Tag: Robinson Cano

Jay Z Reportedly Investigated by MLBPA for Giving Robinson Cano Expensive Watch

New York Yankees star second baseman Robinson Cano was the beneficiary of an expensive birthday gift from Roc Nation founder Jay Z. Now, the hip-hop icon is being investigated by the MLBPA for giving the ballplayer a pricey watch.

The league’s players association is seeking to determine whether Jay Z was in violation of the union’s agent regulations for giving the watch to Cano at a birthday party in Belgium, per ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick.

Cano posted a photo of the watch on his Instagram account, and the timepiece is worth a whopping $33,900.

Here is another look courtesy of Sports Blog New York:

The watch is a limited-edition Shawn Carter Classic Fusion watch made by the Swiss company Hublot. Jay Z was on his “Magna Carta Tour” and had performed a concert in Antwerp the night before Cano’s 31st birthday celebration on Oct. 22.    

Crasnick highlighted the rule in question:

Section 5(B)(5)(a) of the Players Association regulations states: “No Player Agent or Applicant shall provide, cause to be provided or promise to provide, any money or any other thing of value to any player, or any person related to or associated with such player, the purpose of which is to induce or encourage such player to use or continue to use any person’s or firm’s services as a Player Agent, Representative, or Draft Advisor.”

Also noted in the report is that Cano joined Jay Z’s Roc Nation sports group in April, leaving the high-powered agency led by Scott Boras.

Whether it was a genuine gesture by a friend or an attempt to indeed influence Cano to stay on with Roc Nation, Jay Z’s gift was lavish by any stretch.

There is a clause, as Crasnick points out, for a player to receive a gift of up to $500, but any gift in excess of that amount would have to be disclosed to the union in writing. Jay Z could face unspecified discipline for his actions if he’s found to be in the wrong.

Cano is seeking a 10-year, $310 million extension from the Yankees, per Crasnick, and has signed a one-year qualifying offer worth $14.1 million.

While also being a two-time Gold Glove Award-winner, the five-time All-Star is a .309 career hitter with approximate averages of 23 home runs, 42 doubles, 183 hits and 91 RBI per season in his nine-year career.

He was one of only a few Yankees stars to stay healthy in 2013. Cano has played in 159 or more games in each season since 2007. 

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How the Yankees Can Play Hardball with Robinson Cano This Winter

This winter, Robinson Cano will be the biggest, most expensive name on the free-agent market, which is just the sort of player the big-market, deep-pocketed New York Yankees have been known to land.

But will they? And more importantly, should they?

Cano, of course, actually is a Yankee. At least, technically speaking. For now.

Fresh off his 31st birthday—celebrated in style along with his rep Jay Z in Belgium—Cano remains property of the Yankees until the end of the World Series, although it’s all but a formality that he’ll hit the open market and be the most sought-after superstar of the winter.

Among the many questions the Yankees face this offseason, solving the Cano Conundrum should be priority No. 1. But there are oh-so-many layers and nuances and variables to complicate this situation.

Sure, Cano has said he “loves this team”—meaning the Yankees—according to Bryan Hoch of MLB.com.

And general manager Brian Cashman has made it clear that the club wants to bring Cano back:

We’d love to have Robbie back. There’s not much more for me to say about that, but our intention is to have him back if we can. He’ll receive without question, or has received, a significant offer to stay. He’ll have something legitimately to ponder.

And of course, amid what’s shaping up to be an offseason and 2014 season full of change, the Yanks could use some stability by keeping their five-time All-Star and best all-around player.

But despite all of that, the most important fact is that if Cano is going to remain in pinstripes, it needs to happen more on the Yankees’ terms than on Cano’s—especially when Cano’s apparently are $305 million over 10 years.

Recent baseball history has shown that paying a franchise player massive amounts to stick around isn’t necessarily the smartest way to spend, especially when they’re over 30, as Cano is. For every Joey Votto, there’s a Ryan Howard.

