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Dodgers Considering $250MM+ Offer To Yamamoto

By Anthony Franco | December 19, 2023 at 9:38pm CDT

The Dodgers are considering presenting an offer in the $250-300MM range to Yoshinobu Yamamoto, reports Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times. Reports from yesterday indicated that teams are likely to put forth contract proposals to the NPB star this week, with a decision perhaps coming by Monday.

Yamamoto’s landing spot and price point are perhaps the biggest remaining story of the offseason. The 25-year-old righty has emerged as the clear top free agent after Shohei Ohtani came off the board. It is believed the field has narrowed to seven teams: the Dodgers, Yankees, Mets, Giants, Red Sox, Phillies and Blue Jays.

This morning, Ken Rosenthal of the Athletic indicated Philadelphia and Toronto are more on the outside of the market and could be longer shots. Sportsnet’s Ben Nicholson-Smith echoes that with regards to the Jays, reporting that Toronto is less likely to be one of the top finalists on Yamamoto than they were on Ohtani.

Meanwhile, Alex Speier of the Boston Globe writes that the pitcher’s visit to the East Coast last week only consisted of a stop in New York to chat with the Yankees and Mets. While the Red Sox and Phils conducted in-person interviews with Yamamoto, officials from both teams met with the pitcher and his representatives in Los Angeles.

In recent weeks, there has been increasing speculation the price tag could exceed $300MM. That’s particularly true when considering the accompanying posting fee that would be owed to his former team, the Orix Buffaloes. An MLB club would owe the Buffaloes 20% of the contract’s first $25MM ($5MM), 17.5% of the next $25MM ($4.375MM), and 15% of additional spending.

An offer of $250MM to Yamamoto, which seems a conservative estimate of his earning power at this point given the robust interest, would require a $39.375MM posting fee. That’d put the total commitment a little north of $289MM. If a team were to offer Yamamoto $300MM, that’d come with a $46.875MM posting sum that pushes their spending to nearly $347MM.

Of course, that’s even before getting to luxury tax implications — which would come into play for the known suitors aside from Boston and San Francisco. The Dodgers have a competitive balance tax projection around $256MM, as calculated by Roster Resource. That places them right on the border of the $257MM second threshold of penalization.

As a payor for the third straight year, they’d be taxed at a 62% rate for spending between $257MM and $277MM and at a 95% clip on money from $277MM to $297MM (with a 110% tax on any spending thereafter). Signing Yamamoto would push them past the $277MM threshold with ease, quite likely tacking on another $17MM or more in taxes in year one. To be clear, only the amount paid to Yamamoto would factor into the competitive balance tax calculation; the posting fee is not part of that calculus.

Of course, the deferrals in the Ohtani deal (along with lesser but still notable deferrals for Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman) lower their immediate raw payroll. Their actual salary commitments for next season are south of $200MM, well below the approximate $223MM mark they carried into 2023.

Los Angeles certainly isn’t the only team weighing an offer in this range for the three-time Sawamura Award winner. If Yamamoto signs elsewhere, Harris suggests that L.A. is likelier to turn to the trade market for pitching help as opposed to pivoting to another top free agent like Blake Snell or Jordan Montgomery. The Dodgers already struck for Tyler Glasnow on the trade front but remain on the hunt for starting pitching behind their top three of Glasnow, Walker Buehler and Bobby Miller.

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Boston Red Sox Los Angeles Dodgers Toronto Blue Jays Yoshinobu Yamamoto

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View Comments (276)
Post a Comment

276 Comments

  1. baked mcbride

    2 years ago

    C’mon, admit it, this would be pretty cool.

    14
    Reply
    • metsfan1992

      2 years ago

      No, I’m tired of Dodgers buying everyone and then getting eliminated 1st round of playoffs

      73
      Reply
      • PeteRose’s Bookie

        2 years ago

        The Mets did it last year and didn’t even make the playoffs

        35
        Reply
        • evillazilla88

          2 years ago

          Mets retained their own players payroll was bloated from signing two pitchers at 45 million was is smart no but it was their only shot winning

          2
          Reply
      • StreakingBlue

        2 years ago

        The Dodgers are hardly “buying” anyone. Its a free market, and they are simply going after their specific targets. They don’t throw money around like other teams (Padres and Mets) who suffer for doing wild spending.

        20
        Reply
        • Brew88

          2 years ago

          They simply have outspent every team in the league over the past 10 years, you really can’t compare them to any other team.

          33
          Reply
        • i like al conin

          2 years ago

          StreakingBiue, they will be buying a championship if they win it. It’ll be tainted in my view but it’s not against the rules.

          14
          Reply
        • Steve Roberts

          2 years ago

          Dodgers are the new Yankees most hated team in baseball ruining the sport.

          26
          Reply
        • The_M4N

          2 years ago

          @StreakingBlue, your blue is streaking, spinmaster.

          6
          Reply
        • fox471 Dave

          2 years ago

          Padres and Mets would disagree.

          2
          Reply
        • Elon’sDOGEbag

          2 years ago

          @Steve Ruining the sport, you say?

          Yes, it’s far more preferable to have 30 teams made up of complete losers with incompetent penny-pinching front offices to make the sport enjoyable to watch. THAT is what excites fans.

          Instead of trying to project your own team’s incompetence by hating those who allow this sport to SURVIVE- know this: Baseball would die out if every team were as cheap and self-sabotaging as the sickly A’s or the pathetic Mariners.

          All teams make profits. I do not feel bad for those teams who are considered “poor”.

          These are not regular people trying to survive- all 30 teams are large businesses without feelings- and all of them want one thing: your money! Hate them all you want, but if there weren’t teams who consolidate star power there wouldn’t be Major League Baseball.

          18
          Reply
        • StreakingBlue

          2 years ago

          Champions are not bought. There is never a guarantee of anything other then paying the contract.

          8
          Reply
        • StreakingBlue

          2 years ago

          Hee hee haw haw

          2
          Reply
        • CardsFan57

          2 years ago

          @StreakingBlue
          Any team signing a free agent is buying a player’s talent. That’s kind of the way it works. The Dodgers have more revenue than any other team so they can afford it. It’s still buying players.

          9
          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          2 years ago

          Every team is trying to buy a championship. Some are simply willing to pay more for one.

          10
          Reply
        • DeusSexMachina

          2 years ago

          “It’ll be tainted in my view but it’s not against the rules”

          Of course you’re saying that. That’s what we call “copium.” It’s just funny you’re already drinking it up and they haven’t even won yet. Then again, you’ve probably been well stocked since 2020. It will be comments like these I’ll remember most when the Dodgers win the World Series again. Knowing it pains you makes it that much sweeter.

          6
          Reply
        • Wire to wire 2024

          2 years ago

          I ain’t reading all that

          5
          Reply
        • Candy Maldonado

          2 years ago

          “Poor” teams with low payrolls can certainly be spending a lot more, and *should* be forced to, but let’s not pretend every franchise is capable of spending to the same limits. The ownership groups do not have equal resources, their teams do not generate equal revenue, and a *huge* piece of that is simple geographical market.

          As long as the dumb billionaire ownership model exists, larger markets will have a permanent unearned advantage because their owners don’t have to forfeit as much profit to boost payroll. You like it because it benefits your team, fine, but it’s not hard to understand why it annoys folks who know it’s an inherently uneven playing field.

          10
          Reply
        • i like al conin

          2 years ago

          @Deus, glad I’ll be on your mind a lot. Top revenue teams get to have longer competitive windows than lower revenue teams. The Dodgers’ resources are part of a competitive imbalance in the system. But the CBA allows it so it’s not cheating, But notice they have to buy the premium players in an attempt to get over their playoff barrier.

          2
          Reply
        • Don’s Ghost

          2 years ago

          LOL. you people are ridiculous. “it’ll be tainted” but when the Dodgers have lost, you’ve said “see! you can’t buy championships.” You can’t have it both ways. The reality is: titles are won in the board room AND on the field.

          Your attempts to cope won’t make it illegitimate.

          9
          Reply
        • DeusSexMachina

          2 years ago

          Deflect all you want. You’re obsessed with the Dodgers. Everyone sees it. Keep crying, you’re irrelevant franchise won’t win anytime soon and you know it. That’s what really bothers you.

