Daily Press

After Hall selection, Faneca returns to Cox

Padres’ Tatis took ‘advance’ as budding prospect, now owes part of $340M contract

- By Ray Nimmo Staff Writer

In the past two weeks, just about everyone has feted former Pittsburgh Steelers offensive lineman Alan Faneca.

Becoming a Pro Football Hall of Famer will do that.

“It’s literally like talking to everyone you’ve ever shaken hands with and everybody you’ve ever met since you were 8 years old,” Faneca said. “It’s exciting and overwhelmi­ng at the same time.”

Soon, Faneca will trade in those handshakes and well wishes for helmet taps and life lessons as he begins his second season as an offensive line coach at Cox High.

Faneca retired in 2011 following a 13-year NFL career in which he won Super Bowl XL with the Steelers and was a nine-time Pro Bowl selection and six-time All-Pro.

He spent two seasons as an assistant coach at Potomac School before moving to Virginia Beach, where his wife, Julie, is from.

“My daughter is a sophomore (at Cox),” Faneca said. “When she became a freshman, I reached out and asked if they needed any help and if I could get involved.”

It was an easy ‘yes,’ from Cox coach Bill Stachelski.

“Coaching with Alan has been an amazing opportunit­y both for the coaches and the players,” Stachelski said. “He is a profession­al in every sense of the word: the way he teaches, the insights that he offers to me in helping understand the pulse of the team as well as the motivation that he instills in our players.”

Faneca is enjoying the coaching transition, learning what drills a high school athlete can handle while preaching an intense work ethic over talent reliance.

“I’m not selling any fantasies,” Faneca said. “I’m going out there and coaching football and getting the kids developed as football players and people. That’s how I was taught when I was in school.

“I’ve always been a good athlete, but I was not always natural. I always worked hard and in many respects that’s what

got me to where I am today. The work you put into that God-given talent — that’s what I try to pass on.”

So far, the players are listening and engaged. They consistent­ly ask questions during practice, but make sure to talk to Faneca about his playing days as the team walks back to the school post-practice.

“The kids have responded and definitely got over the quote unquote big NFL football player is here at practice fairly quickly last year,” Faneca said.

Faneca continues his own conversati­ons with Stachelski to better maneuver the high school coaching world.

“(Stachelski) is great,” Faneca said. “Sometimes we have our difference­s, but that’s great because we talk them out and discuss them. Some of my ideas I have to tone back or bounce them off him because it might be too much at the high school level. Sometimes we go with it. And it’s new and it’s great. There’s great give and take.”

Faneca hopes his coaching makes the same impact as his previous coaches had on him.

One of the people who reached out to congratula­te him on his Hall of Fame induction was his former youth basketball coach.

“I had a U9- or 10-year-old basketball all-star coach reach out to me,” Faneca said, “and he told me congratula­tions and we reminisced about the times back then. And that was New Orleans, Louisiana, 44 years later, basically. That’s what a coach is.”

NEW YORK — Fernando Tatis Jr.’s payday from baseball’s longest contract is not quite what it appears.

The 22-year-old star shortstop signed a 14-year, $340 million deal with the Padres, the third-highest deal in the sport’s history.

But the son of the only major leaguer to hit two grand slams in one inning will be giving up a percentage of his fortune to Big League Advance, a company founded in 2016 by former minor league pitcher Michael Schwimer to invest in prospects making low salaries. Think of it along the lines of stock traders buying Apple in the company’s early years.

Tatis agreed to receive money from BLA when he was just a budding prospect in exchange for part of his future salary.

Only a small percentage of minor leaguers make it to the major leagues, and even a smaller chunk sticks long enough for the big paydays of salary arbitratio­n and free agency. And Big League Advance develops computer programs to try to predict future All-Stars and then tries to invest in those players before they are known, well, commoditie­s.

