February 17,2004.
It’s the day the worst trade in the history of professional sports happened. I challenge anyone out there to find a more ignorant, gut-wrenching deal than the one Tom Hicks, John Hart and the Texas Rangers made on this day.
The Rangers sent Alex Rodriguez and his whopping contract to the New York Yankees for Alfonso Soriano and prospect Joaquin Arias. Soriano is since long gone, and Arias has yet to pan out. Rodriguez, of course, is one of the best hitters of our generation.
You know the rest of the story. This deal wasn’t simply a matter of the three players involved. Far from it. In addition to trading one of the best hitters of our generation, Tom Hicks, somehow, agreed to give the Yankees $67 million in future years, just for the privilege of doing business with them.
I had no problem shipping A-Rod out of town. After three last-place finishes since he arrived, I was all for it. But $67 million on top of it? Extending in some form or fashion all the way out to 2025? I wasn’t that desperate to see him go. And it felt like a punch in the gut when I saw the details of the trade.
(Technically the money went to A-Rod, not the Yankees. But the Rangers were paying a significant part of his contract, and he played for the Yankees. So…)
You know the saying “a fool and his money are easily parted?”
Well, guess what? The fool got a reprieve. Sort of. With A-Rod opting out of his deal with the Yankees, the Rangers are off the hook for the final $21 million, which will go back in Tom Hicks’ pockets.
And some of that $21 million is going to go back into his baseball team.
Oh, outside of a centerfielder, I don’t expect the Rangers to make much of a splash in free agency this offseason. If they do much, it will be via trades, I suspect. But it does impact what they can do in future years, when the current group of young players develop and they are ready to make a push.
And G.M. Jon Daniels did bring in some young talent this year. The Rangers, in one season, transformed their farm system from being ranked by Baseball America 28th in baseball, to what I expect to be a top 10 ranking as we enter spring training.
To be fair, it wasn’t just the trades Daniels made. It was the bevy of first round draft choices in 2007, five of them in all. It was the re-focusing in Latin America two years ago, which is starting to pay dividends. And it was some young players already in the system, like RHP Eric Hurley, C Taylor Teagarden and 2B German Duran, and plenty of others, making positive strides in their development. But the trades sure helped stock the talent level.
I’m not sad at all to see the A-Rod chapter finally closed.
We’ll get into free agency next time.
I don’t have the stomach for it right now.
Share This