Well, that was fast.
Two days after Korean slugger Byung Ho Park arrived in Minnesota, the Twins and Park have a deal, with Park agreeing to a four-year, $12 million contract, with a club option for 2020, according to MLB.com.
All Park has to do now is live up to his end of the bargain and mash.
Will he hit 53 home runs for the Twins in 2016 as he did for the Nexen Heroes in South Korea last season? Probably not. But many are saying if Park can produce numbers similar to those posted by Jung Ho Kang of the Pittsburgh Pirates his transition to the Major Leagues will be a success.
Kang, in his rookie season with the Bucs, hit .287 with 24 doubles, 15 homers and 58 RBIs. And he did that after a slow start. Kang, who also used to play for Nexen, hit 40 home runs for the club in 2014.
After the Twins came to terms with Park, beat writers covering the Twins took to Twitter to break down Park's contract:
Meanwhile, the Twins' deal with Park looks microscopic after the Boston Red Sox went to crazy town on Tuesday and announced a seven-year, $217 million contract with 30-year-old pitcher David Price, previously with the Toronto Blue Jays.
Price's deal, according to Jeff Passan of Yahoo! Sports, is $2 million richer than pitcher Clayton Kershaw's contract, and at $31 million a year, ties him with infielder Miguel Cabrera of the Detroit Tigers for the most money per year in baseball.
Over his career, Price is 104-56 with an ERA of 3.09. The numbers are impressive, but all that money for a 30-year-old pitcher?
Seems too rich to me.
Labels: baseball contracts, Boston Red Sox, Byung Ho Park, Clayton Kershaw, David Price, Jung Ho Kang, Miguel Cabrera, Nexen Heroes, PIttsburgh Pirates, Toronto Blue Jays