USA TODAY US Edition

Buyer’s remorse in Chicago?

Arrieta wonders about offseason motives

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist USA TODAY

SAN FRANCISCO — Phillies ace Jake Arrieta’s cellphone buzzed Saturday. He looked down and laughed. It was his former teammate in Chicago.

“There’s no way you’re ducking the Cubbies this series,” Cubs first baseman Anthony Rizzo said in a text message. “I was going to have Joe (Maddon) lead me off so I could take you deep.”

Arrieta wasted no time, quickly checked the National League Central standings and responded: “Hey, I’m just trying to help you guys catch Milwaukee.”

Arrieta might not be pitching against the Cubs when the Phillies open a threegame series Tuesday at Wrigley Field, but it won’t stop the rehashing of sentiments, the opening of fresh wounds and a dissection of what went awry in negotiatio­ns that led Arrieta to Philadelph­ia and directed Yu Darvish to Chicago, leaving a passionate fan base grumbling.

It has been nearly four months since the Cubs chose Darvish over Arrieta, and to this day Arrieta wonders why his negotiatio­ns with Cubs president Theo Epstein consisted of one brief phone call when he was offered $120 million over six years.

Less than 24 hours later, the Cubs signed Darvish to a six-year, $126 million deal.

“It was a take-it-or-leave-it situation, and I didn’t like that,” Arrieta told USA TODAY in a 40-minute interview. “I thought I was afforded a little more respect than that. I was in a situation where I would have appreciate­d some negotiatio­ns.

“Brittany (his wife) and I were already pretty convinced we weren’t going back. Was there a part of me that wanted to go back? Of course. I mean, who wouldn’t want to?

“Then, I get that phone call that the offer is on the table, and the emotions are crazy. Man, are we about to go back to Chicago? It was exciting. It was upsetting. Theo made it clear: If you don’t want this deal, then we are going to try to sign Darvish as soon as possible. They signed him the next day.”

In reality, that last-minute contract offer might have been merely a courtesy call out of respect, knowing Arrieta would reject it.

“That’s how I felt,” Arrieta said, “because of the way he wasn’t willing to negotiate. I think in his mind, he was like, ‘OK, we’ll make this offer, and if he signs, awesome. And if he doesn’t, I’m OK with that, too.’ That’s how I felt.

“Obviously, they appreciate­d the past and what I’ve done there, but moving forward, they felt I wasn’t the best option for them. And that’s fine. They’re allowed to feel that way.’”

It’s just that Arrieta believes they signed the wrong guy, and he might have the entire city of Chicago agreeing with him.

While Arrieta has been everything the Phillies envisioned — 5-3 with a 2.66 ERA, yielding a 0.90 ERA in May — Darvish has been a disaster.

Darvish is 1-3 with 4.95 ERA and already twice has been on the disabled list, failing to make it out of the fifth inning in five of his eight starts.

It hasn’t been much better for the Cubs’ other free agent starter, Tyler Chatwood, who is 3-4 with a 4.02 ERA and leads the league with 49 walks in

532⁄ innings after signing a three-year,

3

$38 million deal.

“It’s frustratin­g, I’m sure, for them,” Arrieta says. “I’m sure people are comparing them to me at length. They probably heard enough of it. And I don’t blame them. I wouldn’t want to hear about it either.

“It doesn’t mean they won’t really be good for that organizati­on.”

Certainly Cubs fans are taking notice, with catcher Chris Jimenez telling the Chicago Sun-Times that Darvish believes that Chicago already hates him.

Then, again, it could be worse. Arrieta could be pitching against the Cubs this series, reminding everyone what they had when he went 68-31 with a 2.73 ERA, winning one Cy Young award, five postseason games and a World Series title.

“I really wish I was pitching that series,” says Arrieta, whose fastball is back to 94 mph. “(Tommy) LaStella has been talking a lot of trash, too. A lot of trash. He’s saying he wants to waffle me all over the yard. I’d like to strike him out three times.”

Arrieta and his family have plans with a gaggle of former teammates this week, yet even after the get-togethers, the hugs and well-wishes, and the video board tribute, he wouldn’t mind a moment of quiet time with Epstein and finding out exactly what happened. The Cubs, after all, spent a guaranteed

$164 million on Darvish and Chatwood while he signed a three-year, $75 million guarantee that is potentiall­y worth

$135 million over five years.

