Soto keeps focus on field after rejecting mega deal
LOS ANGELES — Before Juan Soto met with reporters Monday leading to the MLB All-Star Game at Dodger Stadium the following day, he pulled out his cellphone and made a call. A few moments later, his agent, Scott Boras, appeared, also on the phone. With a few assistants in tow, Boras stood a few feet away from Soto as he answered questions, many of them about his future.
Soto, a 23-year-old Washington Nationals outfielder, is one of the biggest stars in the sport. He is a two-time All-Star. He won the Home Run Derby on Monday night, a batting title in 2020 and the World Series in 2019. In five seasons, he has 118 home runs and a .968 on-base plus slugging percentage. Since his rookie season, in 2018, only seven players have accumulated more wins above replacement, according to FanGraphs.
The Nationals have tried to sign Soto to a long-term contract extension, but those efforts have proved unsuccessful. The latest proposal — a 15-year, $440 million extension, which would have been the largest contract in MLB history — was rejected. As a result, reports emerged Saturday that the Nationals would entertain trades for Soto, who reaches free agency in 2025.
How does a franchise properly assess and then acquire the talent needed in exchange for Soto? And, in the first place, how does a team navigate the treacherous public relations battle of parting ways, either via free agency or a trade, with a popular young superstar?
“For me now, I’m just concentrating on baseball,” said Soto, who is hitting .250 with 20 home runs and a .901 OPS. “You can’t do anything about it. I have my hands tied. I’m just going to play as hard as I can and play baseball and forget about anything else. I don’t make the decisions. They take the decisions. If they want to make the decision, I got to just pack my stuff and go. Now I’m going to keep playing baseball as hard as I can.”
Soto was clearly peeved that the latest extension offer became public. He said it was “pretty tough and pretty frustrating because I try to keep my stuff private.”
Asked if the Nationals and Soto would continue discussing an extension, Boras’ answer Monday was telling. He said, “When we do these things, we want all of our discussions to be private. We now know that they’re not, so I’m sure Juan will take that into advisement as he goes forward.”
In June, Mike Rizzo, the Nationals’ longtime general manager, said the team was “not trading” Soto and “we’ve made it clear to his agent and to the player.” On Monday, Soto said no one had told him why that had changed, if at all.
“It feels really uncomfortable,” he added. “You don’t know what to trust. But at the end of the day, it’s out of my hands.”
But why would Soto reject such a large amount of money?
“This is a very unique setting,” Boras said before alluding to Alex Rodriguez, the former star infielder. “I haven’t had a player that’s a superstar since A-Rod who is going to be a 25-, 26-year-old free agent. They just don’t come along that often where you have that level of performance for their teams. They offer clubs a surplus value that may be as much as a billion dollars in performance.”
Boras, who generally prefers that his clients establish their value in free agency rather than negotiate with just one team, added that baseball is about billions while players are about millions, and that Soto is “at the top of the food chain.”
There are many complicating factors, though. The Lerners, who own the Nationals, are entertaining offers to sell the team.
Since they won the 2019 World Series, the Nationals have not posted a winning season and have an MLB-worst 31-63 record this year.
They are in the midst of a rebuild, and it is unclear how soon they will contend again. And last month, the Nationals exercised the contract options on Rizzo and manager Dave Martinez, but those extensions are only through the 2023 season.
Soto said he would like to get to know the new team owner and see what is on their mind and how to help the team win.
“He’s in a position where he’s a huge asset to a major league franchise and that franchise is going to be sold,” Boras said. “I don’t think anybody wants to work for someone they don’t know. So it’s kind of a ghost contract. We don’t know who’s going to pay it. Consequently, when you’re a player like Juan, you’re a winning player and you want to make sure there’s a lot more things than dollars and cents involved and who you’re going to work for and where you’re going to be for the majority.”