BP Comment Quick Links
![]() |
|
|
The First-ever Baseball Prospectus Futures Guide - now just $6.89 at Amazon ( bbp.cx/fg ) |
|
|
December 13, 2003 Prospectus TodayThings to Do in New Orleans While You Wait
New Orleans (BP) - And on the second day, we got an awful reminder of what last year was like. Don't remember the 2002 Winter Meetings? No one does, save for war stories of the Opryland Hotel in Nashville (and parts of Knoxville and Memphis). A couple thousand collected baseball people, media and hangers-on, and the only thing everyone can agree on is that the New Orleans Marriott is better than last year's hotel. Oh, and that there was nothing to talk about yesterday. The only press conference was the Blue Jays' announcement of the Miguel Batista signing. While any number of rumors swept the land, the stuff of actual substance wasn't sexy: the Royals getting close to Tony Graffanino, the Tigers getting far too close to Reggie Sanders, the Padres not as close as they'd like to be on a center fielder. It was the kind of day that tempts you into starting your own rumor. I'm not saying that's something the highly-trained professionals down here would ever think of doing, but if you happen to hear something about Paris Hilton, two well-known writers and enough Hurricanes to kill all three of them, just let it go. With each passing day on which few or no free agents sign, the pressure on players and agents grows. Come next Saturday, the deadline for tendering a contract offer to players on the 40-man roster, it's likely that the number of players seeking employment will double, with a particular swelling in the ranks of outfielders and first basemen. That non-tender date is on everyone's mind, and it's an element in every negotiation with a player below the level of superstar. The recognition that baseball's middle class is filled with guys who don't have to be highly-compensated just because they have service time or tenure with your ball club has permeated the landscape, and even without getting into the C word, that recognition is driving supply up and demand down. So we may see a lot of the guys who weren't tendered arbitration, and the free agents on the second and third tiers, sign deals this weekend just to keep themselves out of that mass of humanity. It's an interesting, and positive, change, because it frees teams to use the bulk of their resources on players who do make a difference in the standings. Whether they do, or if they just sit on the money, is a separate issue for another time. --
Joe Sheehan is an author of Baseball Prospectus.
|