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  • What Are The Odd’s Of A Phillies Repeat?
    By Jeffrey Gross on February 17, 2009 | 2 Comments2 Comments  Comments

    Let’s face it, the Phillies weren;t exactly the baseball “Experts” pick to win it all last year, but it happened. It happened because the Phillies simply found ways to get the job done. They won because they deserved to, plain and simple.

    As a die hard Mets fan myself, I must take my hat off to the Phils, it is the “Never Give Up, Never Surrender” attitude, and that bullpen, that truly carried them though to the end. As I look back now, I realize that uncertainty is simply the only true certainty before a Major League Baseball season starts.

    These in-season wins certainly led to some off season ones for the fightin’  Phils as well.

    “The interest this offseason has been very, very strong, and there’s no question that has enabled us to perhaps be more aggressive than we might have been otherwise,” Phillies president David Montgomery said Monday from his corner office at Bright House Field.

    Try to imagine the following possibilities: What if the Phillies failed to sweep the Brewers in their four game series? What if they didn’t win the National League East? What if the Brewers overtook them for the National League Wild Card?

    Could the Phillies sign Ryan Howard? Or Cole Hamel’s multi-million contract extension? What about the three year $31.5 million offer to Raul Ibanez to replace Pat Burrell?

    “We probably wouldn’t be sitting here saying we know we have sold nearly 24,000 season tickets,” Montgomery said. “It would probably be a number similar to last year, maybe not even as strong. So we would have definitely been doing the offseason differently. I don’t know if it would have manifested itself in multiyear deals or whether it would have manifested itself in not being able to add a player like Ibanez.

    “It’s tough for me to able to say specifically what would have been different, but the answer is, yes, it absolutely would have been different. We are where we are because of the team’s success and the resulting fan support.”

    So now, I must ask…what are the odds of another Phillies championship this year? Any Phillies, Mets. or any other fans out there care to comment?

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  • Ryan Howard – Phillies – Signs Blockbuster 3 Year Deal
    By Jeffrey Gross on February 11, 2009 | 1 Comment1 Comment  Comments

    2006 NL MVP Ryan Howard signed a three-year contract worth $54 million, on an extension deal with the Phillies, and laid out his final three years of salary negotiation.

    What made the deal so intriguing is the fact that Howard and the Phillies franchise seem to be far apart during previous contract extensions, and it seems both parties will continue doing this process until Howard becomes a free agent after 2011.

    “We’re pleased to have gotten this behind us,” Ruben Amaro, General Manager of the Phillies said during a conference at Citizens Bank Park. “I think it’s important for the players to worry about playing baseball; to get them ready to defend our title.”

    In an estimate, Howard will be earning $15 million this season, $19 million the following year and $20 million in 2011. Only five players earned more than Howard last year: Alex Rodriguez ($28 million), Jason Giambi ($23.4 million), Derek Jeter ($21.6 million), Manny Ramirez ($18.9 million) and Carlos Beltran ($18.6 million).

    Considering that Howard will be declared NL MVP over the next season, his current salary will be added $1 million over the next two years. A Gold Glove Award and All-Star appearances will also spell bonuses for Howard and as well as $1 million if he is traded before Nov. 1, 2010.

    “I’m happy to have this done and to know that I’ll be in Philadelphia for at least another three years. Both sides are happy, and now I’m just focused on getting the season started and having fun.” Howard said in a statement

    The cost for Howard’s signing certainty was significant since the Phillies tried to evaluate free-agent players or which of their players to extend, like they did this offseason for Howard, Hamels, Madson and Werth.

    “We know where we’re at with the dollars on him. My job is to try to put a championship-caliber club on the field every single year, and knowing exactly where the dollars are going to be over the next several years on some of our higher-priced players, it helps me a lot.” Amaro said when asked about the $4 million gap on Howard’s request of $18 million as to the Phillies’ offer of $14 million.

    Jimmy Rollins also singed with the Phillies until 2010 and a 2011 club option, Brad Lidge through 2011, 2012 club option, Hamels through 2011 and Chase Utley through 2013.

    Amaro said that they made contact with Casey Close, Howard’s agent and also with Howard’s family. Now specific agenda was brought out, but he said they talked about several conditions that would convince Howard to signing a long-term deal.

    Amaro was asked if he was disappointed that the Phillies couldn’t sign Howard to a longer deal, he said, “I don’t know if “disappointment” is the way to depict it. … It’s three years, and it’s a significantly long time. Ultimately, we came to the conclusion it was the right thing to do.”

    There was also some rumors that the parties had reached an standoff on a multiyear contract with Howard believing to be asking a contract similar to New York Yankees’ Mark Teixeira’s eight-year, $180 million contract. Also, there were some speculations stating that the parties weren’t getting along, even though no real evidence of such came out of the public.

    Putting those into perspectives, it is safe to say that Howard didn’t agree to a single contract the Phillies had offered him for the last three years.

    “No negotiation is simple, but the goal is always the same,” Amaro said. “Get a deal done, and get a deal that is equitable. We’ve been trying to build a relationship with Casey and Ryan and the family, and I think that at the end of the day, we got done what was necessary, and frankly, it was the right thing to do for our organization. … Things that happened prior with Ryan, I don’t know why, but they were being depicted in a different way. They weren’t adversarial. It was just a matter of us agreeing to disagree, and that happens a lot in any kind of business. I don’t think it made us love Ryan any less, and I don’t think Ryan loved us any less.”

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