Sports

Angels News: MLB Insider Projects Shohei Ohtani To Get $600 Million This Offseason

The winter of free agent Shohei Ohtani is here, and it very well could see him leaving the Angels this offseason. Ohtani has been the star of the Halos for some time now, but the lack of success on the field could drive him away from the team.

He is expected to pursue a franchise that he deems gives him a chance to win every year, something that the Angels haven’t been able to show him. And he is expected to receive the largest contract in baseball history, with some believing it to go upwards of $500 million.

But he did suffer a torn UCL this past season and will be limited to just hitting in 2024. He plans to return to the mound in 2025, but there are some who believe it will impact the contract he receives this offseason.

However, MLB insider Jon Heyman of The New York Post isn’t one of those people, and he believes that Ohtani could get $600 million on the open market. He put together contract projections for the top free agents, and Ohtani ended up with an extraordinary amount.

“Expert 1: $535M, 11 years. Expert 2: $400M, 10 years (opt-out after 2024). Me: $600M, 10 years.”

Per Jon Heyman of The New York Post

If Ohtani does get offered a deal for that amount, the Angels will likely walk away. They have their price, and this likely far exceeds it.

Most teams in baseball will do the same, even for the services of Ohtani. But the two-way superstar has made it clear that money won’t dictate things this winter, winning will. He is the type of player to turn down a larger deal to join a team that he believes is a contender.

But the money will be tempting for any player, and there are only a handful of teams who could even offer this amount. The question is how much his torn UCL will impact a potential contract, and that remains to be seen.

“The elbow injury that will limit him to hitting in ’24 won’t prevent a record deal — although, true or not, some speculate he knows where he wants to go before even hearing every offer.”

Per Jon Heyman of The New York Post

Ohtani will be getting paid massively either way, but the signs are pointing to him leaving the Angels. He will be missed, but the team also needs to look out for their future, and giving that much money to one player could hamper them for years to come.

 

Related Posts

“Observing 60-60”? Rickey loses to Ohtani in their 14th HR/SB contest

LOS ANGELES — Shohei Ohtani got plenty of appreciation from the fans in Miami for his unfathomable 6-for-6, three-homer, 10-RBI, two-steal, 17-base performance to establish MLB’s 50-50 club on Thursday at loanDepot Park, even…

Alcaraz desea volver a ser pareja de dobles con Rafael Nadal

Carlitos se prepara para debutar en la Laver Cup, mientras que Rafa continúa definiendo lo que será su futuro. Desde que disputó la segunda ronda de los Juegos…

Graham Rowntree: ‘Two years down the line I’m more battle-hardened’

After two years of Graham Rowntree as Munster head coach, we’ve become accustomed to straight answers. The Englishman speaks about the game just as he played it: to…

‘Need to be more rugby smart’: Wallaroos’ woes worsen as last-ditch try lifts Wales to historic win

The Wallaroos have suffered another international defeat on their British Isles tour, but only after a late, late try from Wales sank them 31-24 at Newport’s Rodney Parade….

What Bath said about revenge win over a Mitchell-less Northampton

Johann van Graan has explained that redemption was never on the Bath agenda after they opened their Gallagher Premiership campaign with a 38-16 victory over champions Northampton. Bath turned the tables on Saints…

All Blacks: Late hammer blow as Beauden Barrett ruled out, debutant added to the bench for Wallabies Test

The All Blacks have made a late change for the Rugby Championship clash against Australia with Beauden Barrett ruled out. Barrett was set to start at full-back in…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *