Carlos Correa |
But on Tuesday, the Giants canceled a press conference during which Correa was scheduled to be formally introduced. Apparently, something came up in Correa's physical that held up the deal.
So, Correa reopened his free agency late Tuesday, and by Wednesday morning, he had a 12-year, $315 million deal with the New York Mets. He'll no longer be a shortstop, because the Mets already have Francisco Lindor. Instead, he'll play third base.
On Wednesday, I saw an estimate that said the Mets' payroll would be an estimated $384 million, with luxury tax penalties totaling $111 million. Add it all up, and that equals $495 million.
According to reports late Wednesday, the Mets are trading struggling catcher James McCann to the Baltimore Orioles, so that sheds some payroll. Still, this is one expensive baseball team.
Here are the contracts the Mets have doled out this offseason:
- Correa, 12 years, $315 million
- Brandon Nimmo, eight years, $162 million
- Edwin Diaz, five years, $102 million
- Justin Verlander, two years, $86 million
- Kodai Senga, five years, $75 million
- Jose Quintana, two years, $26 million
- Omar Narvaez, two years, $15 million
- Adam Ottavino, two years, $14.5 million
- David Robertson, one year, $10 million
That's a total of $806.1 million.
We've talked about the White Sox giving $75 million to Andrew Benintendi, and how that's the richest deal in team history. For the Mets, $75 million would only be the fifth-highest deal they've handed out this offseason. Forget team history.
No wonder Jerry Reinsdorf voted against allowing Steve Cohen to buy the Mets.
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