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    Was Joe Mauer's Contract Extension Worth It?


    Matthew Taylor

    Prior to the Carlos Correa signing this past offseason, Joe Mauer’s $184 million extension was the largest contract in Minnesota Twins history. As we celebrate Mauer’s inauguration into the Twins’ hall of fame this weekend, let’s look back at that extension and evaluate if it was worth it.
     

    Image courtesy of Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports

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    Coming off of the 2009 season, Joe Mauer was on top of the baseball world. He had just completed a season in which he slashed .365/.444/.587 with a career-high 28 home runs and 96 RBI. Mauer was voted American League MVP, one vote shy of earning the honor in unanimous fashion.

    Mauer also found himself one season away from becoming the most sought after free agent in all of baseball.

    However, in March, heading into the 2010 season, in what would have been his final year under team control, the Twins signed Joe Mauer to an eight-year, $184 million contract extension. The contract was the fourth-largest contract ever handed out in MLB history at the time.

    The reasoning behind the Twins inking Mauer to such a large contract was not difficult to understand. Mauer had been playing like a Top-5 player in baseball over the first five seasons of his MLB career, and at just 26 years old, Mauer had not even hit his athletic prime yet. Mauer was hitting better than a catcher had hit in a long time, and brought value to the Twins on both sides of the ball.

    Additionally, the Twins signed Mauer to the contract extension just one month before they opened their brand new stadium, Target Field. There was no move that would have excited a fanbase and opened up a new stadium better than extending the hometown hero, Joe Mauer, to a massive contract extension. For an ownership group that was constantly criticized for being tight with their money, their paying up to keep Mauer in Minnesota was a massive boost to a fanbase at the perfect time.

    So, the contract extension was definitely the right move at the time, but how did things play out after Mauer signed the extension?

    In the season immediately following his contract extension, Mauer proved to the Pohlads that their investment was well-spent, as he was an all-star, finished Top-10 in MVP voting, and won his third consecutive Gold Glove and Silver Slugger from the catcher position. 

    Things took a bit of a turn in 2011, though, when the infamous “bilateral leg weakness” began for Mauer. He only played in 82 games that season, and he started to get his first action at first base. His gradual transition to first base continued in 2012 and 2013 until he became a full-time first baseman in 2014 after Ike Davis's foul tip off of Mauer's face mask caused him to abandon catching for good, just four seasons after signing his extension. 

    After becoming a full-time first baseman in 2014, Mauer would never go on to make another all-star team, earn MVP votes or Gold Gloves, while averaging just 1.4 fWAR per season through his final season in 2018.

    Aside from being an elite hitter, what made Mauer so valuable and worthy of such a large extension was the fact that he played the catcher position. It’s so rare to find a catcher with elite batting skills, and that Mauer was such a great hitter was invaluable. When the Twins signed Mauer to the $184 million extension, they did so assuming that they would be getting an elite catcher for most, if not all, of the contract. 

    How things turned out, though, was that Mauer was only a full-time catcher for the first season immediately following the extension. For five years of the extension, Mauer wasn’t a catcher at all.

    If we look at Fangraphs’ financial value metric, Joe Mauer provided $125.7 million of value, despite earning $184 million over that timeframe. From that metric alone, one would conclude that the extension was not worth it. 

    Although the dollar value says the money wasn’t worth it, the contract extension was still one that was ultimately the right move. The contract extension was worth it because it launched the opening of Target Field. It kept the hometown kid home. It signaled that the Pohlads weren’t, in fact, “pocket protectors”. It showed that the Twins were willing to spend money and ready to compete.

    In the end, it was injuries that kept Mauer’s extension from providing the value they thought they would get when they inked him to the contract. But even though they didn’t get that value that they had hoped, the contract provided value for the Twins that went beyond the diamond.

    Do you think Joe Mauer’s contract extension was worth it? Leave a comment below and start the conversation!

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    8 hours ago, SwainZag said:

    Adjust to what?  Mauer was a professional hitter who worked counts his entire career.   It had nothing to do with adjusting and more than him wanting to see pitches, work the pitcher and wait for a pitch he wanted.  

     

    The odd complaint and straight irritation of Joe taking the first pitch will always baffle me.   He swung at just above 10% of all 1st pitches.   His OPS when swinging at the 1stc pitch was .846.  It was .824 when he didn't.   

    For the majority of his career he had more walks than strikeouts, it changed towards the tail end, but he was the definition off a patient contact hitter.  Almost all the people who discount Mauer point to his 09 season and say.... this is who he should have been his whole career instead of accepting that as an outlier and using the rest of his career as the standard. 