“I don’t know if he’ll ever say for sure what exactly happened,” Arrieta says. “I don’t know. He doesn’t have to. Maybe him and me will talk about it. We’ll see.

“Zero hard feelings. It’s a business. And at the end of the day, that’s what you have to remind yourself of.”

Cubs officials have maintained they knew for years Arrieta always wanted a contract larger than Jon Lester’s sixyear, $155 million deal. They understood. Arrieta won more games than any other pitcher in baseball the past three years, and only three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers had a lower ERA than Arrieta’s

2.67 since 2014.

Still, the Cubs were wary. Arrieta’s fastball decreased in velocity from

93.7 mph to 92.1 mph last year. His strikeout rate plummeted in the past two years. And they were desperate to stay under the $197 million luxury tax.

Although Darvish is guaranteed

$126 million with an opt-out after next season, he has an annual average salary of $21 million — $4 million less than Arrieta’s. Arrieta earns $30 million this year and $25 million in 2019 with a

$20 million player option in 2020. The contract includes two club option years at $20 million in 2021-22 that could escalate to $30 million a year.

“My understand­ing is that the luxury tax prevented Theo from signing Jake,” agent Scott Boras said. “The door was closed. They didn’t want to go above Lester and wanted to stay around the $21 million (annual) level. This wasn’t Arrieta versus Darvish. It was Jake versus the luxury tax.

“When Theo called, he pretty much wanted to let him know that if you want Darvish money, then I might want you.”

Arrieta rejected his only offer Feb. 9, believing someone would give him at least a three-year guarantee. Yet he had to wait another month before signing with the Phillies, with owner John Middleton even sending the team private plane to bring him to spring training.

“The luxury tax, I get all of that,” Arrieta says, “but when you’re running a profession­al organizati­on, and the end goal is to win a World Series, what does it matter if you sacrifice a few million dollars here and there? We all know these owners didn’t get rich by their baseball teams, they’re billionair­es from their other businesses. If I was a billionair­e and I’m going to buy a team, I’m going to do whatever I can to put the best team on the field.

“That’s why last winter was frustratin­g for me and so many other guys. Anybody who says it wasn’t frustratin­g is lying. I pride myself on what I do, and when you go all winter waiting for an offer, you feel undervalue­d, unwanted.”

Certainly, as much as the Cubs could use him now, trailing the Brewers by two games, it could have been much worse. Arrieta could have wound up pitching for one of their NL Central rivals.

“We talked to St. Louis, and there was an outside chance I’d go there,” Arrieta said. “Milwaukee was talking, but no numbers were discussed over two months of conversati­ons, which I don’t understand.

“I don’t know, I guess guys don’t think I’m that good anymore. I don’t care. I intend to take the ball every five days, put up numbers, and be pretty damn good.”

The way Arrieta envisions it, he’ll be pitching so well it will be a no-brainer for the Phillies to pick up the option years after next season, perhaps right after picking up the confetti from their World Series parade.

“I don’t see why the organizati­on wouldn’t want to pick up my option two years,” Arrieta says. “And if they don’t want to do that, it gives me the opportunit­y to opt out. I’m not saying that’s what I’m going to do, but it’s a business decision that will have to be made on both sides.

“I love it here. I really do. We have shown we can beat anybody, but we’ve shown our youth, too.”

And just like his early days in Chicago, there will be frustratio­ns along the way. He’s anchoring a young team that has lost at least 89 games in each of the last five years, finishing in last or nextto-last. He knows he needs to not only deliver on the field but also in the clubhouse, lashing out Sunday after they were swept by the Giants.

This is Arrieta. It’s what made him beloved in Chicago and now treasured in Philadelph­ia.

“There’s a tremendous amount of responsibi­lity here,” Arrieta says. “We got an owner here that wants to win. He’s an aggressive guy. It’s refreshing to have an owner like that.

“I look at it as an opportunit­y, and if there are no expectatio­ns, then why are we doing this? Bring it on.”

 ?? GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Phillies pitcher Jake Arrieta said he had less than 24 hours to accept an offer from the Cubs in February.
GEOFF BURKE/USA TODAY SPORTS Phillies pitcher Jake Arrieta said he had less than 24 hours to accept an offer from the Cubs in February.
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