          1
          Reply
        • i like al conin

          2 years ago

          Haha hilarious. You and I have never interacted. I’m in your head already.

          3
          Reply
        • MLB Top 100 Commenter

          2 years ago

          Steve

          How are they ruining the sport?

          They are not hogging all of the championships!

          It is wildly entertaining for fans to see underdogs defeat teams like the Yankees, Mets, Dodgers and Padres!

          The sport gets more revenue when big market teams are in contention for much of the season!

          Nothing makes the sport better than for big market teams to go big but fall short!

          I have spoken.

          1
          Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          Streak – Any time a team wins a championship with the highest payroll in MLB, it’s bought.

          Do you also think the Dodgers and Yankees make the playoffs nearly every year because they are geniuses?

          5
          Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          Blue – You’ve confused willing with able.

          It’s not a coincidence the two highest revenue teams in MLB are consistently the two biggest spenders.

          Go to a casino, the biggest slot machine winners are the ones playing the high limit machines. Those people are “willing” to gamble big because they can afford to gamble big.

          4
          Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          Don – Teams that spend a lot more have an advantage, what’s so hard to understand about that? Nobody is saying the biggest spenders are guaranteed championships.

          Who has a better chance of winning a lottery prize, a guy who spends $10 on lottery tickets or a guy who spends $10,000?

          This is a ridiculous conversation.

          2
          Reply
        • Joe says...

          2 years ago

          So you favor the indentured servant route?
          There should be a free market and players should be able to decide where they want to go.
          There is nothing wrong with “buying” a championship.

          3
          Reply
        • User 401527550

          2 years ago

          Don’t throw money around? 700 m contract for a player with his second bad Elbow and another 100 m plus for a pitcher that has significant injuries every year is definitely not wise investments. They sound good at them time but the Dodgers will pay down the road.

          2
          Reply
        • 66TheNumberOfTheBest

          2 years ago

          Football does it.
          Hockey does it.
          Basketball does it.

          You are saying that baseball is an inferior sport that cannot survive without being borderline WWE?

          You might be right.

          Trash league.

          Reply
        • WiffleBall

          2 years ago

          Blame capitalism.

          Reply
        • Ski to Coors

          2 years ago

          Most owners would go broke. Competitive balance doesn’t really exist in baseball. I fail to see how spending a fortune on payroll makes the sport better. There should be a salary cap but the big city legacy franchises run the sport.

          1
          Reply
        • drasco036

          2 years ago

          The Dodgers will be buying a Championship because they aren’t going to make the World Series, let alone win it.
          The Dodgers are just like me, the only World Series ring they are going to get is coming off eBay.

          Reply
        • eichejt0570

          2 years ago

          Buddy the Dodgers buy their best players and seem to have a terrible time developing their own players. That typically leads to very little chemistry in the clubhouse hence why they just got put out by the D-Backs. The D-Backs didn’t belong in the World Series as it wasn’t much of a World Series with them in it. Look at Yordan Alvarez. Probably the best hitter in the game and the Dodgers gave him up for Josh Fields because the Dodgers couldn’t develop him!

          1
          Reply
        • VinScullysSon

          2 years ago

          I read that in the voice of Cletus the slack-jawed yokel.

          Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          Mets – The big market teams can afford to make mistakes and waste millions on contracts, that’s part of the advantage they have.

          Even though my favorite team is a big market one, I can understand how difficult it is to be a fan of a small market team. You basically have to hope your prospects develop into stars, otherwise you’re pretty much the MLB version of the Washington Generals.

          3
          Reply
        • VinScullysSon

          2 years ago

          @eichejt0570, that’s the worst take! How do you think team chemistry won them 100 games in a season but somehow that was why they lost out to the D-backs? If anything they have amazing team chemistry which has helped them continue to win the division so much in the last 11 years. And, they are actually well known for developing their own players! Gonsolin, Kershaw, Buehler, May, Will Smith, Lux, Outman, Miller. Even better, they took other teams castaways such as Justin Turner, Max Muncy and Chris Taylor and developed them into great contributors. Your take is just terrible. Betts and Freeman are the only two players you can really say that they “bought” for big money in the last few years before this offseason.

          1
          Reply
        • baseballpun

          2 years ago

          Regardless, the one thing that the Dodgers, Mets and Padres have in common is that they’re all losers.

          2020 doesn’t count Dodgers fans. Sorry.

          1
          Reply
        • KennyF’nPowers

          2 years ago

          Bullpen’s are usually bought. Not so much Rotations and Hitters. Very rare to have more than half of your Pen homegrown.

          Reply
        • Brew’88

          2 years ago

          and/or able to spend more. Which suddenly reminds me of The Magic Christian

          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          2 years ago

          I’m not confusing anything with anything, and I’m pretty sure it isn’t necessary to explain MLB’s revenue imbalance. The reality is, the smaller-market teams are effectively paid off by the larger market teams to be mostly noncompetitive. The CBT receiving teams are able to spend more, but they are disincentivized from doing so because the financing system doesn’t reward success. In fact, it rewards failure. So we get what we get, by design.

          1
          Reply
        • BlueSkies_LA

          2 years ago

          You can always tell when someone has run out of real baseball arguments when they whip out their chemistry sets, making up arguments that can’t be proven, disproven, or discussed in any intelligent way. Jello sticks to walls better.

          Here’s a real baseball theory for what happened in the NLDS: the D’backs had a plan to neutralize the top of the Dodger’s order, and the Dodgers didn’t make adjustments. It was a game planning success on the D’backs part, and a failure on the Dodger’s part. Credit and blame to the front offices, IMO. Of course the shortage of starting pitching didn’t help the Dodgers, but when you don’t score runs, the quality of the starting pitching matters less to the outcome.

          Reply
      • kcmark

        2 years ago

        Tired of th buying or tired of getting eliminated.

        1
        Reply
      • Elon’sDOGEbag

        2 years ago

        @metsfan Gyahaha look who’s talking!

        And since when have the Mets been a consistent performer? They are always buying up players year after year but have become a meme synonymous with failure as they have almost nothing to show for it over their many decades of existence.

        What a pathetic and hypocritical rebuttal! At least the Dodgers consistently MAKE the playoffs. And unless you’re in the AL east- piss off with any kind of argument that your division has been consistently “competitive” because it hasn’t- the Phillies and Braves were terrible for most of the 2010s.

        The Mets have NO excuse for their incompetence!

        4
        Reply
      • fox471 Dave

        2 years ago

        Aren’t you a Mets fan? Why would you care if the Dodgers were eliminated in the first round?

        2
        Reply
      • I speak the truth

        2 years ago

        I love the Dodgers buying everyone and then getting eliminated in the first round.

        2
        Reply
      • JerseyShoreScore

        2 years ago

        By tired of first round playoff eliminations, you mean the last two years, one of which the Dodgers were picked for second or third place, but greatly outperformed that in the 2023 regular season?

        Dodgers have been to the NLCS 5 of the last 8 years, 3 World Series, and 1 World Championship.

        1
        Reply
        • holycow16

          2 years ago

          1ish….

          1
          Reply
      • iBleeedBlue

        2 years ago

        A first round elimination at the hands of another first place team I’m fine with. Those 162 games mean something at that point. A team with 79 wins getting a shot at a team with 100 is asinine.

        2
        Reply
      • HankAaronDidGreenies

        2 years ago

        Then fire the manager. The Dodgers should have at least 3 or 4 rings by now if it wasn’t for the incompetence of Dave Roberts and the cheating of the Astros and Red Sox.

        Reply
    • KirkRueter

      2 years ago

      No, it would be cooler if he signed with the Giants. Maybe Giants-Dodgers could get on Sunday Night Baseball a fraction of as much as Yankees-Red Sox.

      14
      Reply
      • LosPobres1904

        2 years ago

        No breast feeding for them! Only East Coast!

        1
        Reply
      • Joel P

        2 years ago

        Yes Sunday night baseball where the game ends at 1 in the morning. That’s what people want……

        2
        Reply
        • KirkRueter

          2 years ago

          The game will start at 8PM on the East Coast.

          Typical East Coast Snobbery. The World Doesn’t Revolve Around You.

