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Post Info TOPIC: Varitek back in Bean town


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Varitek back in Bean town


It took nearly three months, but the Boston Red Sox have reached agreement to bring back catcher Jason Varitek on a one-year, $5 million contract, pending a physical and the execution of final details, two major league sources said Friday.



The contract would include a 2010 club option for $5 million. If the Red Sox decline their option, Varitek would hold a player option for $3 million.
Varitek
Varitek


There also is $2 million in potential incentives in the player option next year, which would be triggered if Varitek plays 80 to 120 games. If he were to play 120 games next year, he could earn $5 million even in the player option.

Under either scenario, the maximum total value of the contract could not exceed $10 million.

Varitek agreed to the Red Sox's final offer only after the club set a deadline of Friday for him to accept. Had he declined or not responded, the team was gearing up to trade for another catcher. Boston talked to the Rangers about Jarrod Saltalamacchia and Taylor Teagarden, to the Diamondbacks about Miguel Montero and to the Mets about Brian Schneider. They'd also kicked around a number of other names as fallbacks.

Varitek earned $10 million last year ($3 million of it deferred without interest) in the final season of a four-year, $40 million contract he'd signed in December 2004. The Red Sox offered him arbitration nearly eight weeks ago, and had he accepted, he probably would have earned in the neighborhood of $11 million this season.

But when Varitek declined, it left him with no leverage and no market elsewhere. Other teams weren't willing to surrender a first-round draft pick for a soon-to-be 37-year-old catcher who batted .220, with a career-low .672 OPS, last season. And the Red Sox, knowing Varitek had no other teams pursuing him, weren't willing to pay him a salary even close to what he made last year.

Varitek, on the other hand, never seemed to have much interest in playing elsewhere -- which even further depressed his market. The Boston Globe reported this week he was considering retirement, or positioning himself as a midseason free agent, rather than accept the club's offer. But there are no indications the Red Sox believed Varitek had any serious intention to retire.

Friends who spoke with Varitek over the winter say he never understood why the Red Sox wanted to cut his pay, why they were only willing to guarantee his deal for one year, why the economy and his 2008 struggles had cut into his market value or, remarkably, why his decision to decline arbitration was costing him so much money and limiting other teams' interest.

But in the end, he made the only logical decision -- a decision to stay with the only big-league team he has ever played for, rather than gambling that a better deal would come along in February or March or even July.
SI.com was the first to report that Varitek and Boston had reached an agreement.

Jayson Stark is a senior writer for ESPN.com. ESPN.com's Jerry Crasnick contributed to this report.

CREDIT: ESPN.com


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Was it time for the BoSox to cut their strings with the Captain? Or was this the right move?

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Time to cut their ties with him, he has beeng going down hill now and last year he was batting horribly, but I think they are keeping him because he is probaly one of the best game callers in the MLB, he knows how to command a game and thats always a good trait for a catcher.

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Jason Varitek is a guy who's at this point in his career living more off of what he's done then what he's doing.

Since it's only a one year deal, it's not a horrible move for the Red Sox.  And he also has some aspects both from a leadership and a marketing perspective that can only really be applied to the Red Sox.  Also I'm pretty sure he would at least qualifiy as a class B free agent, so I'm not so sure how many teams out there would be willing to give up a 1st or 2nd round pick just to get an average starting catcher for a year or two at the most.

-- Edited by pmoehrin at 01:37, 2009-02-06

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