Signed for 950K, which is just over 700K dollars over his slot value.
Sounds like the Cubs really wanted him to go that much over value
Printable View
Signed for 950K, which is just over 700K dollars over his slot value.
Sounds like the Cubs really wanted him to go that much over value
Good deal for him
I thought this was done a while back?
Just curious, how many of our drafted players (not signees) the last 10 years got 950k or better?
Once he went in the 6th round, he had already agreed with the Cubs. Except 1st rounders, where picks are protected, ALL PLAYERS DRAFTED IN THE TOP 10 ROUNDS SIGN. YOU DON'T GO IN THE TOP 10 ROUNDS UNLESS YOU'VE ALREADY AGREED WITH THE CLUB DRAFTING YOU.
The Cubs couldn't sign their 3rd round pick, Michael McAvene from Louisville until after the CWS. They signed McAvene for 65K under slot, which contributed to Hearn's bonus.
You can't sign a player for over slot until you've signed the players for under slot that allow you to go over slot with another player. Louisville being in the CWS delayed that process.
He is a catcher positionally correct? That is his value, and why the Cubs overpaid, I bet. I hate Contreras. May he soon move on to another team.
I am just saying 3-4 years and you should be knocking on the MLB door. So you either have that amount or you go back to school or do whatever. It is similar to the other scenario in the thread where we were talking about someone signing for $500k. When you get around $1 Mil, you have to be Really Confident in your abilities to turn that down and go to college.
Ginn turned down $2 Mil and I believe Paul Maholm turned down $750k back in the day. Maholm's gamble paid off since he ended up signing for $2 or 3 Mil and we will see next year if Ginn improved his draft stock.
Has any person at catcher ever turned down that kind of money?
I would hope so and he should have a nice start to life with that kind of bonus. He has plenty of money to set himself up and should also have the college tuition clause in his contract so if he doesn't make MLB then he should have enough in the bank to go to college, buy a house and car, and still have some cash in the bank.
It would be hard to turn down close to a Mil unless you had starting pitcher talent like JT Ginn.