          10
          Reply
        • terry g

          2 years ago

          It’s only 1 AM if you live on the East Coast.

          2
          Reply
        • Joel P

          2 years ago

          I live in Colorado fella.

          Baseball is broken. Just a bunch of front runner fans

          5
          Reply
        • Joel P

          2 years ago

          Lot of people live on the east coast last time I checked.

          1
          Reply
        • Brew88

          2 years ago

          Joel is a Cardinals fan, need I say more?

          2
          Reply
        • spudchukar

          2 years ago

          Perhaps.

          1
          Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          Kirk & Joel – What are you talking about? Sunday Night Baseball games begin at 7PM Eastern Time and end around 10PM.

          How can a real baseball fan not know that?

          Reply
      • acoss13

        2 years ago

        I mean, do you really envy not being on Sunday Night Baseball that much? ESPN is meh…

        7
        Reply
        • Joel P

          2 years ago

          Yeah I would think it’s a badge of honor to not be on ESPN these days.

          6
          Reply
      • Hdyddy

        2 years ago

        You still building your Shed? I remember you pitching a two-hitter or two against the Jints before you joined them. Looks like SF will be forced to reduce the 24-foot Willie Mays wall to a 4-foot Mel Ott fence. If they want to get a Harper or Ohtani. Short porch like Boston or NYY.

        1
        Reply
    • User 3044878754

      2 years ago

      All but $.50 will be deferred

      5
      Reply
    • User 401527550

      2 years ago

      Not at all

      1
      Reply
  2. 13Morgs13

    2 years ago

    Don’t count out the Phillies.

    6
    Reply
    • mcase7187

      2 years ago

      Definitely count out the Red Sox because if they are really offering “300+m” Like the rumors say then he’d be a RS let’s be real they probably only offered 150 for 10yrs

      Henry please sell this team

      1
      Reply
  3. flyingblindsquirrel

    2 years ago

    Am I missing it, or does this article not mention how many years?

    6
    Reply
    • gbs42

      2 years ago

      It does not.

      1
      Reply
    • acoss13

      2 years ago

      We’re going to get some misinformation at some point or another just like Ohtani flying into Toronto. One of these journalists will sacrifice being first to break a story over being accurate.

      2
      Reply
      • bigjonliljon

        2 years ago

        Only one?

        1
        Reply
      • Fever Pitch Guy

        2 years ago

        acoss – I think that already happened, they seem to be backtracking off the story about the Red Sox and Giants both offering $300M+ to Yama.

        2
        Reply
    • rct

      2 years ago

      The entire article is pure speculation anyway, so take it all with a grain of salt. Last week we heard that Yamamoto had multiple offers over $300 million already in hand, which turned out to not be true. Then we heard teams were considering a 12-15 year deal, also doesn’t appear to be true.

      1
      Reply
      • StreakingBlue

        2 years ago

        The only really true fact is that Yamamoto is going to pick a team. I don’t put that much faith in all the rumblings.

        2
        Reply
      • acoss13

        2 years ago

        Fever,

        Yup, these guys just can’t resist with reporting everything no matter how unlikely it can be…

        1
        Reply
        • Fever Pitch Guy

          2 years ago

          acoss – It’s amazing how there’s no accountability for what they write. They can write whatever they want, not provide any sources, and there’s no repercussions when they are proven wrong.

          Imagine an accountant presenting financials with nothing to support the numbers, that is basically what these baseball writers are doing.

          1
          Reply
  4. CCooper8920

    2 years ago

    Of course he’s going to the Dodgers. What’s the point of rooting for anyone else

    6
    Reply
    • Cam

      2 years ago

      Because every team has the same opportunities, and the games still need to be played. Titles aren’t won on paper. It’s a great time to be a Dodger fan, but it doesn’t take away from people being a fan of their own team.

      2
      Reply
      • BaseballisLife

        2 years ago

        Whoosh! That’s the sound of his sarcasm going over your head.

        1
        Reply
        • Cam

          2 years ago

          You’re giving him way too much credit

          1
          Reply
      • Wire to wire 2024

        2 years ago

        You’re telling us the reds have the same chance of landing Yamamoto as the dodgers?

        Reply
  5. acoss13

    2 years ago

    250 million dollars is quite a bag. I wonder if Cohen and the Yankees go to 300 million dollars. Need these three teams in a room with an auctioneer going, “Do I see 260?!”

    3
    Reply
    • mcase7187

      2 years ago

      Supposedly they RS’s offered 300+ so I’m sure the Yankees offered a hell of a lot more

      1
      Reply
  6. Edde1968

    2 years ago

    Wow 250 million that’s a bargain.

    1
    Reply
    • fox471 Dave

      2 years ago

      $250 million is a bargain for a pitcher that weighs about 160 and has never spent a minute facing teams from MLB? Sounds like an overpay.

      5
      Reply
  7. Four4fore

    2 years ago

    Front loaded $68mm a year then $2mm a year out the back end?

    7
    Reply
  8. LordD99

    2 years ago

    $250 million won’t be enough. Of course, keep in mind all these leaked numbers are leaked with an agenda attached.

    14
    Reply
  9. good vibes only

    2 years ago

    They’re considering making it? Why wouldn’t it already be made at this point?

    2
    Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      2 years ago

      Like YY is doing now, why not feel out each club for their team culture, personnel, org. philosophy, etc. first? He’s going to be an even richer man no matter what. When his tour is complete, teams can then proceed to submit offers so that money alone won’t cloud his judgment. It makes for a better decision-making process for him I believe.

      1
      Reply
      • good vibes only

        2 years ago

        Of course all that makes sense from YY standpoint. Perhaps they haven’t even requested offers yet or are just now doing so. Just seems like it’s pretty late in the posting period to not have offers made from team perspective.

        1
        Reply
  10. HeadHunter

    2 years ago

    That’s a drop in the the bucket for King Cohen

    1
    Reply
    • TrumboRedux

      2 years ago

      Too bad the Dodgers don’t have the deepest pockets in baseball! Wait…

      Reply
      • seattlehof24

        2 years ago

        Trumbo, they don’t.

        2
        Reply
        • TrumboRedux

          2 years ago

          Who does? You could have added that part in ya know..

          2
          Reply
  11. Daryl Pauley

    2 years ago

    Cardinals, where are you?

    1
    Reply
    • flyingblindsquirrel

      2 years ago

      That’s easy. Just find Yamamoto and the Cardinals are as far away from that spot as possible.

      8
      Reply
  12. 10centBeerNight

    2 years ago

    Bracing for well north of 300 with lots of opt outs etc. should be a wild contract. And more twists, turns and misinformation are a virtual guarantee before it’s all done

    4
    Reply
  13. Degaz

    2 years ago

    Seriously…F the Dodgers. Ball hogs!

    7
    Reply
  14. LosPobres1904

    2 years ago

    They should and should trade for Cronenworth, Yu Darvish and Xman while they are at it…do it cowards!!!

    1
    Reply
  15. James Midway

    2 years ago

    Waiting for another Rosenthal article telling us all how this is great for baseball.

    16
    Reply
    • Joel P

      2 years ago

      Dude I imagine you were cool with this nonsense last year when the Padres were spending like drunken sailors. And now that the Padres are no longer doing that you don’t like it anymore?

      That’s lame.

      Baseball is broken.

      7
      Reply
      • James Midway

        2 years ago

        But according to the Athletic when the Padres do it, it’s a bad thing.

        7
        Reply
        • Joel P

          2 years ago

          Again you sound ridiculous man. Teams having 200 million dollar payrolls while others have 30 million dollar payrolls is lame. I don’t care what team you root for it’s lame. It’s like Saturday morning watching college football and Alabama is playing Alaska State and the score is 73-0. It’s lame.

          1
          Reply
        • Brew88

          2 years ago

          Calling everything lame without suggesting a solution isn’t lame?

          4
          Reply
        • IronBallsMcGinty

          2 years ago

          Maybe if it doesn’t work out how they hope we’ll see stories this time next year on how the Dodgers are trying to shed payroll.

          Reply
        • YankeesBleacherCreature

          2 years ago

          It’s fine, man. Modern baseball isn’t for everybody. There are plenty of other forms of entertainment available. Nobody is holding a gun to your head to watch the Dodgers play the A’s. I used to be a hard-core NFL fan. Now I only watch the Superbowl for fraternizing with friends. I simply just lost interest in the sport for no particular reason.