    I'm always baffled by how many twins fans down play how good Joe Mauer was as a player.  I don't know if it's because he was a hometown guy and they somehow expected more, or if it's because he was always so humble and a likeable genuine human..... but man I will always come with numbers to back him up.  

     

     

     

     

    Why bash Mauer you ask.

    1. He made a lot of money

    2. He never led a parade like Herbie and Kirby did

    3, He never seemed to have any charisma when interviewed or doing commercials

    4. He never led a parade

    5. Injuries, hero’s are not supposed to get injured. The expert fans here roasted him over bilateral leg weakness.

    6. DidI ever mention he never led a parade? AL Championchip?

    16 hours ago, ewen21 said:

    This is not going to be popular here, but I need to say it.....

     

     I made the observation about his apparent lack of conditioning IMMEDIATELY when he reported to camp on the old MLB site.  I was treated very harshly for this observation (I didn't care because I can take it). 

    Yeahhhhhhh that's not what happened at all. You became the resident bully and literally made a slew of people leave that site, because if they didn't also bash Mauer you personally attacked them. And any time your "Joe Mauer is a problem" thread went further than halfway down the front page, you bumped it to make sure the confrontational thread stayed at the top of the page.

    3 hours ago, ewen21 said:

    These are not the reasons why I offered up my opinion.  It is not personal.  
     

    I spoke at length about his approach and refusal to adjust to one of the most bizarre shifts in baseball history.  His unwillingness/inability to turn on a baseball and drive it during that contract was a problem for me because curtailed his production.  Additionally, his close & late and high leverage batting averages were 20 to 30 points lower.  In 12 playoff games he was always on the losing end and in those contests he drove in only one run.  He went from 2008 to 2017 without a walkoff hit.    Correct me if I’m wrong on any of this.

     

    He also was a first baseman/DH during a very large portion of that contract.  This about Mauer AFTER the contract.  Please refer to information posted here if your baffled as to why I’d say he didn’t live up to the contract.  After all, that is what this is about.  It isn’t personal or that I’m being hard on him because of his personality or because he’s a Minnesotan.  That’s got nothing to do with it

    You say "20-30 points lower" like he was hitting .150 in those situations or something. 20-30 points lower was still .280. He was a .286/.412/.410/.822 hitter in high leverage situations and this is what you want to complain about? This is your big "he was overrated" argument? He only hit .286 in 1500+ high leverage PAs? Had an OBP over .400 in 1500+ high leverage PAs? Yeah, real downer of a hitter in high leverage spots. He had an .822 OPS in high leverage situations and you're mad at it. That's quite a hill to die on.

    And walk offs? How many chances at a walk off did he have from 2008 to 2017? Was he 0-100? 0-5? 0-0? Going to need some more context before that's a big "got him" argument.

    35 minutes ago, The_Phantom said:

    He was underwhelmingly average for most of that contract and pretty much all of those years were dark years for the Twins - losing nearly 100 games. He seems to be a nice guy, but it's hard to make an argument that the extension really helped the team

    Yes - it did not help those teams.  It did make sense at the time it was granted though and probably a good long-term investment for the Twins organization, but not short term for winning championships.

    That said, I don't think it was the main reason for those dark years.  Some of those payrolls were not exactly high even with the contract.  They could have spent a bit more to try and do a quicker rebuild.   Those teams had a lot of problems that had nothing to do with Mauer.  He also still might have been one of their more consistent hitters his last few years once he was a bit further from the 2013 concussion.  I know his watching the first strike drove people crazy (and at times with reason), but there have been times the past couple of years where I thought they could use more hitters with his plate discipline.  

    Unrelated, I wonder how he would have done in 2019 when everything was flying out of the ballparks.

    Also unrelated, he seems to be enjoying his current career as youth league coach and chauffeur.  I don't see him coaching at any minor league team anytime soon.  

    18 hours ago, ewen21 said:

    If I had a dime for every moment he came up in a high leverage spot and spit on fat pitches he should have driven to Mars I would have $796.51. 

    Maybe your total accumulation of dimes for fat pitches should end in a zero.

    At the time of the extension, ownership probably felt it had no choice but to give the extension.  But was is "worth it", based on performance during the contact, it wasn't the right baseball decision.  It didn't really help ownership's either.  They still were the cheap Pohlads because they wouldn't just think of contract as sunk cost and spend more money.

    Look at the Cardinals and Albert Pujois.  Pujois lead them the World Series title and they let him walk.  I don't think anyone in St Louis is questioning if that was the right decision because of the fall off in his performance during the contract.

     

    13 hours ago, SwainZag said:

    Adjust to what?  Mauer was a professional hitter who worked counts his entire career.   It had nothing to do with adjusting and more than him wanting to see pitches, work the pitcher and wait for a pitch he wanted.  

