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5/7/26

Paul Articulates - Revisiting the Soto decision


On December 11, 2024 the New York Mets signed Juan Soto to an historic contract.  15 years, $765M were committed to one of the top players in baseball.  That is an enormous amount of money to spend on any player, and the decision to do so had to be based upon some very detailed analysis that the team was on the precipice of greatness with just one great player required to get there.

In the first few months of 2025, without even seeing the best of Juan Soto, the Mets looked like that team that was headed for greatness.  At one point they had the best record in baseball and were stringing series wins together one after another.

We all know where the story turned from there, and there have been countless stories published about the fact that the Mets are no longer anywhere close to greatness.  In fact, their lineup today looks more like a shopping trip to the Salvation Army than fifth avenue.

With that in mind, I pose the question, “Does this team need Juan Soto?

One may argue that “every team” needs a Juan Soto, because when you have one of the best players in the sport, your team is inherently better.  But my question is more pragmatic than just being qualitatively better.  It is whether “better” achieves a realistic goal.  When the Mets acquired Soto, their seemingly realistic goal was to win a World Series Championship.  That is no longer a realistic goal.  I am not even sure that making the playoffs is a realistic goal because they have to play .614 ball for the entire rest of the season to be the sixth best team in the NL.  So if Soto makes the 8th best team good enough for 7th or 6th best in the NL, would you pay $765M for that level of improvement?

Let’s start by looking at the Soto contract that was signed in the off-season before 2025:

Value: $765M overall; 

Duration: 15 years

Options: Soto can opt out after 2029; Team can void the opt-out by adding $4M/year for the last nine years.

Trades: Full no trade clause

Incentives: $75M signing; MVP bonus, WS MVP bonus; Silver slugger bonus; All-star, Gold Glove, Hank Aaron bonuses.

Sunk investment: $75M signing bonus plus $124.15M in salary (2025, 2026)

Now let’s look at the return on investment:

Runs scored (2025+2026): 130

Runs Batted In (2025+2026): 114

Runs created plus (WRC+): 156 (2025); 151 (2026)

WAR: 6.4

Clearly Soto makes this team better, but just as clearly, Soto cannot generate enough WAR to tilt the current team from a mediocre team to a World Series contender.  His cost is not only the salary that he is paid by contract but also the luxury tax levied on the team for being above threshold and the inability to sign other highly compensated players.  The Mets are a middle-class household with a Bentley in the driveway.  

With that said, I know that this was not the intended result.  The Mets (and us) thought we would be a legitimate contender by this time, and in that case, having a Soto on your squad is a tremendous asset.  I am not blaming anyone for taking a big shot and signing Soto, but having him on the roster and then blowing up the core was a pretty big gamble that did not pay off.

So now, what to do?  Soto can’t opt out until 2029 and the Mets can’t trade him for pieces to rebuild without his consent to waive the clause.  There are plenty of incentives in the contract to give Soto the motivation to excel during these few years before the option, but it has to be demoralizing to play out seasons with no prize at the end.  My guess is that he might be willing to waive the no trade clause if there is a team willing to pay the price for him that has a legitimate chance to contend for championships over the next few years.

What would you do?


13 comments:

  1. Your guess is the same as mine.

    My opinion is that injuries, not playing close to the back of their cards and a lack of a true plan has handcuffed the team. I know a lot of us are hoping for at least one more championship in our time.

    Stern's contract ends this year. I believe it is time to say what was tried is not working. The big costs for Soto has been paid. Find a winning or close to winning team willing to take his contract and he would be willing to go. Seek a GM willing to do a rebuild that should have already happened. And give that GM the time and leeway to do the job. Become the NY Mets and be the team others want to be. Not trying to be some other team.

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    1. Can’t dump Soto, in my opinion, unless you are ready for 2 runs per game. He would normally bring in a killer haul, but his contract is so large. I don’t know that the Mets would get much in terms of prospects for him if any. I don’t know how to unload a contract that big.

      I think you get Lindor back and transition in the kids ASAP. This year. While trading/dumping vets.

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  2. They will keep him for all obvious reasons & rebuild around him. To compete within the next two seasons (playoffs not necessarily WS) with a combo of internal youth & FA fill ins.

    Stearns contract ends after 2028 season. He has to effectively respond to this year’s disaster (in-season) & field a competitive & more exciting team next year. If he fails to do that, he will not last through next season.

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  3. There are very few people in this game more talented than Juan Soto.

    I want to keep him

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    1. Enjoy that Bentley. Have you seen the price of gas?

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  4. He's a generational talent and only 27 years old. He's a keeper

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  5. He's a generational talent and 27 years old.

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  6. The short answer to your question is no. A lot of us felt that the Mets were better served by signing three very good players for that kind of money and thereby address three different positions of need.

    Signing Soto was more about Steve Cohen showing that if he wanted a player, money was not going to stop him and if he was a Yankee star, so much better.

    The problem, because the Mets always seem to have a problem, is that once you get a player like Soto, you can't stop there. You need to build the team around him that can compete on a yearly basis.

    However, our resident "Genius" GM seems to be as confused as the previous one. He can't seem to stay in one direction long enough to see if it can work. He disassembles the old core and we are all thinking, he is going to play the kids and find out what we have inhouse before he does anything else or he is going to spend big on star players to complement Soto. He does neither because, well, these are the Mets. He brings in Luis Robert Jr., a Ferrari that is in great shape because it is always in the garage. Then he brings in the great Semien because hitting is no longer important, catching the ball is. Then he signs Bichette to play 3B because catching the ball is no longer important, hitting is. Then he bring in Polanco because playing a 2B at 1B is always a good idea and it makes the defense so much better.

    Then he trades Jett and Sproat for a pitcher that wants a long term contract that the Mets are not willing to give. Genius indeed.

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    1. The loss of Jett and LuisAngel was very painful when Lindor went down followed by Mauricio. Now we will fill the shortstop hole with our 3rd baseman and create another hole.

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    2. Both are playing sub-par baseball

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  7. So it’s Sproat and Williams for a 1 year rental of a 5 inning pitcher. Sproat looked good last night, 4 innings 1 hit, 5K. Another brilliant move by the boy genius. So next year we have McClean, Senga and Manea as our only pitchers under contract. I guess this is what a Harvard education gets you.

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  8. DS did well in a small mkt with a small mkt budget then he gets a BIG mkt with BIG budget and a BIG head to match so to me he's in over his head and won't admit it. He needs help so where does he get it and will he even ask?

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