          3
          Reply
        • Joel P

          2 years ago

          Yeah it’s fine for you the Yankees fan.

          Baseball is a dying sport.

          People are so self centered it’s ridiculous.

          Reply
        • fox471 Dave

          2 years ago

          The Dodgers shed payroll last year.

          1
          Reply
        • Brew88

          2 years ago

          Whining like a child about everything without offering solutions is feeble-centered

          3
          Reply
  16. Neon Cop

    2 years ago

    I thought LAD was a “homegrown” team? All their best players came from elsewhere!

    11
    Reply
    • For Love of the Game

      2 years ago

      Evil Empire – West

      7
      Reply
    • Brew88

      2 years ago

      Palm trees aren’t native there either

      3
      Reply
      • math

        2 years ago

        Beer and cheese aren’t native to Wisconsin. What’s your point?

        1
        Reply
        • BaseballisLife

          2 years ago

          Beer and cheese are really not that good in Wisconsin either. Prefer Boston and San Diego for beer. France and Italy for cheese.

          1
          Reply
        • Brew88

          2 years ago

          We have veered off topic, but then beer is always a great topic for moi. Cheese? Give me Switzerland 9 times out of 10

          Reply
    • Suitcase Simpson

      2 years ago

      I mean they let homegrown talent walk (Seager, Bellinger) and signed otherworldly talent. They have to pay someone.

      Reply
    • amk1920

      2 years ago

      They still have more homegrown players than most playoff teams. Keep fighting this strawman argument that nobody is claiming

      1
      Reply
      • Brew88

        2 years ago

        It ‘‘twas their claim to fame and now it isn’t.

        3
        Reply
      • BaseballisLife

        2 years ago

        2 of 9 is more?

        2
        Reply
        • McGurk

          2 years ago

          14 of their 25 man roster.

          1
          Reply
        • BaseballisLife

          2 years ago

          It a 26 man roster. 2 of 9 position players. That better?

          Reply
        • amk1920

          2 years ago

          Way more on the pitching staff right now. Most of the key pieces on the Dbacks world series team came outside the organization. But hey only bad when Dodgers do it

          Reply
        • Brew’88

          2 years ago

          only Dodger homegrown pride is bruised when other teams do it

          Reply
    • Pickle_Britches

      2 years ago

      And they still have a top 10 farm with being at the back end of every draft lol. It’s called dedication to win and they have it. Don’t hate

      Reply
      • Neon Cop

        2 years ago

        Only “top 10” because some fake experts said so. Their prospects have been totally mediocre the last few years.

        1
        Reply
  17. dirty617water

    2 years ago

    Can they not?!

    1
    Reply
  18. deGrom/Langford Texas Ranger

    2 years ago

    Don’t do it!

    1
    Reply
  19. Silas

    2 years ago

    Maybe one of those teams will meet Yamamoto Midway? Those Japanese codes can be tough to crack.

    6
    Reply
  20. steven st croix

    2 years ago

    Spending all that money worked out for the Mets, right?

    4
    Reply
  21. Joel P

    2 years ago

    I imagine he’s going to end up signing for far more than people expect him to at the moment. Probably a 10 year deal with an opt put after 4 years or so.

    2
    Reply
  22. bjhaas1977

    2 years ago

    Not going to be enough! Mets will blow this away ️

    3
    Reply
    • Pickle_Britches

      2 years ago

      Lol he’s not going to the highest bidder I’m sorry. He’s going to a winning team

      Reply
  23. terry g

    2 years ago

    hmm. So his agent leaked at story about the Dodgers trying to get the bids closer to $300 M from the others. Gotcha. Just doing your job. Right?

    2
    Reply
  24. TigersLoveCinnamon

    2 years ago

    He’s got 2 300+ million dollar offers on the table according X. This a non story

    3
    Reply
    • ohyeadam

      2 years ago

      Maybe he’s on a plane to Toronto too

      3
      Reply
      • bestone

        2 years ago

        Rumbling on the street says there is a private sushi party at a Toronto restaurant on Friday….

        3
        Reply
        • BaseballisLife

          2 years ago

          It was at Cohen’s house last night.

          Reply
    • Pickle_Britches

      2 years ago

      Yup Red Sox and Giants but that don’t mean anything. He will not go to the highest bidder

      Reply
  25. Chris Koch

    2 years ago

    Kinda an odd age for long term contract. You pay 30/yr that’s about 8/9 yrs then. Returns as a FA at 34/35. Is a team going to commit 10+years? 11/280-300? Making 37/38 not as odd finish age or FA around finish age?

    1
    Reply
    • LordD99

      2 years ago

      A ten-year contract takes him through his age-34 season. Not sure “odd” is the right word. It’s certainly beneficial.

      1
      Reply
    • YankeesBleacherCreature

      2 years ago

      They can make it a 9-year deal and give him an opt-out after 4 years to become a free agent again at 29/30 y.o. The club can void his opt-out by adding 3 more years. Gerrit Cole has a somewhat similar provision in his contract.

      1
      Reply
  26. Yanks2

    2 years ago

    Only 250m? Snell is going to get that much and isn’t even half of what Yamamoto is

    1
    Reply
    • gravel

      2 years ago

      250MM to Snell? That seems excessive.

      2
      Reply
      • Yanks2

        2 years ago

        He just came in 1st in the NL Cy Young voting and if Nola got 7 years 172m. Snell will get north of 200m

        1
        Reply
        • Roll

          2 years ago

          Agree and you can even look at comps last year with rodon. Snell is a better pitcher than rodon and as you said coming off actually winning the cy young and while not played full seasons much he has played around 2/3 and every year.

          I think for him to even think of picking up the phone you looking 180/6 but i think he ends up over 200 with around 7 or 8 years.

          1
          Reply
  27. TrumboRedux

    2 years ago

    Would anyone really be surprised if the man wanted to play with Shohei?

    2
    Reply
    • Seamaholic

      2 years ago

      I can see the opposite too. And maybe they know and dislike each other.

      2
      Reply
      • TrumboRedux

        2 years ago

        Yeah maybe Shohei cheated on both his little sisters back in the day. Probably right?

        1
        Reply
      • Fever Pitch Guy

        2 years ago

        Seam – I don’t think they dislike each other, in fact it was reported that Ohtani meeting with Yama was deemed “significant”.

        If anything, Yama’s personality is such that he doesn’t want to play in the shadow of Ohtani.

        Since Ohtani will always be “the man” in SoCal, it’s quite possible Yama will want to be “the man” on the East Coast.

        1
        Reply
  28. thunderlips

    2 years ago

    $100,000/year for the first 10 years, then $249,000,000 for the next 10

    2
    Reply
  29. DonnieMoore

    2 years ago

    1 billion! With 998 million deferred into 2099. This is getting ridiculous.

    2
    Reply
  30. filihok

    2 years ago

    Trout

    “Crazy how it was so widely predicted that the White Sox (underrated) would get Belli, Yamato, Soto, and ohtani,”

    Who predicted that?

    1
    Reply
    • filihok

      2 years ago

      Trout

      “Verducci, Rome, Lupica, etc”

      Citation requested

      Reply
  31. BaseballisLife

    2 years ago

    I’m considering asking Kate Upton out on a date before we move 8 states away instead of 4 houses away.

    Why is that news?

    1
    Reply
  32. gravel

    2 years ago

    Dodgers plus Yamamoto in headline equals clicks.

    6
    Reply
    • Brew88

      2 years ago

      Pretty much

      3
      Reply
    • unpaidobserver

      2 years ago

      I believe this is his agents pitch.

      2
      Reply
      • outinleftfield

        2 years ago

        If this came from his agent it would be $300 million or more.

        1
        Reply
  33. jhomeslice

    2 years ago

    If there is any truth that Yamamoto had multiple 300M offers, the Dodgers may not have such a great chance with a lower bid. I think the Yankees are desperate and will beat any 300M offer that exists. I just hope he decides sooner than later, would like to know where he, Snell, Montgomery, Hader, Chapman, and Bellinger end up.