Nor is it recommended to splurge on the top free agents; just ask the Los Angeles Angels about Josh Hamilton and Albert Pujols or the Boston Red Sox about Adrian Gonzalez and Carl Crawford.

Indeed, there are several examples of big-name, big-money players who have moved on when their team wouldn’t meet their too-steep contract demands. And surprisingly—or perhaps not so surprisingly anymore—many of the teams turned out better for it, both in terms of on-field success and financial freedom.

In fact, if any team should be wary of the pitfalls of ponying up for an aging superstar, it’s the Yankees, who have done so to get or hold on to (deep breath now) Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira and A.J. Burnett, among others.

Obviously, not all of those were regrettable decisions either at the time or in hindsight—the Yankees, remember, did win the 2009 World Series after spending big—but it’s also hard not to look around the league these days and see small-market clubs like the Tampa Bay Rays, Oakland Athletics and even (gasp) the Pittsburgh Pirates get it done without breaking the bank. Or even the piggybank.

The good news for the Yankees is that they already have a blueprint for handling the Cano negotiations. Back in November of 2010, Jeter’s previous contract came to an end, and after proposing an offer, Cashman more or less challenged the longtime captain and shortstop—one of the best, most revered players in the franchise’s long, storied history—to see if he could do better elsewhere.

Granted, taking that strategy to the public forum wasn’t the smartest thing for the organization to do, especially with Jeter and in media-crazed New York—it wouldn’t be recommended with Cano either—but that same take-it-or-top-it approach is the Yankees’ best play.

Put a big, fat number in front of Cano, one that fits the team’s budget and terms, and make it clear that’s where the line gets drawn.

The Yankees already made a “significant offer” to Cano several months ago—$161 over seven years, per David Waldstein of the New York Times—and maybe even more than one. But that should be thought of as the let’s-get-these-talks-started proposal more than a hard-and-fast one that’s likely to come soon enough.

The Yankees should be spending these last few days of exclusive negotiating rights with Cano to line up their best—and final—offer. And if Cano, under the advisement of Jay Z’s Roc Nation Sports says nah, then Cashman should respond by saying that the offer stands, but not for long, and if Cano can do better, well, then thanks for playing.

Because in Cano’s case, even as the top target this offseason, there won’t be that many suitors able to give him the money he wants or expects. While it might be a little premature to automatically count out any small-market team, it’s more than likely that only teams with big budgets will be in the bidding.

Obviously, the freedom to negotiate with all 30 teams on the open market gives the player a huge advantage and lots of leverage. But in Cano’s case, he he simply won’t be talking numbers—real, serious, nine-figure numbers—with more than a handful of clubs.

As Tom Verducci wrote for Sports Illustrated:

Ultimately, Cano’s value will be determined by a team other than the Yankees, be it the Dodgers, Cubs, Nationals or Rangers or a team nobody sees coming, such as the Mets or Marlins. Cano needs to engage another club in the bidding to reach the $200 million neighborhood, a space occupied previously only by Rodriguez (twice), Albert PujolsJoey Votto and Prince Fielder.

So what “team other than the Yankees” might be the one to drive up Cano’s value on the open market to the point where he might actually get a better deal than what the Yankees could offer?

Look, it’s not as easy as saying all of the above teams are over and out, not when free agency hasn’t even begun. And the “mystery team” is always in play, always lurking. But the point is, Cano isn’t going to have this wide-open market to land a contract much bigger than what the Yankees are likely to put on the table.

A team or three will be in the mix, for sure, but at the moment you have to squint to see which ones.

From the Yankees’ point of view, if they suspect Cano and Co. are bluffing, but that he really does have another team ready to hand over more, the biggest problem is that there’s not much to fall back on at the moment, either on the current roster or in the minors.

That would put a lot of pressure on Cashman to make a few savvy—but less pricey—moves in free agency to keep the Yankees in contention. But with the millions that would otherwise be going to Cano available, Cashman would have the ability to spend as he sees fit to plug multiple holes, rather than just one.

All the more reason why that take-it-or-top-it offer should be presented to Cano sooner rather than later, so the Yankees can move on and do their shopping elsewhere, if it comes to that.

