[外電] Duquette takes stand against opt-out c
以下文長,總而言之就是訪問DD關於他對於可跳脫合約的看法
基本上他表示球團不會願意同意這樣的合約
他也覺得這才是對的方式,對球團的利益才有保障
訪談中也有提到,Fowler的合約沒談成就是因為要求可跳脫合約條款
來源:MLB.com
連結:http://tinyurl.com/hzdzyoq
Duquette takes stand against opt-out clauses
By Phil Rogers / MLB.com February 25th, 2016
SARASOTA, Fla. -- Opt-out? Sorry, Dan Duquette, opts not to give
any player an opt-out.
The Orioles' executive vice president of baseball operations
made his views on opt-out clauses clear. Dexter Fowler either wasn't
listening or didn't really want to sign with the Orioles. There is
no way Duquette was going to let Fowler hit the market again
next winter if the outfielder was being guaranteed $33 million
over three years, as was widely reported.
It was a shock to fans in Baltimore, as well as to many players
at the Ed Smith Stadium complex, when Fowler re-signed with the Cubs
on Thursday afternoon. He will receive a guaranteed $13 million --
less than the $15.8 million qualifying offer he turned down back
in November -- but he will be able to hit the market again
next offseason if he desires.
Duquette and Buck Showalter were pumped at the idea of having Fowler
as their leadoff man and right fielder. So were the guys in the clubhouse.
"Fowler, if all that's true and Fowler's here, career on-base percentage
of .360 and he's at the top of the lineup -- that just makes our
lineup better," Orioles shortstop J.J. Hardy said before Thursday's
workout, when the belief was that the Fowler deal was pending only
a physical. "Now you move Manny [Machado] to two, and you have more guys
on base when he hits his 35 homers. It's shaping out to be a good lineup.
We like where we're at. We'll show up against any team and feel like
we can score runs.''
Uh, not so much, at least not regarding Fowler.
Duquette let the deal collapse rather than joining the opt-out craze.
It may have been especially offensive to the Orioles, since they had
already given up the 14th overall pick to sign free agent Yovani Gallardo
and would lose their second pick, No. 28 overall, as compensation for
signing Fowler.
"We made a very competitive offer,'' Duquette said. "The issue was
the opt-out. The Orioles have made it clear that that type of deal
wouldn't really work for us. … There was not an agreement to terms,
because they kept insisting on an opt-out. I don't see, club ownership
doesn't see, the value in that type of arrangement to the Orioles.
If we are going to guarantee a contract, it should be a contract.''
Make no mistake: This was a principled stand when the expedient thing
was to just give in and worry about the opt-out later.
Duquette watched the Red Sox give David Price an opt-out on top of a
$217 million deal, the D-backs give Zack Greinke one on top of a
$206.5 million deal and the Cubs give one to Jason Heyward on top of a
$184 million deal. The trend didn't stop there.
Justin Upton, Yoenis Cespedes, Johnny Cueto and Scott Kazmir also have
opt-out clauses.
Here's what Duquette is wondering: Why should the team take all the risk?
Shouldn't it be expected that a player will deliver after signing
a free-agent contract? If he does, shouldn't that benefit the club
who signed him? Why should a player then be able to put himself back
on the market?
If a long-term deal blows up in a team's face -- think of the Orioles'
agreements with Albert Belle and Brian Roberts -- then the team still
has to pay off the contract. Why give a player the right to terminate
a deal early when the team doesn't have the same right?
"Well, I don't see the advantage [to] the team,'' Duquette said.
"I don't see the advantage to the team of guaranteeing the money and
allowing the player to have a free look at the market. Either you're
going to play the market or you're going to commit to a team. Frankly,
I think it's better for our fans. Our fans want to know that the guys
that are playing for the Orioles are playing for the Orioles, that
they're committed to the team. And I believe that that's the right way
to operate the team as a business.''
Duquette is absolutely right. The trend toward giving away opt-out clauses
is bad for clubs. Just look at how Greinke jumped to the D-backs after
opting out of his Dodgers contract. Losing him was a major blow to
the Dodgers, just like extending Alex Rodriguez and CC Sabathia after
they opted out of their contracts has proven to be bad business for
the Yankees.
But the teams that are getting the deals these days seem to be
the ones willing to roll the dice over the opt-out clauses.
I asked Duquette if he feels like he's swimming upstream.
"No, I think that's the right way to run a ballclub,'' he said.
"If you can convince me to the merits for the team, I'm sure we can
consider it, but I've yet to see the value to the club.''
Missing out on Fowler isn't going to sink the Orioles. He would
have been a nice piece, but the tipping point of a baseball season
rarely happens in February.
"It will all be revealed to us,'' Showalter said. "Everybody wants
to know about it before it happens, but it will be revealed in time.'
--
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