    2
    Reply
  34. YanksPhan42

    2 years ago

    Yes, for 300mil, please go to the Dodgers! Signed~ Yankees fans

    2
    Reply
    • Salzilla

      2 years ago

      Not this Yankees fan. Give him all the monies. I’d even match Cole’s contract.

      1
      Reply
    • PinstripedPride

      2 years ago

      I’ll take him for $300 million, but not $350 million.

      2
      Reply
    • YankeesAreDodgersEast

      2 years ago

      Yea bro, keep rooting for your team to save their money, Hal needs to buy a new yacht.

      The money you won’t be using to sign Yamamoto will not be put to other use to spread talent on the roster, like you think it will.

      1
      Reply
    • YanksPhan42

      2 years ago

      You guys are missing the point. It’s not just the money. He’s 5’10 170 pounds, throws with a lot of arm and his wipeout is the splitter. How many Smurf aces have you seen in the last 40 years? Pedro aaaaaad…… ?
      With that tiny of a build, a heavier ball and throwing a ton of splits, his elbow is a live grenade.
      We already have Rodon eating a ton of money. Same with Stanton. DJ too. Still paying Hicks too. The more big spends we add that don’t perform, the more we’re doomed to mediocrity.
      Furthermore, this isn’t the NBA. Can’t just add 3-4 stars and win it all. Look at the balanced DBags who broomed the star studded Dodgers.
      Trade for Burnes or Luzardo and sign Gumby. Cole, Burnes, Gumby, Rodon and Nestor sounds a lot deeper to me.

      3
      Reply
      • bullred

        2 years ago

        What? A sensible Jankee fan. Unheard of!

        3
        Reply
      • filihok

        2 years ago

        YP

        “Look at the balanced [DBacks] who broomed the star studded Dodgers.”

        Yes let’s look

        Dodgers 100 wins
        DBacks 84 wins

        You failed to make your point

        Reply
      • Salzilla

        2 years ago

        Anyone’s elbow can blow up. His frame doesn’t have much to do it with it. I’d rather take my chances with an absolute phenom than anyone on the market, free agent or other. He’s that special right now, and not comparable to anyone you mentioned as mediocre.

        Also, have you forgotten about 09 when we added 3-4 stars and won it all? Yes it absolutely can happen, but like the NBA it isn’t always a slam dunk either. Doesn’t mean you don’t try!

        Reply
        • filihok

          2 years ago

          RE Sal

          “Also, have you forgotten about 09 when we added 3-4 stars and won it all? Yes it absolutely can happen,”

          People making totally galaxy brain level taeks “Getting good players doesn’t help”

          Reply
      • quimmy

        2 years ago

        Maybe if the Yanks push the payroll to $350M they will take a game or 2 vs the Astros next time they meet in the playoffs?

        Reply
      • YanksPhan42

        2 years ago

        @Filihok

        Filihok said……

        “Yes let’s look

        Dodgers 100 wins
        DBacks 84 wins

        You failed to make your point”

        Are you an idiot? Did you not see that ARZ broomed LA and went to the WS? It’s about winning a title, not having a good record. Wow.

        Reply
      • filihok

        2 years ago

        YP

        “Are you an idiot? Did you not see that ARZ broomed LA and went to the WS? It’s about winning a title, not having a good record. Wow.”

        Maybe I am am Idiot because I don’t see how your argument makes sense

        Did the DBacks win a championship? Because I see you saying that it’s a about wi.nning a title, but, I don’t see that the DBacks won a title.

        2023 Titles:
        Dodgers 0
        DBacks 0

        2023 record vs each other
        8-8

        2023 wins
        Dodgers 100
        Dbacks 94 (84 regular season wins, 10 playoff wins)

        I see no argument for the DBacks being better than the Dodgers jn 2023.

        Same number of Championshps
        Same number of wins head to head
        Dodgers more wins

        Help this “idiot” understand

        Reply
  35. slydevil

    2 years ago

    I still don’t get it. $300 mil is more than just about half the league would ever give up for a player.

    He has a good line in Japan, but they have a different ball, different mound dirt, different strike zone. Not saying he shouldn’t get paid, but there is still a lot of risk. Zero track record in MLB, and the show is much different than in Japan.

    If my favorite team had the money (the owners do but would never spend it) I’d rather they spent the dollars elsewhere.

    4
    Reply
    • Joel P

      2 years ago

      He’s 25. He’s younger than any American free agent is ever going to be.

      He’s been the best pitcher in Japan 3 years straight.

      You really don’t get it?

      6
      Reply
      • Anthony maresca

        2 years ago

        You are clueless. Nobody gives a rats ass what Yamamoto did in Japan. His small frame is a ticking timebomb and TJ surgery is inevitable! He wont come close to same level of success against mlb hitters so if Im Yankees I resign Monty, trade for Cease and sign another bullpen arm and call it a winter. Cole, Monty, Cease, Rodon and Schmidt make nice rotation and move Cortes back in bullpen as lefty and spot starter. Warren, Beeter and Gil can be starter depth.

        1
        Reply
        • filihok

          2 years ago

          AM

          “You are clueless. Nobody gives a rats ass what Yamamoto did in Japan. ”

          Muted

          Reply
        • Ella B

          2 years ago

          MLBTR-Dodgers considering $250MM+ Offer to Yamamoto

          Tony from Brooklyn-“Nobody gives a rats ass what Yamamoto did in Japan.”

          The Dodgers, Yankees, and other teams seem to have a different take than you do, Tony.

          1
          Reply
        • slydevil

          2 years ago

          Dodgers, Yankees and similar teams also throw away what would be another teams full payroll on players that don’t even play for injuries, weak play or to play on other teams.

          Reply
    • jhomeslice

      2 years ago

      You’re probably right, but I think his age plus exceptional performance in Japan projects him to be pretty damn good. This is kind of a weak free agent class so probably drives up the price tag. If I had to guess, he’ll probably be the best pitcher signed this winter. Snell has been very inconsistent.

      1
      Reply
    • unpaidobserver

      2 years ago

      Agreed. It could be a good signing. Could be an okay signing. Could be godawful from day 1. There is uncertainty.

      1
      Reply
      • Joel P

        2 years ago

        Considering Senga wasn’t nearly as good as Yamamoto is Japan and he was a Cy Ypung contender last year for the Mets it’s pretty clear its not going to be God awful.

        Pay attention guys.

        2
        Reply
  36. Mickey Solis

    2 years ago

    I’m so sick of this garbage everywhere you look it’s the Dodgers buying another superstar (trading is essentially the same, buying with capital and/or signing them to massive extensions that few others can afford).

    5
    Reply
    • fox471 Dave

      2 years ago

      Now the Dodgers are being blamed for a rumor?

      2
      Reply
    • Ski to Coors

      2 years ago

      If every one spent as much as they could, it would drive prices up. Going to the ballpark would cost hundreds of dollars. And in places where people couldn’t afford it, they’d lose money and eventually have to sell the team. This could lead to fewer and fewer teams in existence, because only the highest income cities could afford to keep a baseball team.

      But please tell us more about your understanding of economics. For the record, not all owners are billionaires.

      1
      Reply
      • CommentsSectionCommenter

        2 years ago

        @Ski To Coors

        For the record, all but five owners/ownership groups are billionaires, and all can certainly afford to pay more than they are; to suggest otherwise is to carry water for extraordinarily rich folks who are more than happy to have their fans plead poverty on their behalf (it’s quite a racket)….

        And frankly, fewer teams in existence would be great for the overall product. Perhaps that’s archly cynical–no more so than rich owners pocketing profits while gaslighting fan bases about their ability to spend–but it’s also true.

        1
        Reply
  37. LFGMets (Metsin7) #ConsistentlyBannedBaseballExpert

    2 years ago

    Yamamoto isn’t worth anything near that. I’d rather pay a major league with years of success like Blake Snell 150 million plus over a guy who has never thrown a single major league inning. Gerrit Cole had to put up back to back to back spectacular years to get 300 million plus. Yamamoto can’t even shine Cole’s shoes. Waste of money. Whatever team that signs him is going to have a lot of regret. A year from now, no one should be surprised when the headline says “Yamamoto out for the year with Tommy John Surgery”

    3
    Reply
    • sfes

      2 years ago

      He’s better than Senga who put up a Cy-caliber year in his first season though.