“For us as a company, it’s really a testament to our modeling capabiliti­es and how well we’ve been able to predict success of minor leaguers,” Schwimer said Monday. “When we did a deal with Fernando Tatis Jr., he wasn’t a top 50 prospect on anybody’s list. And here our numbers said he was the second-best player in the last 15 years, including Mike Trout, (Bryce) Harper and all these guys. That’s what our modeling told us. It was actually a really scary thing investing the amount of money we invested in it. It was a sizable portion of our fund. But at the end of the day, we decided to trust the numbers and trust the process, and it really, really worked out.”

Big League Advance has invested in 344 players, including 20 signed in the last two months, and the vast majority are not on 40-man rosters.

The company’s first $26 million fund, which closed in 2018, invested in 77 players, of which Schwimer said 83% were outside the top 300 prospects when the player was signed. Of those 77 players, he said 45 had reached the major leagues, a percentage he attributes to the company’s data analysis and predictive skills.

The second fund raised $130 million. Schwimer said BLA has had about 200 people invest the $156 million.

Tatis and other players who sign with BLA get an upfront payment in exchange for a percentage of their future earnings. Schwimer said the average paid to a player is $350,000, without confirming any individual’s figure.

“It was just a family decision,” Tatis said. “I’m just going to call it that way.”

Money the players receive from the company is taxable income, but they are not taxed on money they owe the company.

The only available contract involves Padres catcher Francisco Mejia, which became public when he sued BLA in U.S. District Court in Delaware in February 2018. Mejia alleged he signed three contracts with BLA in September, November and December 2016, and he received $360,000 as part of agreements in which Mejia agreed to repay the company 10% of future earnings. The lawsuit was dismissed with prejudice.

The players’ associatio­n does not regulate businesses such as BLA, and union head Tony Clark declined to comment on the company.

“The Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n is in a difficult position with respect to regulation of entities such as Big League Advance,” said Jay Reisinger, a lawyer who represents players. “While they have oversight authority with respect to agents, that is derived from the MLBPA granting certified agents certain rights that the MLBPA has under the CBA, specifical­ly to negotiate individual player contracts. Entities such as Big League Advance are not granted any bargaining rights, and thus the MLBPA most likely doesn’t have any control over Big League Advance. The MLBPA should, and has, educated players about the dangers of deals with entities such as Big League Advance, but more education is certainly warranted.”

Scott Boras, baseball’s most high-profile agent, said he advises clients not to take this type of deal and tells them they are better off waiting until they reach the major leagues. The lowest big league salary is $570,500 this season, which comes to $3,067.20 per day when a player at the minimum is called up, an increase from the minimum of $700 weekly at Triple A, which was boosted from $502 weekly in 2019.

BLA does not break down its players from among baseball’s three entry paths: high school, college and internatio­nal.

“The primary target is indigent and talented players from Latin America. Few if any top American talents who received large signing bonuses would ever consider the usurious terms,” Boras said.

“The idea of giving millions in lump sums to players is the justificat­ion of candy used to attract and compel players to give up huge percentage­s of their careers. That solely benefits BLA.”

Tatis agreed to a $700,000 bonus when he signed with the White Sox in 2015. His dad, Fernando Tatis, played in the big leagues from 1997-2010 and earned about $18 million, most from a four-year, $15 million deal with the Cardinals in 2000.

Tatis Jr. told The Athletic in 2018 he signed the BLA deal at first to afford a personal trainer, higher quality food and better housing.

Asked Monday whether he would recommend similar deals to other prospects, he responded: “I feel like that’s a very private decision from the player’s standpoint and from their family.”

Angels star Mike Trout, entering the third season of a 12-year, $426.5 million contract that is baseball’s largest deal, said he hasn’t given thought to whether the union should attempt to regulate this type of venture.

“I think if you put up numbers and you go out there, play hard and bring some joy in front of the game, I think everything will pay off in the end. And you don’t have to worry about that stuff. I’m sure it could hurt some players, it could. That’s just an educated guess,” he said, “I’m pretty sure that Tatis is pretty happy.”

BLA, based in Washington, D.C., Bethesda and Potomac, Maryland, says it is in its first season devising analytics for Duke basketball and consults for NBA teams. Its sister company, Jambos, provides analytics for sports betting.

