I’m sure someone has already done this study, maybe not in exactly this form, but rather than search for it online, I decided to take a crack at it. I may be among the most extreme of those who were puzzled by the Yankees offering Gerrit Cole the gigantic contract that they did, both in terms of years and in terms of dollars per year—it makes no sense to me, unless the concept of "money" is almost literally meaningless to the Yankees, which may be the answer right here-- in which case no need to read further.
By "meaningless" I mean that they might just be able to afford to dismiss an expense like 36 million bucks every year for the next half-dozen or so years as a mere inconvenience if such a sum were to disappear annually down a swirling toilet. It’s certainly none of my business how they choose to spend their money, and Cole is certainly the best free-agent pitcher on the market. My argument is just this: pitchers are fragile.
For all I know, the Yankees have taken out an insurance policy against Cole’s getting hurt over the course of his contract, but insurance is never cheap, either, and insurance companies make money selling contracts so I’ll assume this is a non-issue here, or at best a peripheral side issue. All I want to study is how pitchers like Cole perform in line with their contracts.
We’re dealing with a small sample size, of course, because there aren’t that many "pitchers like Cole" and the more broadly we define that term to expand the sample size, the less the other pitchers will resemble Cole. If we go back too far in time, for example, we may be looking at pitchers who suffered injuries, or training regimens, that have become outdated by Cole’s time, and if we don’t go back far enough in time, we lose the basis for comparing their performance for the entire period of Cole’s contract. If we look at pitchers much younger or older than Cole is right now, or coming off seasons that are much better or worse than Cole is coming off, they might not be appropriate comparisons to Cole. Well, I suppose it’s going to be hard to find many pitchers having seasons all that much better than Cole’s 2019, so we can eliminate an upper limit to the quality, which eliminates—no one, really. Cole’s 2019 was about as good as you’re going to find.
So what I’m studying is pitchers with at least a 6.0 WAR at least one time in the six seasons between 2008 and 2013, who were between the ages of 26 and 30, with special attention to the tiny sample of age exactly 28. (Cole was 28 last year, with a WAR of 6.9.) Only a few were free agents in the target season, but we’ll pretend that all of them were free agents signing with a new team, and evaluating how they did over the length of Cole’s contract.
As I understand it, the Yankees are paying him the 36 bazillion dollars with a hard commitment to pay that salary for five seasons. (https://www.spotrac.com/mlb/new-york-yankees/gerrit-cole-13294/ --Cole has an opt-out after 2024, the fifth season, but he’d be walking away from the gross remainder of his contract—literally, a gross remainder, $144 million—only if he’s pitching really well after season five, 2024, well enough to be worth a greater amount on the free-agent market. The Yankees can counter with an offer of adding one more year at $36 mil for 2029, after which he can walk and they can go piss up the proverbial rope—you’re familiar with the proverb, I assume.) But this isn’t about the money, other than in the sense that I don’t get, laying out anything like this kind of money for a pitcher who can pull up lame after his next pitch. If you care, I don’t believe in paying pitchers anything comparable to what you pay hitters, which I’ve explained way back at the end of 2016, if you want to search through the articles archived here.) All I want to study here is how often pitchers comparable to Cole deliver value for the buck.
Or simply how they deliver value, period. I don’t really believe, nor do I think the Yankees do, that they expect to get their money’s worth out of him. Partly, I think they’re investing the money in Cole because a) they can, and b) to show their fans and their organization that they’re committed to winning, and c) to keep him out of the hands of any of their rivals, particularly in the AL East. I’m more certain of the assertation that they don’t expect 36 million dollars worth of pitching annually from Cole all throughout the length of the contract (it ends in 2028, by which date this website, and this writer, will probably no longer be in existence). If they get a year or two of "Gerrit Cole, ca. 2019" out of him, the full price of $324 Million will be earned, and every year after that (allowing for hyperbole) will be gravy.
But I’m getting ahead of my study. Literally. I’m asserting that result, but I haven’t actually run any numbers yet. So allow me to shut up, and deliver what I’ve been advertising up to this point.
This study begins in 2008, eleven years before Cole’s 2019 season. Cole was listed as 28 years old in 2019 (he turned 29 on September 8th, but we’ll go with his baseball age as 28 here), and made his third All-Star team, finished just behind Justin Verlander in the Cy Young Award voting, and racked up 6.9 WAR, easily the highest in his excellent career so far. By starting in 2008, we can track out the subsequent careers of those pitchers who bore some resemblance to Gerrit Cole, by which I mean those pitchers who earned at least 6.0 WAR and were within two years of age 28 (26-30) that season:
2008
|
WAR
|
age
|
’09
|
’10
|
’11
|
‘12
|
’13
|
‘14
|
Total WAR (’09-‘14) [per pitcher]
|
Average WAR over 6 seasons
|
Johan Santana
|
7.1
|
29
|
3.3
|
4.7
|
0.1
|
--
|
--
|
--
|
8.1
|
2.7
|
Cliff Lee
|
6.8
|
29
|
5.4
|
5.1
|
8.5
|
4.4
|
6.8
|
0.9
|
31.0
|
5.2
|
Dan Haren
|
6.1
|
27
|
6.5
|
3.1
|
4.1
|
-.1
|
0.0
|
-.5
|
13.1
|
2.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
6.7
|
28
|
5.0
|
4.3
|
4.2
|
1.3
|
2.3
|
0.2
|
52.2 [17.4]
|
3.3
|
(You can ignore the color-coding, which sorts the individual seasons into groups, e.g. 2.0-3.9 WAR, which helped me to check that the numbers added up.) In addition to lightening my work-load considerably, I’m not tallying those pitchers with fewer WAR in 2008 than 6.0, and I’m not including those pitchers under 26 or older than 30 because they’re less directly comparable to Cole, though I understand why you might consider their age irrelevant. I think age is a relevant factor, or may be, because younger pitchers might be thought to have more remaining healthy years than older pitchers, and older pitchers could be thought to have either demonstrated the ability to pitch heavy workloads or to be on the verge of having arms that are soon to collapse under their years of heavy workload.
