Depends who they are.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑07 May 2026 06:05 amYou can sign six, seven, eight young players to long term deals and still flip them later, just like with guys who are going year-to-year.ecleme22 wrote: ↑07 May 2026 05:51 amI think you are partially right.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑07 May 2026 05:33 amMaybe none, as of yet. The Braves has probably come close to that (Acuna, Albies, Harris, Strider, Riley, etc.). But that is the direction more mid-market teams - teams with payrolls in the $150, $160, $170, etc. million range - should be going. It's the only way, long term, that they can compete consistently with the Dodgers, Yankees, Phillies, Mets, etc.ecleme22 wrote: ↑07 May 2026 05:13 amHistorically, what team has had eight of these type of extensions at one time?mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑07 May 2026 04:49 amPujols was signed to a 7 yr./$100 million extension before he ever got to FA. That was what kept him in St. Louis for 11 years.JuanAgosto wrote: ↑06 May 2026 19:15 pmA decrease in attendance and a messed up TV situation will be reasons BDW gives to not sign guys. There is evidence that DeWitt will not spend. Was Pujols signed in 2011? Outside of Matt Holliday, what top tier FA has DeWitt chased? Sure, he will try to lock a guy in early. Because he is gambling on a lower salary over the long haul. But he will limit it to 1 or 2 guys.Ozziesfan41 wrote: ↑06 May 2026 17:49 pmThey will sign them to early extensions and the rays would probably have rings if they had the payroll the cardinals can have doneand will again. There’s nothing in Dewitt’s past that’s says they are going to operate as a small market team going forward and they and bloom have said the exact opposite people saying they are it’s their opinion based on zero evidenceJuanAgosto wrote: ↑06 May 2026 17:33 pmYou are avoiding my full statements. You mention "cost controlled " players. Im talking about when those players hit free agency. BDW will not pay them. He may retain one, two max. It will be next guy up from Memphis to replace the rest. So the window for the group i mentioned will be extremely small.Ozziesfan41 wrote: ↑06 May 2026 12:12 pmYes they are wanting to adopt the rays model of being successful at drafting and developing good talent youre wrong about them going to a small market team. They are really just going back to what made the cardinals successful in the past being able to develop good young cost controlled players and eventually supplementing them with veterans. The cardinals recent problems have been they have been unable to develop good cost controlled players so instead of being able to spend on one good player they have had to disperse the money around to multiple mediocre and supplemental players who they then have to elevate to key roles instead of being the supplemental players they are. Gray wasnt an ace but because they could not develop any internal aces they had to elevate him to ace instead of a 2 or 3 starter which he is. Contreras great supplemental player but because the caridnals couldnt develop a decent middle of the order bat they had to elevate him into middle of the order bat instead of 5th or 6thJuanAgosto wrote: ↑06 May 2026 11:52 amHere is the unspoken problem with the thought process sacrifice now to win in 3-4 years. When that window you are all waiting on opens, Winn, Burleson, Walker, Gorman, Liberatore, and Herrera will be entering free agency territory. Do you think BDW is signing them to big deals? Nope. He brought Bloom in to run the Rays model. Once a guy nears free agency, trade him. Any potential window with this group is 1 to 2 years. And then you better hope Bloom nails those trades.ClassicO wrote: ↑06 May 2026 11:36 amYou've nailed it with this unique concept that a team should try to "WIN." .Goldfan wrote: ↑05 May 2026 07:47 am Abdicating responsibility to win this season for HOPES of better chances in the future is stupid. This year might be that lightening in the bottle and every “perfect” year in the future could be disappointments. Is he here to win or write the script of some narrative in his head? No one saying trade away every viable prospect for a vet but making one move that could help push this team in to the playoffs shouldn’t be so easily dismissed the first of MAY. There are no guarantees with any of this. If 2026 is the Cards season then play to WIN![]()
![]()
I'm sure Bloom would love to have your insight.
PS - would you rather win more games this year and reduce the chance to win the World Series in future years? Not I. It's all about the ring. Bloom's plan is designed for that. Just a guess, but I think you're heavily in debt.![]()
This model makes financial sense for an owner who focuses primarily on profit. But how many rings has Tampa won using it?
The first place the Cardinals need to start spending money again is in locking up guys like Wetherholt, Winn, Herrera, Burleson, Walker, etc.
The Cardinals should have the flexibility to do a lot more of that than the Rays have ever had. And the Cardinals need to pursue that option not just for one or two guys, but for any guys they develop who fit into the long term "core" of the team - a starting position player, a SP, or their closer. That's 15 guys (including a starting DH) that you could look to sign to early, long term extensions.
If/when they get to a healthy situation, the Cardinals should probably have six, seven, eight guys signed to early, long term extensions on the roster.
The Cardinals "model" going forward should be the Braves as much, or moreso, than the Rays. If they can be 80%-90% of the Braves, that would be success.
1. Sign X number of players long term. Let's say 3-4.
2. The decent/good players you don't sign long term, look to possibly flip with a year or two of control left (and no, not for guys like Libby who take 5 years to be good. Like players who can produce on the MLB level relatively soon.)
3. Keep on the gas when it comes to drafting and signing young, talented players.
4. Look for opportunities to sign low risk / high reward players like Dustin May.
I don't think survival lies in signing 8 young players to LT contracts. It lies in being able to identify the best 3-4, sign them, and let the others play out their team-controlled contract. Maybe flip them or let them walk. All the while, making sure the pipeline of young talent is strong and can replace the ones that leave.
While Donovan with 2 added years (4 total) might be a plus in the trade market, Noot with 4 more years would be an albatross no one would want…