KC: Don’t give in to Scott Boras

Well, with the Royals having been all but mathematically eliminated from contention by Memorial Day–that’s what happens when you forget how to field, pitch, and hit, and aren’t fast enough to steal any bases–it looks like they’ll soon be disassembling the team. And the first to go out the door will be Carlos Beltran.

He shouldn’t be.Beltran is possibly the most underrated player in baseball. He’s a classic five-tool player, in that he makes spectacular catches, has a great throwing arm, can steal bases, hit home runs, and hit for average. For the past four years or so he’s been one of the most exciting players in baseball, but because he’s played in Kansas City, even a lot of Kansas Citians don’t know it.

Trouble is, Beltran is represented by Scott Boras, who is a leading candidate, along with George Steinbrenner, Bud Selig, and Donald Fehr, to do the most to ruin the game of baseball. I think the nicest thing I’ve ever heard Boras called was "a one-man wrecking ball." Hey, none of those words will get you fined by the FCC…

Boras gets called lots of colorful things because Boras is a master at extracting every red cent out of you. Boras gets seven-figure salaries for pitchers who can’t pitch and position players who can’t hit or field routinely. And if you happen to be any good at all, Boras will get you an eight-figure salary.

How’d World Series MVP Ivan Rodriguez end up playing for the Detroit Tigers, a team that lost 119 games last year? Easy. They were the only team willing to pay the salary Boras demanded.

So, back to Beltran. Scott Boras’ job now, the way he sees it, is to present Beltran as the best player in baseball. Or at the very least, twice as good as anyone else available. And as we all know, if you’re twice as good as someone else who plays baseball, you should make at least four times as much money.

Scott Boras is going to try to get Beltran $25 million a year. And if he can’t get it, he’ll take the best offer on the table, which needless to say probably won’t be the $9 million the Royals are paying Beltran now.

So the Royals, desperate to get more than nothing for the best player they’ve developed since George Brett, are shopping Beltran. The only thing is, how many teams are willing to give you anything in exchange for a Scott Boras client, who’s going to walk at the end of the season?

The Yankees will, but the Yankees don’t have anything the Royals want or need. They’ve depleted all of it trading for less-talented players for their pennant drives the last few years. The Royals and Yankees discussed an even-up trade of Beltran for Alfonso Soriano during the offseason, but then the Yankees traded Soriano for Alex Rodriguez.

Seeing as nobody else is likely to have an Alfonso Soriano-caliber player at an Alfonso Soriano price to offer, the Royals’ best bet is to keep Beltran around and let him give them some highlight reel exposure. The Royals’ pitchers give him plenty of chances to chase down long fly balls.

The reason for this is simple: When a free agent the quality of Beltran departs, you don’t get nothing. You get a draft pick. In the case of Beltran, you’re virtually assured of getting the team’s first-round draft pick.

When you’re a small-market team, drafting is just about your only hope for being able to find and afford another player like Beltran.

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2 thoughts on “KC: Don’t give in to Scott Boras

  • June 15, 2004 at 3:33 am
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    If Kansas City doesn’t know about Carlos Beltran then they simply don’t care about the Royals – period. I’m a Boston fan living near LA and believe me most fans I know, know about Beltran. I’m sorry KC went to h#ll this year because I like seeing the smaller market teams do well and I like Tony Pena (a former Boston catcher). Every team needs their unique local heros to generate fan interest both at home and on the road, because in the end it translates into money for everybody. Even the Yankees don’t make that much playing home games against washout teams. Parity sometimes gets a bad rap, but I think it’s healthier for the game when more teams have a shot up until the end of the season. I love that the Angels and Marlins have won the last 2 World Series. In football, I love it that my Patriots have 2 Superbowls without any megastars. And I really enjoy the Pistons smaking around the Lakers in the NBA finals (Laker fans are almost as insufferable as Yankee fans). Hopefully Boras is a man whose time is limited because eventually the owners, the players, and the agents should learn that in sports, it’s better if everyone has a chance to succeed.


    Some things you must love because they’re impossible to like

    • June 16, 2004 at 3:37 pm
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      I think–do I ever hope–the Royals made a statement when they passed over Stephen Drew (younger brother of J.D. Drew) in the draft this year. Drew was the best player available but represented by Boras, so they drafted someone else. Seeing as Drew is a hard-hitting shortstop, he very well could have been one of the first five picks. He wasn’t.

      I believe small-market teams as a matter of policy should refuse to deal with players represented by Scott Boras. That reduces their choices, but teams don’t lose by not having enough stars. Teams lose by not having enough slightly higher-than-average players.

      Oh well. The Royals do seem to finally be subscribing to the Cleveland Indians School of Thought, which served Cleveland well for most of a decade. So they’ll be good again… Come about 2007.

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