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The great thing about baseball, is despite all the spending and all the percieved "major" vs. "minor" market teams, there is so much parity that any team can win the World Series in any year.

True, but not in the case of the Royals. Meche may not want to live in a big city, but he showed his true colours by not signing with a contender when the dough was offered. The Royals are the worst team in all of baseball, period.

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The great thing about baseball' date=' is despite all the spending and all the percieved "major" vs. "minor" market teams, there is so much parity that any team can win the World Series in any year. [/quote']

True, but not in the case of the Royals. Meche may not want to live in a big city, but he showed his true colours by not signing with a contender when the dough was offered. The Royals are the worst team in all of baseball, period.

Yea the Royals will definately not win this year, however, lets say the pull a Tigers and each and every one of their young players develops and has a career year in the same season, say 2 years down the road. Maybe Meche earns that money and becomes an ace (he is "young") and the Royals also have Luke Hudson and Zach Grienke...they could easily pull a Bonderman/Verlander/Maroth type season...or maybe not...yea...definately not.

haha never mind

silly Meche

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The great thing about baseball, is despite all the spending and all the percieved "major" vs. "minor" market teams, there is so much parity that any team can win the World Series in any year. Case in point the fact that for the past 6 years (or 7?) there has been a different team win the championship and many of them have been teams with "small" payrolls: Marlins, Angels, D-Backs, White Sox etc...

This would be a good point if it were true.

There is parity in the leauge between the top 10 teams any given year.