Because there’s more than one way to solve a conundrum.

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2014 MLB Free Agents: Best Bats on the Market This Offseason

The MLB playoffs are heating up with some incredible games going down in both the ALCS and the NLCS, and as things move closer and closer to the 2013 MLB World Series, one thing will be on the mind of baseball fans everywhere, especially fans whose teams have been eliminated: free agency. 

Here is a quick look at some of the best bats coming onto the free agency market this offseason.

Carlos Beltran, St. Louis Cardinals

Carlos Beltran has had a huge season. He batted an impressive .296 with 24 homeruns and 84 RBI and has been a major part of the Cardinals’ playoff run. He’s now reaching the end of his two-year, $26 million deal which means that the 36-year-old beast has a choice to make: stay in St. Louis or test the waters and find another contender to lead to the promised land. 

Beltran is one of the best offensive weapons in the major leagues, bringing over 80 runners home in each of his last three seasons, and given his age, he would be a great addition to any American League team in need of a big bat to bolster their lineup at the designated hitter position. 

According to Mark Feinsand of the New York Daily News, there have been rumors floating around the city of the former Met heading to the Bronx and donning Yankee pinstripes. 

Nelson Cruz, Texas Rangers

Nelson Cruz, like Beltran, is one of the best batters in the MLB, and also like Beltran, he’ll be able to test free agency during the offseason. But Cruz has something against him that Beltran doesn’t have to worry about: a PED suspension.

Cruz was suspended for 50 games this season, but even with the suspension, he batted .266, hit 27 homeruns and brought 76 runners across the plate for the Rangers. Cruz has had over 70 RBI every season since 2009 and is one of the most consistent run-producers in the major leagues. 

Any team that needs to add a little pop in their lineup would be smart to pursue Cruz for his on-field production, but it’ll be interesting to see how teams approach him after his PED suspension in 2013. 

Robinson Cano, New York Yankees

Robinson Cano has been one of the most consistent Yankees over the last few years, putting up 27 homeruns and 107 RBI while batting .314 this season alone. Cano has been a Yankee since 2005, but now, according to Andrew Marchand of ESPN.com, Cano is demanding big money for his elite skills at second base and ridiculous production at the plate.

Because Cano will be demanding beau-coups bucks, the Yanks have a very tough decision during the offseason. Do they re-sign this life-long Yankee and lose a bunch of extra money in the process, or do they look for a way to fill his shoes, either at second base or at home plate?

We’ll get the answer in a few months, as Cano and the Yankees both have the opportunity to explore all of the various options out there in free agency. 

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Watch Robinson Cano Take Advantage of Shift and Bunt for Easy Double

Robinson Cano perennially ranks among MLB‘s leaders in doubles every year, so it’s no surprise he found a creative way to get another one on Friday night.

With the Boston Red Sox infield shifted to the right side during the first inning, Cano laid this unconventional bunt down the third-base line (courtesy of MLB.com):

Pete Abraham of The Boston Globe tweets that Boston might’ve secretly been satisfied with the result:

Since 2009, the New York Yankees second baseman has nearly 29 home runs per season. Although Red Sox starter John Lackey was facing him with the bases empty, the team recognized that Cano could single-handedly turn a scoreless game into a 1-0 deficit.

The Red Sox wisely deterred him from taking a full swing by employing a shift and leaving shortstop Stephen Drew alone on the left side (h/t CBS Sports):

Cano often sees extreme shifts but seldom decides to outsmart his opponent.

Doing so in this situation could be interpreted as an act of selflessness, as he passed up the opportunity to put the Yankees ahead in order to get on base in front of Alfonso Soriano. Cano probably trusted Soriano to deliver considering the 37-year-old’s second-half hot streak. Entering that game, he had driven in 47 runs in 45 games since accepting a trade to New York.

Then again, perhaps Cano actually had the most selfish of intentions, attempting the bunt to impress the media outlets and generate nationwide reaction. If that was the case, mission accomplished.