     

    The odd complaint and straight irritation of Joe taking the first pitch will always baffle me.   He swung at just above 10% of all 1st pitches.   His OPS when swinging at the 1stc pitch was .846.  It was .824 when he didn't.   

    For the majority of his career he had more walks than strikeouts, it changed towards the tail end, but he was the definition off a patient contact hitter.  Almost all the people who discount Mauer point to his 09 season and say.... this is who he should have been his whole career instead of accepting that as an outlier and using the rest of his career as the standard. 

    I'm always baffled by how many twins fans down play how good Joe Mauer was as a player.  I don't know if it's because he was a hometown guy and they somehow expected more, or if it's because he was always so humble and a likeable genuine human..... but man I will always come with numbers to back him up.  

     

     

     

     

    He was a extremely talented player.  I think he is HOF bound.  What a treat it was for us to see the greatest hitting catcher of all time play for the Twins.  But isn't ok to ask why the power surge in 09 and then like a fart in the wind it just disappears?  Outside of his 28 HR year which came in his contract year he averaged 8 HR/year.  In my opinion that can not be merely a coincidence.  His contract wasn't for him to be a Wade Boggs.  It was for him to be a run producer.  Especially when he moved to first base.  That's a run producing position.

    As far as the "boring" personality that doesn't bother me at all.  Some people want more firey leadership but that just was not who he was.  Morneau wasn't all that much of a fireball either and no one says much about that.  

    The contract was worth it. He's one of the greatest players in Twins history, a generational talent and one of the greatest catchers of all time. He wasn't the same player after the injuries started piling up and the concussion(s) were responsible for a lot of that, but he was still a fine player and should have won at least one Gold Glove at 1B.

    I think a lot of people blame him for the injuries as if it's somehow a personal failing on his part (maybe part of that is because people look the same after a concussion; it's not something that makes you limp around like Tony Oliva's destroyed knees). There's also certain members of the media who have relentlessly bashed him for years (mostly for taking too many walks and not appearing on their shows...) and that certainly impacts people's perceptions. there's also those who blame his contract for the Twins not spending money in free agency or retaining other players at bigger deals...but that was a failing on the part of the front office and ownership not Joe Mauer, especially because they had the money.

    You can't know what injuries are going to do to a player or even whether they're going to have minor, serious, or none. Despite all of that, Mauer kept playing and adding value to the team. He was the veteran leader and tone setter of that 2017 club that went from being dreadful to making the Wild Card and has been a good guy and community presence his entire career. he should have won a Gold Glove at 1B, which probably would have helped re-evaluate the last few years of his career; think about how few players have won Gold Gloves at truly different positions (LF v CF doesn't count) and Mauer was worthy at C and 1B.

    I love the fact that he played his whole career here. He should be going into the Hall of Fame (I don't think he'll have to wait long, the national media has long held him in more respect than some of the local guys). Maybe from pure on-field value the extension wasn't the greatest, but it wasn't a disaster and everything else that is part of Joe Mauer as a twin makes it worth it every time in my mind.

    Glad his number is retired. Glad he's in the Twins Hall of Fame. Looking forward to him going to Cooperstown (3 batting titles as a catcher? that's insane.)

    5 hours ago, old nurse said:

    Yet now I read complaints of the pull happy Twins that can’t go the other way

    Not sure how this applies to anything I’m saying.  Joe was pretty extreme in his inability to launch balls into right field.  Nearly everything he pulled was on the ground.  Most right fielders shaded about 30 to 40 feet toward CF, giving him the entire right field corner.

    Is this not a fair comment?

     

     

     

     

    2 hours ago, ewen21 said:

    Not sure how this applies to anything I’m saying.  Joe was pretty extreme in his inability to launch balls into right field.  Nearly everything he pulled was on the ground.  Most right fielders shaded about 30 to 40 feet toward CF, giving him the entire right field corner.

    Is this not a fair comment?

     

     

     

     

    The first half of his career he was an all fields hitter. Later it became more left, left center, were he a pull hitter as a left hand bat, they go to right field

    He was an amazing catcher, I consider it a gift to have had the privilege to watch him play all those years.   He conducted himself on and off the field with such grace.  At the time the contract was signed he was at the top of his game and the price reflected that.   He wanted to stay and the Twins wanted to keep him at all costs.   Other larger market teams were willing to pay more than he signed for.   There’s no way to know the future.  It was a steal at the time.

    So unfortunate that concussions pulled him out from behind the plate.  

    Exceptional catcher and a more than adequate first baseman.  Not many catchers cane play the positions and hit the way he did.  
    As far as it goes off the field, I’ve dealt with him many times in a service position both before and after his playing days and he is a joy to deal with.  That tells me a lot about him as a human being.
     

     




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