How Vlad Jr. and the Blue Jays bet on each other -- and won
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How Vlad Jr. and the Blue Jays bet on each other -- and won
"SIX MONTHS AGO, just seven games into the 2025 season, the Toronto Blue Jays arrived in Queens with uncertainty hovering over Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s future. New York Mets fans, hopeful that their team could eventually land the impending free agent and partner him with Juan Soto, welcomed the first baseman with notably loud cheers at Citi Field to open the weekend series."
"The deal was historic: 14 years, $500 million without deferrals, the third-largest contract in Major League Baseball history. The Canadian-born Guerrero, signed out of the Dominican Republic as a 16-year-old with a famous name, would be a Blue Jay for life. Guerrero bet on himself by turning down smaller offers and bet on the Blue Jays by agreeing not to test free agency. And the Blue Jays bet on the homegrown star at a massive price, having whiffed on other marquee talents in recent years."
""We didn't start playing our best baseball until May," Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer said. "But if that didn't get settled, it would be this cloud hanging over our season the whole time. The fact that that was resolved just kind of settled everything down. The outside attention is resolved. It's no longer, 'What's going to happen here?' It kind of took the elephant out of the room.""
Six months into the 2025 season, the Toronto Blue Jays faced uncertainty about Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s future after failing to reach a contract extension before a mid-February deadline. Mets fans cheered Guerrero during a series in Queens. Hours after the Mets were swept, the Blue Jays signed Guerrero to a 14-year, $500 million deal without deferrals, the third-largest in MLB history. Guerrero, signed from the Dominican Republic at 16, committed to remain a Blue Jay and declined smaller offers and free agency. Team leaders said resolving the contract removed a cloud over the season. Guerrero produced a fifth All-Star season, batting .292 with 23 home runs and an .848 OPS in 156 games.
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