPS+ of 441, lmao
As a Reds fan I agree about Larkins contracts. Drove me crazy back when he was playing when fans would bitch about his contract being a bad one. And I loved me some Jose Rijo.
liking for the effort
Appreciate it.
As soon as he said 2 months I paused the video and saluted. He's doing gods work for baseball fans
he’s so underrated
Thanks!
amazing video
25 times the players got so screwed they should probably be considering suing their agents/agencies
I love how any montage involving Johnson has to include the bird clip.
It's that bird law you keep hearing about.
I have a feeling the Bobby Witt Jr contract could be on this list one day. A decade from now his contact is gonna seem like a steal for the Royals.
Fantastic video as always
Also 36:02 it was 2012
Yep. I tend to misspeak sometimes.
The Braves had three players in the top 25, and one of them concluded as recently as 2021. They also have 4 candidates currently signed that could show up on this list within the next ten years. I'm a huge Braves fan, but I don't know if this information is an endorsement, or an indictment of their front office. Its good that they are savvy with their deals, but sometimes, I wonder if they go too far.
Too far how?
Jose rijo had some nasty stuff in his prime pre injury!
We miss you
I agree. No one is EVER gonna break Rickey's stolen base record. Breaking it down numerically, if a player stole 50 bases a year for the next TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS...Rickey would still have more.
Yeah, it ain't happening in my mind.
Kind of like Ryan's SO record. Randy Johnson and Roger Clemens might be two of the most dominant pitchers ever and both played well over two decades and despite being second and third on that list are still nowhere close to Ryan.
The Marge Reds dished out some quality contracts.
People thinking Ricky’s stolen base record is being touched simply don’t know ball
28:48 Rest in peace, legend!
babe wake up baseball's not dead posted
If you're talking to Ruth, going to be difficult to get him up without some severe smelling salts and a shovel.
Jose Rijo was a stud.
The pujols thing is crazy.. he was the best first baseman in baseball and then suddenly on of the worst
Plantar fasciitis.
Makes you wonder if he may have been older than he leads on...
Just curious, how does Griffey's 1993-1996 contract with the Mariners rank? I know 1995 brought him down a bit, and he was one of the highest-paid players, but I'm shocked he didn't pass $100M.
Now can you do one of “best negotiated contracts” where the players production was fully compensated, they were not over, or underpaid.
The Best Arbitration Extensions: Felix Hernandez, 5 Year 78 Million in 2010. This got The Mariners his Cy Young, and his robbed Cy Young. Another Year was 4th in voting and 8th in voting.
Hernandez signed another extension in 2013 that shortened his arbitration extension to only 3 years, really lowering it's total value.
@@BaseballsNotDead True, but thats still 3 Years 47 Million coming off a Robbed Cy Young in 2009 and got 3 All Stars, a Cy Young, and 4th in Cy Young voting.
That extension was a "Shit, Sorry we suck Felix. Here's the highest pitching contract in the league".
I love Adam Eaton 6:22
good vid
Appreciate it!
Jeff Bagwell went to my high school!
Not that it makes any difference, but you could call “ok/fine” as “fair” since the player got what they deserved for their production and the team paid market value for the production.
That's fair.
I love how you said the late 70s and 80s player getting criminally underpaid.
Yes that’s correct the owners were sued and lost for payment collusion.
The owner collusion didn't really happen until 1985 when the players DID start getting paid their worth and the owners freaked out especially with new commissioner Peter Uberroth having a meeting with the owners and saying it was dumb to sign long-term free agent contracts.
They didn't have to collude prior to 1985 because players weren't getting paid their worth out of ignorance.
“I love you” ~ Patrick Star
Tigers fan here, and yes most of us don't even think Morris was a HOFer (but congrats to him getting in... I won't rain on his parade anymore) but Lou & Tram not going in together is just a complete miscarriage of justice!
Morris is a crazy HOF inductee because if you remove 3 games from his career, he comes nowhere close to sniffing the hall.
He's probably the one player where you could remove the smallest percent of his career to make him not even considered.
Funny you should mention that because Trammell and Morris both got elected by modern day committee the same year. Also fun fact, the guy that wrote that fluff/hit piece on Trammell and Morris is the same guy that wrote Tuesdays with Morie.
@@bigbearkat2010Ol' Mitchie
So is the George Brett contract a typo?
I fucking love your content dude
Thanks!
In 10 years this list is just going to be all the current Braves contracts
Imagine the contract Mike Schmidt,George Brett and Nolan Ryan would get if they were playing at their prime today.
I hope that this can be done again in like 2030 so that half the Braves current roster can make the list 😂
Alan Trammell may have short changed himself by negotiating without an agent, but at least he seemed to have a rudimentary understanding of inflation, unlike his peers.
Whenever his current deal is over I would like to see where Ronald Acuña Jr deal ends up.
So pretty much Albert Pujols is the greatest player to ever exist.
26:29 is a painful one to look at. Cal got hosed with that call, ball was a foot off the plate.
that detroit article is the funniest thing I have ever seen, it was so fucking personal😭
If you really want to see a funny thing, when Morris made the HOF a writer talked about how he respected Morris, especially when Morris bought a 10,000 farm in Montana and tried to work it himself.
IT WAS THE SAME WRITER!
www.mitchalbom.com/alan-trammell-jack-morris-always-belonged-in-baseball-hall-of-fame/
@@BaseballsNotDeadelected the same year as Trammell no less. And the funny thing is, for all of Albom's insistence about how much people clearly hate Morris and love Trammell, Morris got considerably more ballot votes even if he couldn't get in that way. Neither one got elected until Modern Day selection in which Morris still got more votes.
Maybe Albom had been too busy writing his hokey books to remember his hypocrisy.
@@BaseballsNotDead Just a student of the game, I see. Would have respected tramell.
40:36 I don't know what that writer was smoking when he spewed out that hate speech against Jack Morris. I can't speak for any Tigers fans out there, but as a Twins fan, you'd be hard pressed to find anyone around here who doesn't consider Jack Morris a local hero and a legend of the Game. All of this comes from his single year with the team.
I can only imagine how much he is revered in Detroit, where he spent a decade and a half and helped bring in a World Series Championship to Detroit. What did he do in that World Series? He picked up two wins, both complete games, allowing just four runs total. Sure, Trammell had a great series and rightfully won the MVP, but who else was going to pick up a big pair of Ws for the Tigers? Certainly not Dan Petry.
(Dan Petry had two terrible starts in that Series, losing one and on his way to giving another away before he was pulled. Nothing against Petry, but the numbers don't lie.)
Interesting side note about that fateful Game 5: all three of the Hall of Famers who participated had horrible games. Trammell and Gwynn combined to go 0 for 9, and Rich Gossage gave up 4 runs in the late innings. Kirk Gibson, a notable member of the Hall of Great, had 2 home runs and 5 RBI.
Well, also look at George's clutch homeruns before the contract, and then after '79...he hit .390 for the love of GOD haha
9:00 is comparing a position player to a starting pitcher really valid in these scenarios? Seems like different markets. The mid level FA SPs get about what players many MVP caliber players get these daya, 25-30 a year
I think for Longoria v Price it's comparable because Price was a top 10 starting pitcher during his pre-arb and arbitration years while Longoria was perhaps the best position player in the league during that time.
Do the worst next