Regardless, most of the Twitterverse was impressed:

The biggest takeaway might be the fact that the superstar hustled for this two-bagger. The YES Network’s Michael Kay—and countless others—have blasted Cano for jogging out of the batter’s box rather than emulating Derek Jeter’s run-like-your-hair-is-on-fire style. This perceived “laziness” occasionally prevents him from reaching base on grounders or stretching singles into doubles.

Could he have been conserving his energy all year for the urgency of the September playoff race? Prior to first pitch, the Yankees were a game behind the Tampa Bay Rays for the American League’s second wild-card spot and a mile behind Boston for the AL East lead.

Cano’s bunt ultimately didn’t result in a run, but his team will need to continue thinking outside the box to rally for a postseason berth.

 

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Robinson Cano Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Hand, Potential Return Date

The New York Yankees’ quest to claw their way back into the American League wild-card race may have taken a huge blow, as second baseman Robinson Cano had to leave Tuesday night’s game against the Toronto Blue Jays with an apparent right hand contusion.  

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Is Robinson Cano a Shoo-in for All-Time Second Base Home Run Record?

We could be witnessing history every time we watch New York Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano step up to the plate.

The 30-year-old slugger blasted his 200th career home run Tuesday against the Toronto Blue Jays, taking Esmil Rogers deep to center.

Cano launched the ball a staggering 426 feet for a three-run home run to reach the milestone, becoming just the 14th second baseman to do so.

What’s more, Cano is just the third second baseman in history to reach 200 home runs and bat .300 or higher over the course of a career, joining Roberto Alomar and Rogers Hornsby.

It’s rare to find a second baseman with such a great combination of contact and power, which is what makes Cano such a a special player. He is a future Hall of Famer, but is he also a future record holder?

Jeff Kent set the mark for most career home runs by a second baseman with 377 over his incredible 17-year career. He surpassed Hornsby’s previous mark of 301 without a problem, but left future second basemen with a tall order.

Cano could be just the man to take down Kent’s record, and, barring injury, he has a good chance to do it.

Cano has an edge on Kent in the fact that he entered the majors much earlier than Kent did. Cano started playing for the Yankees age 22, whereas Kent didn’t make his MLB debut until age 24.

At 30 years old, Cano already has a big advantage on Kent in terms of home run numbers. Just take a look at their stats by the age of 30 side by side.

Player GP AB HR AB/HR
Jeff Kent 894 3,231 138 23.41
Robinson Cano 1,337 5,190 200 25.95

As you can see, Cano has the edge in playing time and home runs. However, Kent was hitting home runs at a more accelerated pace.

Despite Kent hitting home runs faster than Cano, the fact that Cano had such a head start in terms of playing time gives Cano a 62 home run lead at the age of 30—and he still has up to 39 more games to play before he turns 31.

What helped Kent break Hornsby’s record so handily was his longevity. Kent really caught fire after the age of 30, blasting another 239 home runs. He wasn’t even named an All-Star until he was 31, he didn’t win his MVP award until he was 32, and his fourth and final Silver Slugger award came when he was 37.

Kent had nine 20-plus home run seasons after he turned 30, including all three of his 30-plus home run seasons.

Cano has been tearing it up in the bigs thus far, but to ask him to get even better in his 30s is just ridiculous. He has been playing well, but very few second basemen can hold up as long as Kent did, and it’s unlikely that Cano will continue to slug homers until he’s 40.

Let’s assume for the sake of argument that Cano plays another eight seasons. Tack on another 39 games this year and use his career average of 151.8 games per year (excluding 2013), and that leaves him with 1,253 games to hit another 178 home runs to break the record. That’s one home run per 7.04 games, which is just slower than his current pace of one per 6.69 games.

If Cano hits another six home runs this year, he’ll be at 206 and just 172 short. Over eight years he’d have to average 21.5 home runs per year to break the record. While it’s unlikely that he smacks 22 dingers at the age of 38, a progression like this is not out of the question: 28-28-26-25-23-20-18-14. That adds up to 182 home runs, which would break the record by 10 home runs.

