Holliday agrees to 7-year deal with Cards
Matt Holliday is staying with the St. Louis Cardinals, agreeing
Tuesday to a $120 million, seven-year contract that is baseball's
richest deal of the offseason.
The Cardinals announced Tuesday they had agreed with the
power-hitting outfielder on a multiyear contract subject to a
physical. The team said a formal announcement was likely by
Thursday.
Holliday, who had been the biggest prize in free agency,
confirmed he was returning in an interview on ESPN Radio.
"I'm going back to the Cardinals," Holliday said. "I'm
excited about it."
His agreement includes $119 million guaranteed over seven
seasons plus a $17 million vesting option for 2017 with a $1
million buyout, a person familiar with the deal told The Associated
Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team
didn't reveal the length of the contract or financial details.
St. Louis acquired Holliday from Oakland in July and he
helped lead the Cardinals to their first NL Central title since
2006. They sent several top prospects to the Athletics and
justified that expense by retaining a player who hit .353 with 13
homers and 55 RBIs in 63 games for St. Louis.
A three-time All-Star, Holliday was a perfect fit batting
cleanup behind star slugger Albert Pujols, though he was the goat
in a first-round playoff sweep by the Los Angeles Dodgers after
dropping a sinking liner to left field that would have been the
final out of Game 2.
Holliday, who turns 30 on Jan. 15, batted .313 overall with
24 homers and 109 RBIs, his fifth .300 season and third 100-RBI
year.
"Obviously, with Albert Pujols on the team you have a great
opportunity to have a great team," Holliday told ESPN. "Albert is
the best player in the history of baseball in my mind. Hopefully
between the two of us we can help do our part to win a World
Series."
Cardinals pitcher Kyle Lohse said he got the news in text
messages between the teammates' wives.
"That's pretty good, pretty exciting," Lohse told The
Associated Press in a telephone interview. "I've been around long
enough not to pay too much attention until something gets done, but
I know he liked it here and I'm sure he's really happy things
worked out."
Holliday's agreement is much bigger than the other two big
free-agent deals of the offseason: pitcher John Lackey's $82.5
million, five-year contract with Boston and outfielder Jason Bay's
$66 million, four-year contract with the New York Mets, which was
finalized earlier Tuesday.
"When you're a little kid growing up hoping to be a
professional baseball player and hoping to play in the major
leagues, I don't think you ever think about the money," Holliday
said. "Now that you look at it, it's a little overwhelming."
Holliday's contract contains a full no-trade clause and
deferred money that lowers its annual present-day value to about
$16 million.
It also likely sets a floor for negotiations between the
Cardinals and Pujols, who is entering the final guaranteed season
of a $100 million, seven-year contract. St. Louis holds a $16
million option for 2011 on the three-time NL MVP.
St. Louis becomes only the third team with a pair of $100
million players, joining the New York Yankees (Alex Rodriguez,
Derek Jeter, Mark Teixeira and CC Sabathia) and the New York Mets
(Johan Santana and Carlos Beltran).
The Cardinals have long considered themselves a mid-market
franchise and had a payroll under $100 million last season, but
this deal might be a signal the franchise is willing to spend more.
The Cardinals have three players making over $10 million per
season, including NL Cy Young Award runner-up Chris Carpenter ($13
million).
Holliday said he was happy to have things settled after
negotiations that have been ongoing for months.
"This has been a bit of a long process and there were some
emotional ups and downs that go with it," he said. "It hasn't
exactly been a walk in the park. It's relief."
Holliday and Lohse have the same agent, Scott Boras. Lohse
said he never tried to get the inside story on negotiations.
"I've had several people ask me what was going on," Lohse
said. "It's not that I don't care, but it's a business decision."