By now, the baseball world knows that the Rangers won the right to negotiate with Yu Darvish and will send $51.7 million to the Nippon Ham Fighters if they are able to sign him. Just hours before the announcement, though, the Blue Jays were the trendy prediction—and that raises the question, why isn’t Darvish heading to Toronto?
The simple answer, of course, is that the Rangers’ bid was higher. But, why is that? On Tuesday, the Toronto Star reported that the Jays came just short in the posting process, and that their offer was for more than $50 million as well. If the right to negotiate with Darvish was worth $50 million to GM Alex Anthopoulos and the team’s owners, then surely $1.7 million more would not have been a deal breaker.
We may never know the exact value of the Jays’ bid, or how close they came to topping the Rangers. But $50 million—while a nice, round number—is not the threshold that matters. That would be $51.1 million: the Red Sox’s fee for the rights to Daisuke Matsuzaka. The Rangers did not bid $600,000 more than that for Darvish by accident, and when it comes to interpreting the Jays’ true intentions, $1.1 million makes all the difference.
If the Jays’ bid was between $50 million and $51.1 million, they were either in the running only for show or made a grave miscalculation regarding the symbolic value of the Matsuzaka figure. If it was between $51.1 million and $51.7 million, then Anthopoulos and co. were in it to win it and were merely edged out by Jon Daniels and Nolan Ryan.
The Rangers’ push for Darvish may have been motivated by the Angels’ splurge for Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson, but the value of their bid proved that they were seriously interested from the start. The Yankees’ bid of less than $20 million showed the opposite—and the same is true of any other submission below the $51.1 million mark.
If I could have predicted that it would take a hair more than the Dice-K figure to land Darvish, then the Blue Jays certainly should have known that as well. Many fans and pundits were convinced that the 25-year-old righty would be the prize of Toronto’s offseason. That $1.1 million may eventually tell us whether the Jays fooled us or will come away looking foolish themselves.
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@ScottyB:
I agree that $50 million would have been a very large bluff, but it's not really a bluff in that the Jays would not have lost $50 million had they not been able to sign Darvish.
@bigjonempire:
A couple of thing. First, with the changes in the conversion rate, $51.1 million now is less than it was when Matsuzaka came over. Second, I think it's likely that the Blue Jays were seriously interested, but given the symbolism of the Matsuzaka figure, if they were willing to go to $50 million, they should have gone over $51.1.
@Jay Taylor
That's essentially my point -- that knowing they bid over $50 million doesn't tell us much. If they indeed bid over $51.1 million, that would clarify their intent.
The bid number is only important as it relates to the bids of every other team. What if the Rangers had re-signed Wilson and not bid? There were a ton of reasons to believe that the bidding would not be as rich, and if rumors are true it wasn't, not as many teams bid and only one team believed they needed to beat 51.1,
The bottom line is we do not know if the Jays truly coveted Darvish or if they (or some in the media) just wanted to create the appearance that they were very interested. Unless a very reliable source divulges some key details, we will likely never know.
The Jays' story should now turn to how they will spend the $100 or so million they may have allotted to Darvish, if they spend it at all.
Second, if Rogers thought it could make back all or most of his contract from Darvish related increased revenues, than the Jays really did screw up. This implies little or no financial risk and all upside based on his performance.
I expected the winning bid for Darvish to be $56.something million or higher, because you absolutely cannot ignore the historical/symbolic piece here. That's why Pujols got the extra few million in his deal - so that he would have the 2nd highest contract ever and not the 3rd. These nuances matter greatly to teams and players.
Alex A is smart enough to know this. He's also smart enough to know that his main competitor for Prince Fielder are the Rangers. I'm guessing they hyped the Darvish bid to make sure the Rangers were in it to win it. If the Rangers are going to sink $100M into Darvish, that potentially removes them as an obstacle for the real prize: Prince.
(Yeah, I said it, I said the "S" word)