It’s unclear whether or not Cano will break the record, but he certainly has a shot. No matter what happens, Cano’s battle with Kent for the most career home runs by a second baseman will come down to the wire, and every at-bat will count for the slugger over the rest of his career.

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5 Lessons Learned from Robinson Cano’s 1st Half

New York Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano is off to another stellar year, one that has already achieved an All-Star birth.

Though the Yankees have struggled this year and been decimated by injuries to their line-up, with last-season’s regulars Mark Texiera, Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriquez and Curtis Granderson each missing extended time this year, the greatest bright spot has been Cano.

Despite the adversity the Yankees have faced, Cano has evolved into a leader and has been without a doubt the best player on the Bronx Bombers in 2013. Though acting with a relatively weak supporting cast, Robbie Cano has powered the Yankees to an above .500 record, and while their playoff hopes may be continually dimming, his play has kept them in contention thus far.

We all know of Cano’s looming contract issues that will come into play at the conclusion of this season, but let’s take a look at the lessons we’ve learned from his great first half.

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How Would a Dustin Pedroia Extension Impact Robinson Cano’s Free Agency?

In the American League East are two elite second basemen in line to get paid: Robinson Cano of the New York Yankees and Dustin Pedroia of the Boston Red Sox.

Now we have an idea as to who’s going to be paid first, which naturally means we have to ponder what it could mean for the other guy.

If you haven’t heard the latest yet, it sounds like Pedroia‘s the guy who’s going to be paid first. The word from Jeff Passan of Yahoo! Sports is that he and the Red Sox are discussing a contract extension that could exceed $100 million over five or six years. That would make him the highest-paid second baseman in history.

At least until, you know, Cano hits the open market this winter. He’s going to become the richest second baseman ever no matter what happens with Pedroia. About the only thing Pedroia can do with an extension is help Cano raise the bar to the level he wants it at.

Yes, the door is still technically open for Cano to sign an extension with the Yankees, but it was easy to believe Jon Heyman of CBS Sports when he reported in June that free agency is a “very likely outcome” for Cano. The man himself even let it slip to Chris Dell of the New York Daily News that he’s going to be a free agent “either way” at the end of the season.

Cano’s situation sheds light on Boston’s urgency to re-sign Pedroia.

Taking an $11 million option for 2015 into consideration, he’s under club control for two more years beyond 2013. But the Red Sox are playing it safe, as they could either wait for Cano to set the market for elite second basemen in free agency or go ahead and do it on their own terms with an extension for Pedroia.

They’ve got the right idea in doing so, and they also have the right kind of figure in mind.

A contract worth $100 million or more over five or six years would put Pedroia in the range of $20 million per year. That’s a bit more than the $15 million per year that the Texas Rangers gave Ian Kinsler last year, but that’s OK. Contract values do tend to inflate, and Pedroia has both age and numbers working for him in comparison to Kinsler.

Pedroia is now in his age-29 season, whereas Kinsler signed at the start of his age-30 season. Put side by side, their career numbers look like this:

Player AVG OBP ISO OPS OPS+
 Kinsler  .273  .351  .185  .809  111
 Pedroia  .304  .372  .155  .830  118

For the uninitiated, ISO stands for isolated power and is essentially a slugging percentage that ignores singles. Here it confirms that Kinsler is the better power hitter, but not to such a degree that it makes him the better overall hitter.

So yeah, $20 million sounds reasonable for Pedroia, and it’s a figure that ought to agree with him, seeing as how he’s only making $10 million this year and next. And in light of his upcoming free agency, a $20 million-per-year deal for Pedroia ought to agree with Cano as well.

It’s already a given that Cano is going to get at least $20 million per year when his next deal comes. He certainly won’t settle for anything less. But since he’ll obviously be looking to get as much money as possible, it won’t hurt if he has Pedroia‘s contract to point to while saying, “You want me? Beat that!”

And if it comes to that, Cano will have a couple of legs to stand on. Namely, numbers and health.

One significant edge I believe Pedroia has on Cano is his defense.