Florida payroll

Ivan Rodriguez $ 10,000,000

Luis Castillo $ 4,850,000

Derrek Lee $ 4,250,000

Mike Lowell $ 3,700,000

Juan Encarnacion $ 3,450,000

A.J. Burnett $ 2,500,000

Mark Redman $ 2,150,000

Brad Penny $ 1,875,000

Josh Beckett $ 1,725,000

Alex Gonzalez $ 1,700,000

Braden Looper $ 1,600,000

Todd Hollandsworth $ 1,500,000

Carl Pavano $ 1,500,000

Vladimir Nunez $ 1,400,000

Mike Redmond $ 1,050,000

Juan Pierre $ 1,000,000

Andy Fox $ 800,000

Lenny Harris $ 800,000

Armando Almanza $ 775,000

Mike Mordecai $ 500,000

Gerald Williams $ 325,000

Brian Banks $ 300,000

Ramon Castro $ 300,000

Blaine Neal $ 300,000

Tommy Phelps $ 300,000

Tim Spooneybarger $ 300,000

Michael Tejera $ 300,000

Justin Wayne $ 300,000

Dontrelle Willis $ 234,426

Miguel Cabrera $ 165,574

Arizona payroll

Randy Johnson $ 13,350,000

Matt Williams $ 9,000,000

Jay Bell $ 8,050,000

Curt Schilling $ 6,500,000

Steve Finley $ 5,375,000

Luis Gonzalez $ 4,833,333

Brian Anderson $ 4,125,000

Tony Womack $ 4,000,000

Matt Mantei $ 3,583,333

Mark Grace $ 3,000,000

Greg Swindell $ 2,533,333

Armando Reynoso $ 2,000,000

Russ Springer $ 1,700,000

Greg Colbrunn $ 1,600,000

Reggie Sanders $ 1,500,000

Damian Miller $ 1,250,000

Byung-Hyun Kim $ 762,500

Mike Morgan $ 700,000

Danny Bautista $ 675,000

Bobby Witt $ 500,000

Midre Cummings $ 425,000

Miguel Batista $ 400,000

David Dellucci $ 325,000

Erubiel Durazo $ 260,000

Rod Barajas $ 208,000

Nick Bierbrodt $ 200,000

Califonia payroll

Tim Salmon $ 9,650,000

Kevin Appier $ 9,500,000

Aaron Sele $ 7,166,667

Darin Erstad $ 6,250,000

Troy Percival $ 5,250,000

Garret Anderson $ 5,000,000

Brad Fullmer $ 4,000,000

Troy Glaus $ 4,000,000

Scott Spiezio $ 2,275,000

Alan Levine $ 1,325,000

Dennis Cook $ 1,250,000

Orlando Palmeiro $ 1,000,000

Ramon Ortiz $ 575,000

Jorge Fabregas $ 500,000

Benji Gil $ 400,000

Adam Kennedy $ 375,000

Bengie Molina $ 350,000

Jarrod Washburn $ 350,000

Scott Schoeneweis $ 325,000

Donne Wall $ 300,000

David Eckstein $ 280,000

Lou Pote $ 255,000

Shawn Wooten $ 250,000

Jose Nieves $ 240,000

Ben Weber $ 240,000

Jeff Davanon $ 207,500

Mark Lukasiewicz $ 207,500

Chicago payroll

Paul Konerko $ 8,750,000

Jose Contreras $ 8,500,000

Freddy Garcia $ 8,000,000

Frank Thomas $ 8,000,000

Mark Buehrle $ 6,000,000

Jermaine Dye $ 4,000,000

Carl Everett $ 4,000,000

Orlando Hernandez $ 3,500,000

Jon Garland $ 3,400,000

Shingo Takatsu $ 2,500,000

Tadahito Iguchi $ 2,300,000

A.J. Pierzynski $ 2,250,000

Juan Uribe $ 2,150,000

Dustin Hermanson $ 2,000,000

Aaron Rowand $ 2,000,000

Luis Vizcaino $ 1,300,000

Damaso Marte $ 1,250,000

Timo Perez $ 1,000,000

Cliff Politte $ 1,000,000

Scott Podsednik $ 700,000

Chris Widger $ 500,000

Joe Crede $ 400,000

Willie Harris $ 365,000

Ross Gload $ 335,000

Neal Cotts $ 330,000

Pablo Ozuna $ 330,000

These aren't lightweight line-ups they just aren't as overpaid as the Yanks and Red Sox.

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championship and many of them have been teams with "small" payrolls: Marlins' date=' Angels, D-Backs, White Sox etc...[/quote']

These aren't lightweight line-ups they just aren't as overpaid as the Yanks and Red Sox.

hence why I put it the "small" in quotes...they aren't small, but comparitively speaking they are

and at the begining of the year, not one of those teams were predicted to win it all...

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The Globe and Mail reports that the Toronto Blue Jays have made a formal contract offer to outfielder Vernon Wells.

According to another report on Yahoo!, it is a seven year deal worth $126 million US. If signed, the contract would be the sixth-richest in baseball history, behind only Alex Rodriguez ($252 million), Derek Jeter ($189 million), Manny Ramirez ($160 million), Todd Helton ($141.5 million) and Alfonso Soriano ($136 million).

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The Globe and Mail reports that the Toronto Blue Jays have made a formal contract offer to outfielder Vernon Wells.

According to another report on Yahoo!, it is a seven year deal worth $126 million US. If signed, the contract would be the sixth-richest in baseball history, behind only Alex Rodriguez ($252 million), Derek Jeter ($189 million), Manny Ramirez ($160 million), Todd Helton ($141.5 million) and Alfonso Soriano ($136 million).

WOW!!!!

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The Globe and Mail reports that the Toronto Blue Jays have made a formal contract offer to outfielder Vernon Wells.

According to another report on Yahoo!, it is a seven year deal worth $126 million US. If signed, the contract would be the sixth-richest in baseball history, behind only Alex Rodriguez ($252 million), Derek Jeter ($189 million), Manny Ramirez ($160 million), Todd Helton ($141.5 million) and Alfonso Soriano ($136 million).

I don't care how well you catch a ball, no one is worth 125 mil.

Insane!

SO who is gonna get baseball's first 200 million contract!?!

When will it end!??!!

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You owe me 50$ Jaimoe' date=' ya dumbass. I could have suckered him![/quote']

As if Chameleon has that kind of scratch. He can't even afford a spell-checker.

Stop hatin' I got a spell checker for firefox. Now if I can only use it correctly...

Hmmm.. sorry guys my main skillsets involve music history, music theory and recreational chemistry...

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I think this is great, we need to keep Wells. If we don't it will be a huge step-back for an organization that is only a few steps away from winning for real.

I say give Wells as much as he wants, he is one of the few players in the game that are actually worth it...he is a 5-tool player, great club house guy, and just an all around good person. Unlike Soriano, who is only a 4 tool guy at best (some might say a 3-tool, he definately can't play defense, and does he even have an arm?), and he is a complete and total head case.

Good for the Jays to offer up a serious contract offer to a player who deserves it.

Looks like we are gonna trade Reed Johnson me thinks and put Adam Lind in the field for good...I think Reed and a pitching prospect could land us a better starter than we would've gotten on the free agent market.

As far as not following baseball anymore because of the contracts, would you rather the Jays not pay any money and lose all the freakin time? Jeez, they can't win with some fair-weather fans...

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