      2
      Reply
      • LFGMets (Metsin7) #ConsistentlyBannedBaseballExpert

        2 years ago

        @sfes and you know that for sure? Senga didnt get 300 million, he got 80 million. The risk is much less with Senga. Also Senga relies more on his control then overpowering his opponent like Yamamoto does. Senga is also 6.2, Yamamoto is like 5.10. Hes an injury risk just waiting to happen

        1
        Reply
      • sfes

        2 years ago

        @LFG am I sure that he put up better numbers than Senga? Yes, that’s a fact on paper. And Senga relies more on his control? What? He walked 4.2/9 last year. He also had control issues earlier in the season. And he is a strikeout pitcher as evidenced from his 202k… not exactly a soft tossing control artist. I’m not saying he’s bad, but that’s all available to see online. And yeah the Senga deal is a steal at this point. Yamamoto is also 25 years old. Getting a pitcher that good that young takes a bigger commitment. We’re you this averse to signing Senga last year considering he was an unknown? Our evaluation of Japanese players has gotten way more precise than it was when Kaz Matsui was brought over. I’m not saying Yamamoto has no risk, but he’s young and really really good. Also according to BBref Senga is 6’ … 2 inches taller than YY. What injury does that predict? Senga had injury issues previously to coming here and adjusted well to the innings, the ball, the whole deal.

        Reply
    • sfes

      2 years ago

      He also led the league in wild pitches

      Reply
    • filihok

      2 years ago

      LFGM

      So tired of reading your idiotic taeks

      Muted

      1
      Reply
    • Roll

      2 years ago

      so you are going to offer the cy young winner less than a pitcher who the prior year received a bigger contract whom has overall less of a pitcher and has a history of being less durable. I’m assuming you want to insult him and dont want him to bother picking up the phone.

      1
      Reply
  38. senator

    2 years ago

    …and 97% of his salary will be deferred until 2090?

    3
    Reply
  39. User 4223176798

    2 years ago

    I love the way the Giants fans whine. Want some brie with whine? Rules are rules. No one is cheating here. They play by the rules and get good players. We whine about it and get Stripling, Manea and other Salvation Army retreads. You get what you pay for. Fire Farhan.

    4
    Reply
    • l9ydodger

      2 years ago

      TGF; All the POBO’s & GM’s do what the man or organization holding the gold tells them to do. Blame your owner/owners!

      1
      Reply
  40. VegasSDfan

    2 years ago

    Dodgers will have 1 billion locked up in 2 players.

    5
    Reply
    • Joel P

      2 years ago

      Don’t the Padres have that in 3 players?

      You guys are ridiculous.

      4
      Reply
    • Yanks2

      2 years ago

      Yeah lol

      1
      Reply
  41. YankeesAreDodgersEast

    2 years ago

    Headline should read – “Dodgers prepared to make grown men cry all over the country”

    10
    Reply
    • cpdpoet

      2 years ago

      Thumbs up for making me laugh

      1
      Reply
    • The_M4N

      2 years ago

      @YankeesAreDodgersEast, are you sure it shouldn’t be “Dodgers prepared to make Dodgers fans cry?” Roberts can’t get you past the first round.

      2
      Reply
    • BlueSkies_LA

      2 years ago

      Except for the grown men part.

      1
      Reply
  42. cpdpoet

    2 years ago

    To quote (sort of) Hawkeye Pierce in the voice of Yamamoto when asked about playing with Ohtani:

    I’m not playing second fiddle to this garbonzo for the rest of the war….

    4
    Reply
  43. Echopark

    2 years ago

    Cohen can blow 250 away.

    At least four teams would hit the bid at 250: Yanks, Mets, Dodgers, Giants and my guess is Red Sox, Toronto and Phillies would also hit the bid.

    If Yamamoto is 3/4 as good as people think, he’ll opt out after four years. 250 is just his protection if he sucks or gets injured.

    Yamamoto, like Ohtani, gets to decide where he wants to go and then the money will be figured out.

    5
    Reply
    • Echopark

      2 years ago

      I would not do more than that and I might not even do that if I were the Dodgers. But I wonder how much of it would be a business decision – ie could having both be meaningfully incremental in ad/sponsorship/Japanese TV money. I mean they’d really be consolidating the Japanese market. And not letting another team diffuse it by signing Yamamoto. Just not sure what that’d be worth if anything above already signing Ohtani.

      Still think a NY team gets him – they’ll offer more money. Only way Dodgers get him is if he decides he WANTS to be a Dodger and the Dodgers offer gets close enough.

      2
      Reply
  44. The Saber-toothed Superfife

    2 years ago

    Rumor has it….
    Little Caesar’s putting DOUBLE anchovy back on the menu!

    2
    Reply
  45. The Ghost of Bobby Bonilla

    2 years ago

    How much do Dodgers tickets cost? I’m serious – as a fan of a Central division team where I can frequently buy the best seat in the ballpark for under $100, I’m really curious how much money the Dodgers are raking in.

    1
    Reply
    • TrumboRedux

      2 years ago

      You can get 2 decent seats for 100 bucks a lot of the time. Other times at least 150+.

      1
      Reply
      • The Ghost of Bobby Bonilla

        2 years ago

        So it must be all TV money paying for this? Those prices don’t seem too crazy. I was expecting Dodger tix to start at something like $80 for the worst seats given how much they spend on players.

        1
        Reply
        • ohyeadam

          2 years ago

          They also led the league in attendance by over 500,000 this year

          4
          Reply
        • TrumboRedux

          2 years ago

          Some games they do. Like vs SF or SD..I went to at least 3 or 4 games last year where I got aisle seats top deck for about 30 each though.

          1
          Reply
    • The_M4N

      2 years ago

      @The Ghost of Bobby Bo, given that Dodgers fans dont get to the Ravine till the 3rd inning and leave by the 7th, they should only pay .5.

      2
      Reply
    • BlueSkies_LA

      2 years ago

      My seats are two levels up behind home plate, a good location, around middle-middle priced. They cost around $35 each as season tickets. Depending on the day of the week, the visiting team, and what if any promotional item they are offering, their value in the resale market is anywhere between zero and $100, but typically around what I paid for them. My expectation for next season is the resale market will be quite a bit stronger, and if I have to part with tickets I won’t get zonked like I did a couple of times last season.

      The teams are heavy participants in the resale market and benefit by higher demands, so this is one reason they are willing to fork out big salaries. They are box office.

      2
      Reply
    • Willzsco

      2 years ago

      Depends on who the Dodgers are playing and the day of the week. Tickets for a game against the Giants on a Saturday will be pretty expensive. But, tickets against the Brewers on a Wednesday would be pretty reasonable.

      Reply
  46. 99socalfrc

    2 years ago

    I thought the bidding for this guy was already over $300m? He seems like a serious overpaid drama queen before he has even thrown a single MLB pitch. What is 3 weeks of meetings already? Good luck to whoever jumps on this landmine contract….

    1
    Reply
  47. KINGHZEY

    2 years ago

    I though the Dodgers didn’t buy championship caliber teams though…

    1
    Reply
  48. Viveleempireevil

    2 years ago

    The Dodgers have won exactly one WS title since 1988 and it’s a tainted one b/c it was a 60 game season. Not exactly bang for the their massive bucks.

    3
    Reply
  49. DarrenDreifortsContract

    2 years ago

    162-0!

    1
    Reply
  50. titurriria

    2 years ago

    I love all the talk about the Dodgers being the Evil Empire West: What several people don’t realize is that the new Dodger ownership group signed a 25 year, $8:3B TV deal back in 2013: That pays them over $300M a year: So they regularly exceed the CBT threshold: They know they need a winning product so they are willing to spend some money if need be: That’s good business: They just need to find a way to win when it matters; not in the regular season:

    3
    Reply
  51. Cora the Destroya

    2 years ago

    Sources have said (whether accurate or not), that the Red Sox and Giants have offered over 300 million for the Yamamoto.

    If these reports are true, Dodgers may be outbid this time unless they up their deal.