Cano is easily among the game’s best defensive second basemen, but FanGraphs will vouch that there’s a huge gap between him and Pedroia in fielding runs above average since 2007, Pedroia‘s rookie season. Pedroia also holds a significant edge in defensive runs saved.

But offensive numbers are the ones that pay the bills and attract the big bucks, and that’s where Cano has Pedroia beat handily.

Player AVG OBP ISO OPS OPS+
 Pedroia  .304  .372  .155  .830  118
 Cano  .308  .354  .197  .859  125

Pedroia has the edge in on-base percentage, but Cano’s huge edge in power is worth something in this case. What’s more, Cano can brag that his power is only getting better while Pedroia‘s is getting worse. Cano has an ISO of .233 since the start of the 2011 season, compared to .153 for Pedroia.

Cano and his people (i.e. that one rapper guy and others) may already be treating $25 million per year as a realistic goal. Said goal would likely only become more realistic if Pedroia inks a $20 million-per-year contract, as Cano would be able to sell his power as being worth an extra $5 million per year.

But we’re not done here. Another notion that Cano can sell prospective bidders on is the prospect that he’s going to age better than Pedroia.

He may already be a year older than Pedroia, but Cano’s injury history is a lot cleaner. He hasn’t been on the disabled list since 2006. Per Baseball Prospectus, Pedroia has lost almost 100 games to the DL since 2010, and the Boston Herald reported in May that he’s playing this season with a torn ligament in his thumb. 

And let’s face it, you only need to watch the two guys play to conclude that Cano is the safer long-term investment. Pedroia plays recklessly, going all-out all the time. For lack of a better word, Cano plays smoothly. If Pedroia is the Jeep of second basemen, Cano’s the Cadillac.

This is going to be particularly relevant if Pedroia inks a six-year contract that would take effect after the two years he’s already under club control. In that scenario, the Red Sox would be tied to him through his age-37 season in 2021. 

A free-agent contract that would take Cano through his own age-37 season would only be a seven-year deal. I say “only,” of course, because Joel Sherman of the New York Post mentioned last October that Cano would be looking for a 10-year deal. He’s kidding himself if he actually thinks he can get something like that, but him being able to set the floor for his next contract at seven years would be good enough.

Seven years at $25 million per year would, after all, be a $175 million contract. For some perspective, that’s $100 million more than the current record for a second baseman (held by Kinsler).

Cano would do even better than that if he were to get the right teams involved in a bidding war. One of those between the Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers would be perfect, as it would involve a team with a need and lots of money (Dodgers) going up against a team with lots of money and an even bigger need (Yankees). In such a bidding war, more years and more money could come Cano’s way.

So…what happens if the Red Sox only ink Pedroia to a five- or six-year deal that would take effect immediately and only lock him up through 2018 or 2019?

Best guess: Nothing that would hurt Cano.

Even if it comes to that, the Red Sox and Pedroia will still have set an annual average value for Cano to beat. And while the precedent wouldn’t be set for Cano to get a long-term deal, such a precedent isn’t necessarily required given Cano’s optimistic aging outlook and, indeed, the fact that he should be negotiating with several teams rather than just one. The team that wants him the most will be willing to do an extra year or two.

It all goes back to what I said earlier about Cano not really needing Pedroia to set the bar in order to set his own bar this winter. He’s going to do that anyway.

All Pedroia can do is make it a little easier for him to do so.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference unless otherwise noted.

 

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Robinson Cano Injury: Updates on Yankees Star’s Knee

New York Mets pitcher Matt Harvey isn’t making any friends in the Bronx.

The National League’s starting pitcher for the 2013 MLB All-Star Game plunked Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano in the first inning of Tuesday night’s contest, causing him to leave the game.

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Robinson Cano Hit by Pitch, Leaves All-Star Game

The New York Mets’ Matt Harvey nailed Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano in the right knee with a 96 mph fastball in the first inning of the 2013 MLB All-Star Game.

Cano would be forced to leave the game in the top of the first.

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