So BDW is going to pay way to much to lose (and sell few tickets) for several years (magically converting prospects into future wins) then hopefully he will spend to win. At the end of the day he's spending too much over the course of a decade to not have more chances to win and to not sell enough tickets. Doesn't seem likes its going to be a sustainable business model for long.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑17 Nov 2025 13:51 pmI count it as "spending money" on top of what they will be paying the guys actually on the Cardinals roster. If the actual roster is $100 million and they ship $30 million with Gray and Arenado, they are spending $130 million this year.Pura Vida wrote: ↑17 Nov 2025 12:49 pmDoes eating salaries for NA, Contreras. Gray constitute "spending money". The money has been committed for some time.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑16 Nov 2025 06:25 am There continues to be a contingent on CT who wants to misrepresent what those of us who support the Cardinals current direction are saying. This contingent repeatedly tries to say that we who support the direction categorically "don't want the Cardinals to spend money."
I have not seen anyone who has said that the Cardinals will not eventually have to spend money in order to compete with the Dodgers, Phillies, Mets, etc. The Cardinals will eventually likely have to spend back at the $170, $180 million level of ML payroll. Time will tell when/if that happens.
What those who support the Cardinals direction ARE saying is that the Cardinals don't need to prioritize spending money NOW - and in particular they should avoid committing to big 3, 4, 5, or more year contracts for significant FAs. Even if they held on to Gray, Contreras, Donovan, etc. and added like a Bo Bichette and/or Dylan Cease on 5+ year deals, they wouldn't have enough talent to really challenge the best teams in the NL in 2026. Committing to more guys now on long, expensive contracts who are likely to turn into your next "Nolan Arenados" in 3, 4, 5 years isn't going to help you down the road either.
The Cardinals probably will choose to sign some guys much more cheaply to 1 year + 1 team option year or 2 year deals - guys who are more "boom or bust" options like a Dustin May, etc. Those guys aren't being signed to "win now" in 2026. Those guys should be signed to be traded for more prospects at the 2026 trading deadline if they "boom," or cut loose after 2026 if they "bust." The Cardinals should also "spend money" now by packaging it with Gray, Arenado, Contreras, etc. in deals in order to get better prospects back which could jump start their rebuild in 2027, 2028, etc.
So their spending money now should be directed toward either gathering more prospects immediately (from trades of Gray, Arenado, Contreras) or gathering more prospects later by planning to deal cheap FAs signed now for prospects during the 2026 season.
Then fast forward 10 years to when every single prospect we acquire before 2028 will either have reached FA, or been paid market rates, or failed - and then we no long have these surpluss contracts to trade for bonus prospects and we will presumably enter a cycle of losing again?