    2
    Reply
    • BaseballisLife

      2 years ago

      Bowden reported that. Mets are thought to be that high as well. Cohen and Stearns flew to Japan last week and Yamamoto met with them plus Mendoza and their pitching coach yesterday.

      1
      Reply
      • Cora the Destroya

        2 years ago

        A search online found multiple sources confirming this.

        1
        Reply
      • Cora the Destroya

        2 years ago

        And now there’s a source saying they haven’t offered that but likely would.

        1
        Reply
      • Brew88

        2 years ago

        Imagine the carbon footprint

        Reply
  52. Sadler

    2 years ago

    Dodgers will single-handedly cause a salary cap and change California contract tax law.

    1
    Reply
  53. unpaidobserver

    2 years ago

    Present day value tho is five bucks.

    1
    Reply
  54. Old York

    2 years ago

    Why are the Dodgers low balling Yamamoto. That offer is a slap in the face.

    1
    Reply
  55. outinleftfield

    2 years ago

    Oh come on guys. Either they have offered him $250 million or they haven’t. A rumor that they are thinking about offering him a specific number is total BS.

    2
    Reply
  56. foppert2

    2 years ago

    I think the Giants will offer the most money. For obvious reasons. Whether he wants to be there is another story. I heard somewhere (foul territory maybe) that he is a big town bright lights high fashion kind of guy. Opposite of Shohei.

    1
    Reply
  57. eddiemurraysafro

    2 years ago

    I don’t think he’s that good

    1
    Reply
    • filihok

      2 years ago

      EddieMurray

      “I don’t think he’s that good”

      Based on anything? No? Good talk

      Reply
      • Ubaldo Jimenez

        2 years ago

        Based on literally nothing. No MLB track record!

        Reply
  58. theknuckler

    2 years ago

    8 years $240 M / with an opt out after 5 years.
    That’s my guess.

    1
    Reply
  59. BaseballisLife

    2 years ago

    Per Jim Bowden, the Giants and Red Sox have made offers to Yamamoto in excess of $300 million. Yamamoto met with Mets yesterday at Cohen’s home and their POBO, manager, and pitching coach were all there.

    If the Dodgers are only going $250 million they have already lost.

    1
    Reply
    • JerseyShoreScore

      2 years ago

      Yup!

      A $250 million dollar offer is a mid-market team’s offer on Yamamoto, not a serious Big Market offer.

      The Dodgers need to offer $325 million for 13 years which tops Cole’s contract by a million as the largest total every for a pitcher. This keeps CBT salary at $25 million per year for the entire contract.

      Structure it at $20 mil per year early years and $30 per late, include an opt out after five or six years.

      If that does not work for Yamamoto, I would not go much higher. Just overpay a bit on Snell or Montgomery, and move on…

      Reply
  60. holycow16

    2 years ago

    Go Cubs Go!!!

    1
    Reply
  61. I.M. Insane

    2 years ago

    Of course the funny thing would be if the Dodgers signed him to an outlandish contract and he went 3-11 with a 5.88 ERA in 2024 and never got better.

    2
    Reply
  62. tbcoolguy

    2 years ago

    at what point does it become it embarrassing to be a Dodgers fan if they don’t win the World Series?

    1
    Reply
    • JackStrawb

      2 years ago

      @tbcoolguy They had the sense to deal for Betts, grab Freeman, and make themselves the most attractive destination for Ohtani—while having no other FA’s committed past 2025.

      —And a 2024 payroll currently running around $213m. Well under the Yankees and Mets, for example.

      Why would you be embarrassed by having one of the more competent FOs in baseball if the postseason fails to break your way?

      Even the best MLB teams only very rarely begin a season with as much as a 20% shot to win the World Series. 3 and 4 round postseasons are baseball’s revolting answer to football’s repugnant “parity.” Hardly a team’s fault if they can’t run the gantlet when the Field is 29 other teams in combination.

      3
      Reply
    • JerseyShoreScore

      2 years ago

      One would think that one FULL season World Championship since 1966 is a bit disappointing to say the least for the Dodgers!.

      Reply
    • fox471 Dave

      2 years ago

      @cool guy- Never!

      Reply
    • filihok

      2 years ago

      tbcg

      “at what point does it become it embarrassing to be a Dodgers fan if they don’t win the World Series?”

      Never

      What would be embarrassing is tying your identity to a sports team.

      Reply
  63. 30 Parks

    2 years ago

    Seems inevitable Yamamoto ends up in LA given Ohtani has already recruited Glasnow.

    2
    Reply
    • JackStrawb

      2 years ago

      @30 Parks Sure. I mean, if you were Yamamoto would you care if Steve Cohen offered 10./$330m vs LAD’s 10/$300m?

      Why would a 25 year old in his prime bet on the fiasco that is likely to be the future Mets, given the previous 3 years since Cohen bought the team, their banal offseason to date, the unlikelihood they’ll be a serious contender before 2026 (and even then only if their farm matures fortuitously), and the fact that they’ll have to radically improve just to be in the zip code of, say, oh, the LA Dodgers?

      How much better would the accoutrements of life have to be for that extra $3m a year to be meaningful? Is your house that much better, the food that much tastier, the women that much more beautiful, to make it worth the absurdities and embarrassments that inevitably attach themselves to Cohen?

      Reply
      • JerseyShoreScore

        2 years ago

        D-Backs are solid, but one would assume the Braves and Phillies are a bigger obstacle to win Division titles than most of the NL West is for the Dodgers.

        Pitching on the Big Stage for the Mets can be many Wild Card appearances over the next decade. Regardless of what the Mets do, the Braves should be better on paper each season.

        From competition standpoint, AL East should be more formidable than NL West as well…

        1
        Reply
  64. آلي مكبيل_.._.بيتزا بيبيروني آشتون كوتشر

    2 years ago

    Cheapoos. 700mil deferred. What are you? The Pirates?

    1
    Reply
  65. Wrian Washman

    2 years ago

    Surely Yanks and Mets can go over 3.

    Reply
  66. Cleon Jones

    2 years ago

    250M, paid in 1M increments per year for 250 years, payable to Yamamoto to his demise,then his designated beneficiaries to their demise, then the Yamamoto family trust for last couple hundred years. Interest-free. Good deal for everybody.

    Reply
  67. Ubaldo Jimenez

    2 years ago

    For a guy who has never played MLB. Wild.

    Reply
  68. 178iq

    2 years ago

    I’d like to see a team get stacked like this, & spend like the Mets do but with the right players! & spend money like the Yankees used to but win! Will be a fun real to watch.

    1
    Reply
  69. Joe S

    2 years ago

    Yamamoto should consider his legacy. Playing in the shadow of Ohtani would not help at all. Coming to New city like Toronto or Philadelphia would help him be him. As for NY teams, those fans would eat him alive if he struggles at all. Yankees have 3 big stars and Yamamoto would be lost in the noise of that clubhouse.

    Reply
    • filihok

      2 years ago

      “Yamamoto should consider his legacy. Playing in the shadow of Ohtani would not help at all. ”

      This seems like some week-minded BS

      Guys like Ruth and Gehrig have had their legacies stand up just fine

      People, well reasonably intelligent ones at least, can recognize great players even if they played with other great players.

      Reply
  70. Reggie Smith

    2 years ago

    Dodgers are not getting Yamamoto. News reports say there are a couple of $300M offers already, and the Dodgers bid $250M.

    They’re just playing y’all. They’ve already made their Big Box purchase. They just want to grab more headlines aka free publicity.

    Reply
  71. HBRC1987

    2 years ago

    Why would a team spend that much for a guy who may not even be MLB quality?

    Reply
    • Brew88

      2 years ago

      Why buy a race car when you don’t race? Among billionaires it gets to a point where it goes beyond a good business decision.

      1
      Reply
  72. Poolhalljunkies

    2 years ago

    No way the other big markets let the dodgers get this guy for less than 300 mil ..the ny teams and bos will for sure run the price way past 250

    Reply
    • Reggie Smith

      2 years ago

      2 MLB team bid $300M, Dodgers bid $250M. Another team goes $325M, Dodgers will go $275M.

      Getting free publicity for being in the bidding is fun!