Schwimer said the staff includes 35 people, all equity partners, including former prospects Rudy Guillen, David Ledbetter, Arlon Quiroz and Manny Ramirez Jr. Former Dodgers GM Paul DePodesta, known for his internatio­nal baseball scouting and now chief strategy officer of the Browns, was involved when the company began.

The Rockets waived veteran center DeMarcus Cousins on Tuesday.

The move came after a mutual decision was made between the team and the fourtime All-Star to part ways, according to reports.

Cousins, 30, plans to explore interest from other teams. His veterans minimum salary of $2.3 million was guaranteed by the Rockets last week.

In 25 games for the Rockets this season, Cousins averaged 9.6 points and 7.6 rebounds while shooting only 37.6% from the floor.

Injuries have wreaked havoc with Cousins’ career in recent seasons. He ruptured his Achilles tendon during the 2017-18 season while with the Pelicans. Cousins then signed with the Warriors but tore his quadriceps muscle in the 2018-19 season. He joined the Lakers for the 2019-20 campaign but tore his ACL and didn’t play.

College basketball: The Big 12 scheduled a dozen makeup games next week in the break the conference had left open for such games before the start of postseason tournament play. No. 2 Baylor, No. 7 Oklahoma, No. 10 West Virginia, No. 14 Texas and No. 18 Texas Tech all will play three games next week before the Big 12 tournament is played March 11-14 in Kansas City. Baylor on Tuesday had its first game in three weeks after COVID-19 issues in the program.

Golf: The PGA Championsh­ip will cap attendance at 10,000 spectators per round due to COVID-19 concerns when it’s played on The Ocean Course in in Kiawah Island, South Carolina from May 20-23.

NHL: Sabres defenseman William Borgen will miss up to two months with a broken right forearm, further depleting team’s injury-thinned blue line. The news of Borgen’s injury comes a day after the Sabres announced that veteran defenseman Jake McCabe will miss up to eight months after tearing two ligaments and damaging the meniscus in his right knee. The already was playing without top defenseman Rasmus Ristolaine­n, who tested positive for COVID19 three weeks ago.

Soccer: Olivier Giroud’s bicycle-kick goal in the 68th minute awarded after video review gave English Premier League club Chelsea a 1-0 victory over Spanish league leader Atlético Madrid in the first leg of a Champions League last 16 match. Atlético was the home team but the match was played in Bucharest, Romania, because of travel restrictio­ns preventing visitors from Britain entering Spain. The second leg will be contested March 17 in London. In UCL other action, Bayern Munich defeated host Lazio 4-1.

Women’s basketball: Senior Katie Benzan made a school-record nine 3s and scored a career-high 29 points to lead No. 8 Maryland to a 111-93 victory over visiting Iowa. Hawkeyes freshman Caitlin Clark was equally impressive and made nine 3s, one shy of a program record, and scored 29 of her 34 points in the first half. Clark has scored 30 or more points nine times, the most in NCAA women’s basketball. The Terrapins’ 68 first-half points were the most scored in Big Ten history. Diamond Miller had 27 points and Ashley Owusu added 24 points and 12 assists for the Terrapins (17-2, 13-1 Big Ten).

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Pittsburgh Steelers center Alan Faneca, pictured celebratin­g with the Vince Lombardi Trophy in 2006, is now an offensive line coach at Cox High.
MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Pittsburgh Steelers center Alan Faneca, pictured celebratin­g with the Vince Lombardi Trophy in 2006, is now an offensive line coach at Cox High.
 ?? JONATHAN FERREY/GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Alan Faneca hopes his coaching has the same impact as his coaches had on him.
JONATHAN FERREY/GETTY IMAGES FILE Alan Faneca hopes his coaching has the same impact as his coaches had on him.
 ?? DENIS POROY/GETTY ?? Padres start Fernando Tatis Jr. recently signed a 14-year, $340 million deal, the third-highest deal in the sport’s history.
DENIS POROY/GETTY Padres start Fernando Tatis Jr. recently signed a 14-year, $340 million deal, the third-highest deal in the sport’s history.

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