• Drama over Guerrero's long-term future with Blue Jays extends into Tuesday

    DUNEDIN, Fla. – The drama over Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s long-term future with the Toronto Blue Jays stretched into Tuesday’s early hours amid a push for a contract extension that would keep the all-star first baseman from free agency in the fall.

    A late Monday deadline set by the 26-year-old, who didn’t want negotiations taking place once the club holds its first full-squad workout of spring training, came and went with no public resolution.

    Guerrero is due to join his Blue Jays teammates Tuesday at the club’s Player Development Complex, by which time some clarity on his future should emerge.

    That the talks are pushing right to the wire isn’t surprising, as the baseball industry is largely deadline driven, with executives and agents alike tending to believe that only when a cutoff is imminent do the best offers hit the table.

    At minimum, facing the cutoff surely forced the two camps to distill months of posturing into their true positions, perhaps driving them towards some common ground.

    The primary gap to overcome, as it has been since they first discussed a long-term deal after Guerrero’s MVP runner-up campaign of 2021, is how to value Guerrero’s free-agent years.

    Back then, the $340-million, 14-year extension Fernando Tatis Jr. signed with the San Diego Padres shifted the market and divided the sides, while now the $765-million, 15-year deal the New York Mets gave Juan Soto in free agency again moved the yardsticks.

    Atkins on Vladdy contract talks: 'It's entirety of our focus in coming days'
    Blue Jays GM Ross Atkins gives the latest update on the contract negotiations with Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s camp, and why all the dialogue is constructive, and will be the entirety of their focus in the coming days, leading up to Vladdy's deadline.
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      By how much is up for debate but by not finding a long-term deal early, the Blue Jays have left themselves chasing the market. Had they signed Guerrero to the Tatis deal after his 2021 season, they would have essentially bought his free-agent years for roughly $270 million over 10 years, since they paid $70.8 million for his four arbitration seasons.

      A similar scenario could play out if there’s no agreement before the deadline and the Blue Jays are left to try and retain him in free agency. That’s what happened in the spring of 2022 when Aaron Judge turned down a $213.5-million, seven-year extension offer from the New York Yankees, put up monster numbers and then received huge bids from the San Diego Padres and San Francisco Giants before returning the Bronx for $360 million over nine years.

      Layered atop that, and particularly pertinent to Guerrero and the Blue Jays, is how clubs have behaved when elite young talents become available in free agency.

      And Guerrero would be selling his peak years, beginning with his age-27 season, should he reach free agency.

      The Blue Jays, of course, would be factoring in the scarcity of such players, along with other intrinsic elements, into their valuation, and one trait they’ve consistently shown in free agency is a strong discipline to their rational evaluations. 

      There’s a time and a place for such an approach — it helped them land free agents Anthony Santander, Jeff Hoffman and Yimi Garcia at relatively comfortable numbers this winter — but they also risk getting trapped by their processes if they can’t stretch when necessary.

      Whether the Blue Jays feel it’s necessary in this case is another matter, and doubters can point to the volatility of Guerrero’s performance — sandwiched between his elite seasons in 2021 and 2024 are seasons of 3.3 fWAR and 1.3 fWAR in 2022 and 2023 — as reason for caution.

      Blue Jays' Atkins says 'the willingness is there' to re-sign Bichette
      Blue Jays GM Ross Atkins talks about the importance of Bo Bichette to the organization, expecting a big bounce back, and touches on what he can about any contract talks they've have with him and his camp.
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          If Guerrero — and/or Bichette — were to walk, the Blue Jays could theoretically reallocate the combined $46 million the duo is earning this year toward other free agents, seeking to take an alternate route to remaining competitive.

          However, Guerrero, with his combination of power, average and zone control, all supported by top-percentile underlying data, is the type of carrying player that rarely gets to market, and there’s no guarantee the Blue Jays can sign the alternate free agents they want.

          All of which makes this negotiation one of the most fateful in franchise history, with the coming fork in the road leading either toward stability through the biggest contract the Blue Jays have ever handed out, or directional uncertainty for a roster that can be easily unravelled if 2025 goes awry.

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