      1
      Reply
  73. Reggie Smith

    2 years ago

    Ichiro Suzuki
    Shohei Ohtani
    Yu Darvish
    Hideo Nomo
    Hideki Matsui
    Hiroki Kuroda
    Koji Uehara
    Masahiro Tanaka
    Hisashi Iwakuma
    Kazuhiro Sasaki

    For those people who think big purchase Japanese players are as risky as American. Just look at the top 10 list. IMO Japanese players have a much better success rate than American FA.

    1
    Reply
    • Poolhalljunkies

      2 years ago

      So..there have been 67 japanese born players to play in mlb..based on your top 10..really cant think of too many others that have distinguished themselves..thats about a 15% success rate..15% sight unseen is 100% risky

      Reply
      • Reggie Smith

        2 years ago

        Real dumb logic you used. There are thousands of non-Japanese free agents who signed contracts over the same time period.

        I said “big purchase” for a reason. Lets not count every Tsuyoshi Wada who signed a modest contract and I wont count every Jeter Downs and Franchy Cordero.

        1
        Reply
    • al34

      2 years ago

      Dice K Matsusaka too. He was very overrated and frustrating to watch with his power nibbling of the strike zone and pitch counts of over 120 by the 5th inning.

      Reply
      • Reggie Smith

        2 years ago

        Dice K was one of the few high paid misses from Japan. But, honestly without Dice K Red Sox dont win the 2007 WS. So he wasnt a total loss.

        Still a lot better than some of the High Priced Free Agent Busts in America (Pujols, Damon, Sandoval, Bautista, Upton, Hosmer) and so many more.

        Reply
  74. Poolhalljunkies

    2 years ago

    Just because the sample size is smaller does not make it dumb logic since you came up with the top 10 list to begin with i was simply using it

    Reply
    • Reggie Smith

      2 years ago

      You used the “top 10 list” to compare against EVERY SINGLE Japanese player. So fine lets use EVERY SINGLE Non-Japanese Free Agent. The percentage of perennial all-stars out of the second group is below 1%, much lower than the Japanese 15%.

      If youre going to use dumb logic, you should at least make sure it doesnt blow up in your face.

      Reply
      • Poolhalljunkies

        2 years ago

        APBA..are you ok you? seem very upset by this. Wpuld you like a hug? throwing out the word “dumb” must come easily to you..perhaps reading and understanding doesnt..did you not read the “sight unseen part” that my friend is huge as we can accuratly project any north american player in the minors or college vs rarely seeing anything on japanese players

        Reply
  75. GOAT Closer Esteban Yan

    2 years ago

    The Dodgers will be the next Angels. They’ll spend into oblivion, trade their future away, and get minimal returns counting the days when their mega salaries come off the books.

    Reply
    • Camden453

      2 years ago

      Yeah ok the Dodgers have been in the playoffs 11 straight years and still have a better farm system than most

      Reply
      • GOAT Closer Esteban Yan

        2 years ago

        Yes, in the past they were that disciplined big market team that occasionally handed out big contracts and held onto their deep farm system while remaining competitive. My point is they’re now transitioning into being the Angels making their bets around a few guys and making bad win-now trades (Glasnow for Pepiot). Even if they get Yamamoto, their rotation is an injury or two away from being a very mediocre pitching staff. They’ve gone from being a smart and balanced team to putting all their money into a few players while sacrificing depth.

        Reply
        • Trollfree

          2 years ago

          Camden453 –

          Do you believe it’s better to make the playoffs for many years in a row and never win (with the exception of a bogus shortened season) or would you rather win 2 or 3 rings in a ten year period?

          If your answer is the former, you are a perfect Dodger fan. You think there is a place in sports for participation trophies.

          If your answer is the later, then you are in for another 45 year drought with lots of participation trophies. Teams like LAD and NYY have enough profitability that the CAP means nothing. It’s great that the sport is competitive enough that teams continue to outsmart the front offices of the two money monger franchises and render them limp when it comes to championships!!!

          That’s why baseball is a great game!!

          Reply
  76. Camden453

    2 years ago

    Leaks like this mean the player isn’t considering the Dodgers but is using them to up the price on another team

    1
    Reply
  77. padam

    2 years ago

    Mets should easily win this auction since Cohen is willing to throw money at players. If they were willing to pay $43M per for 5 years of Verlander and Scherzer, 9-10 years at $35-37M for a 25 year old who seems to be the deal shouldn’t be a question. Sure, he hasn’t done what he did in Japan here in the States, but history shows there’s been solid results from those that have come over with the same sentiment of their pitching capability. Worst case he’s your number two, which is still a solid return considering.

    Reply
  78. Cooperdooper7

    2 years ago

    From the beginning his agent said he wants to sign with a team with one of his countrymen….. If that is true that leaves the Mets (Senga), Dodgers (Ohtani) and the Red Sox (Yoshida). Lets see if that stands true and if it is then how can the Yankees be a front runner? My Guess is he signs with the Mets because they offer the most money along with one of his friends being on the team.

    Reply
  79. al34

    2 years ago

    Breslow unfortunately is an amateur in a big market city Boston. He seriously got the job by default because no one wanted it and was not a blip on the radar. He has to be smoking cracked if he thinks he is going to be able to sign Yamamoto. No way. He will leverage any offer from Boston to go to the Dodgers. Then Breslow will say we gave it our best shot and came up empty. Then he will go after the third rate high upside cheaper players like Bloom would do. It is going to be a long year in Boston and we have so many holes to fill on this team. I guess we have a continuation of Blooms Reign of Cheapness and incompetence.

    2
    Reply
  80. Trollfree

    2 years ago

    AL34 – Always love your candid opinions because you are professing what most fed-up fans think. Breslow needs to do something before Spring Training that adds at least 1 or 2 all-star quality players. Bloom lost 5 during his reign and never replaced them. That explains the .500 record we are now accustomed to.

    Breslow could fix so much by moving Devers, trading Yoshida for something we need like a 3B or 2B and then signing TWO elite SPs whether by FA or trade.

    Everything else is minor compared to these big ticket items. If he can’t accomplish it by the start of the season, it needs to be his last season and we need to move on to a mover and shaker not thinker.

    Reply
  81. Trollfree

    2 years ago

    Dodgers signed Yamamoto and once again proved what a farce the CAP is in baseball. If Yamamoto needs TJ sometime in 2023 then LAD spent 1 Billion for Ohtani’s bat for a year!!! hahaha But hey, they probably will still get a participation trophy for making the playoffs and that’s all that really matters to them!!

    Reply
  82. al34

    2 years ago

    I knew he would go to the Dodgers with Ohtani going there as well. I also knew Breslow would come up empty. The Red Sox were not even in on it. Now we will hear that we were in on it but came up short like we usually do. Now Breslow will go after other guys but other teams who lost out on Yamamoto will up their anty to those players. He will do what Bloom does and go after cheaper “High Upside” players. It is going to be a long year in Boston again with an Amateur at the controls in Breslow.

    1
    Reply
    • Trollfree

      2 years ago

      Al – Like with Bloom I had hoped for great things but to not have a single impact addition to the roster by Christmas, Breslow is following in Bloom’s footsteps. He can’t strip the roster like Bloom did because it’s already been stripped but he can sit on his hands, read the situation and then be the last to the table on all deals.

      Bloom took over a World Championship team and downgraded it significantly. Now Breslow takes over the mess that is the Red Sox roster and his first actions are insignificant other than trading Verdugo. That action was on his critical actions list and I applauded him for doing it when he did. Now, he’s lost out on the elite players, the remaining good players are next to be gotten and lets hope at least 2 are scored by Breslow. The longer he waits to move Devers the less likely he lands good pitching except in a trade unless they have a contract clause that allows them to say no to Boston.

      The list of needs are so short that you would have thought more would have been accomplished by now. Breslow, give everyone a Christmas present and fire Cora and move Devers to DH. That’s all I want for Christmas!!!

      Reply
  83. Mickey Solis

    2 years ago

    I love this “any owner can spend whatever they want” garbage narrative Dodgers bandwagon fans are pushing to defend what their team is doing. They have the TV deal and overcharge their fake fans so much that they can actually spend money they “earn” as opposed to digging through their personal funds to pay these players. Take your stupid takes and shove them. The Dodgers ruined baseball.

    Reply

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