Steve Cohen hands the Mets over to Juan Soto


There is joy in Flushing where no one cares that Steve Cohen spent a record $765 million (so far) — and was prepared to go for more if the Yankees matched him — for one player in Juan Soto. And while Soto tried to tell us last Thursday it was not about the money but rather what teams wanted to do for the next 15 years, it was as former New York Giants GM George Young so famously put it all those years ago, it was always going to be about the money, and all the perks his family could cajole out of Cohen.

The Yankees finally realized that as the negotiations reached the nitty-gritty stage last Sunday night when they were already in far beyond their comfort zone at $700 million and were told by Soto’s agent Scott Boras they would have to pony up a $60 million signing bonus if they were to remain competitive with three other clubs in the bidding, the Mets, Red Sox and Blue Jays. Hal Steinbrenner gulped hard, talked it over with Yankee president Randy Levine and GM Brian Cashman and reluctantly agreed, only to be told that other clubs had also agreed to a provision that would allow them to void the opt-out after the fifth year in exchange for adding another $4 million per year salary to Soto for the remainder of the contract. Again, they reluctantly agreed but said they would have to add another year to the contract in order to keep the annual average value for them at $47.5 million.

Gardiner Anderson / New York Daily News

Juan Soto at a press conference at Citi Field in Queens, New York City on Thursday, Dec. 12, 2024.

It was at this point when they were informed that Soto’s mother, Belkis Pacheco, who had become the driving force in the negotiations, insisted the Yankees throw in a suite at Yankee Stadium for the entire 15 years of the contract. That was when Hal Steinbrenner said something to the effect: “We’re gonna pay you $760 million and you can’t afford to pay for your own suite? We don’t give away suites (which range from $600,000 to $1 million) at Yankee Stadium,” — while adding that Aaron Judge, Derek Jeter and CC Sabathia all had suites at Yankee Stadium which they paid for themselves, as well as for premier seats in the Legends section behind home plate.

Cohen, on the other hand, had no problem with any added perks Soto and his family threw at him, and there were plenty. Besides a suite at Citi Field for 15 years, he also threw in 22 (for Soto’s number) Delta Club premium seats, security people for both him and his entire family home and away, and it is said, but not confirmed, the “family services” clause in the contract includes charter flights for his family to road games and a clothes allowance for his mother! Cohen probably doesn’t care but all these perks are included in the overall value of contract for luxury tax purposes and when it’s all said and done, Soto’s AAV will be more likely around $55 million not $51 million. I’m told Rob Manfred’s salary police are all over this contract.

So, yes, the deeper you dig into the contract the more obscene it gets as Cohen has essentially handed over his team to one player — a one dimensional player, by the way, who will most assuredly be a fulltime DH long before it’s even half over. As one former manager put it to me: “Carlos Mendoza’s job just got a whole lot harder as Aaron Boone’s got a whole lot easier.”



Source link

Related Posts