I don’t know how valid any of these ideas are but as I say, cutting such pitchers from the study not only alleviates MY heavy workload (and yours in making sense of all these numbers), but there are all sorts of examples of older AND younger pitchers whose performances following a 6.0 or better season bear out similar patterns to pitchers within two years of Cole’s age now. Tim Lincecum, for example, led all of MLB in pitcher’s WAR in 2008—he was only 24, and he put up comparable stats in 2009 (7.4 WAR) but after that point became the poster boy for mediocrity. So it’s not as if by excluding him from the study on account of his youth, I’m sidestepping those 6.0+ pitchers who did well. Also on the youthful end is John Danks, who put up a sparkling 6.4 WAR in 2008 at the age of 23, but then posted only 12.9 WAR over the remaining eight years of his career, almost all of it in 2009 and 2010.
24-year-old Jon Lester also didn’t make the cut, despite a 6.1 WAR. Lester’s had some spectacular years since 2008, but also some pretty spectacular health issues, with five seasons since 2008 below 2.0 WAR and three seasons since 2008 above 5.0. On the other side of the age-ledger, Ryan (6.9 WAR) Dempster was 31 in 2008, so is likewise disqualified from this study, but any team signing Dempster to a nine-year contract for bazillions of dollars on the basis of his 6.9 season would be kicking its own ass: in the remaining five seasons before Dempster retired, he averaged 2.2 WAR (11-10 W-L, and a 103 ERA+ on average), not exactly superstar numbers, my point being that youth or age doesn’t seem to exempt pitchers from suffering sharp declines in performance.
I got started thinking along these lines by marveling at Matt Harvey’s rapid decline from "Best pitcher in the known universe" to "Can’t unload his contract for bupkis fast enough." Slight exaggeration, but he did go straight from fourth in the Cy Young voting in 2013 (5.4 WAR) to a grand total of 4.0 WAR in the six years since 2013. Plenty of others, just outside the parameters of this study: Jake Arrieta has his magnificent 8.3 WAR year in 2015, so lacks the requisite number of followup seasons, but otherwise is the poster boy for "DON’T SIGN HIM TO $30 Million-dollar CONTRACT!!!" In the four years since 2015, he’s gone 12-9 on average with an ERA a little over twice what it was when he was winning his Cy Young Award—not bad pitching by any stretch, but not, I think, what you want for that kind of money.
This is all to explain why I’m excluding those pitchers more than two years older or younger than Gerrit Cole is now, and excluding those pitchers below a 6.0 WAR mark. On to 2009:
2009
|
WAR
|
age
|
’10
|
’11
|
‘12
|
‘13
|
‘14
|
‘15
|
Total WAR (‘10-‘15) [per pitcher]
|
Average individual WAR over 6 seasons
|
Wainwright
|
6.3
|
27
|
6.2
|
--
|
0.9
|
6.2
|
6.1
|
0.9
|
20.2
|
4.0
|
C.C. Sabathia
|
6.2
|
28
|
4.8
|
6.4
|
3.4
|
0.0
|
-.6
|
1.2
|
15.1
|
2.5
|
Dan Haren
|
6.5
|
28
|
3.1
|
4.1
|
-.1
|
0.0
|
-.5
|
2.1
|
8.7
|
1.4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
6.3
|
28
|
4.7
|
3.5
|
1.4
|
2.1
|
1.7
|
1.4
|
44.0 [14.7]
|
2.7
|
Haren, our first repeating qualifier, is another year older, still pitching very well in 2009, but this time he’s at the end of the line of excellence—his next few seasons will top out at 4.1 and there are only two seasons left for him. Meanwhile C.C. Sabathia is looking like a good match for Cole and a good return on the dollar, at least in the short run: he’s got another 6+ WAR season ahead of him (in 2011) and a 4.8 in 2010. But is C.C. a good long-term investment? After 2012, he’s a. 500 W-L pitcher with a 4.22 ERA in under 150 IP—so if you sign him after 2009, you get three years of top quality pitching, and seven more years of back-of -the-rotation yeoman pitching. Like Cole, Sabathia turned 29 during the year, about two months sooner than Cole does. Our final match here is Adam Wainwright, who mixes in future brilliant years with future non-years.
2010
|
WAR
|
Age
|
’11
|
‘12
|
‘13
|
‘14
|
‘15
|
‘16
|
Total WAR
(‘11-‘16) [per pitcher]
|
Average individual WAR over 6 seasons
|
Josh Johnson
|
7.0
|
26
|
2.9
|
3.9
|
1.5
|
--
|
--
|
--
|
8.3
|
2.8
|
Ubaldo Jimenez
|
7.5
|
26
|
-.9
|
1.1
|
-.5
|
2.9
|
0.3
|
2.4
|
5.2
|
0.9
|
Wainwright
|
6.2
|
28
|
--
|
0.9
|
6.2
|
6.1
|
0.9
|
1.0
|
15.0
|
2.6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
6.9
|
27
|
0.7
|
2.0
|
2.4
|
3.0
|
0.4
|
1.1
|
28.5 [9.6]
|
2.1
|
2011
|
WAR
|
age
|
‘12
|
‘13
|
‘14
|
‘15
|
‘16
|
‘17
|
Total WAR (‘12-‘17)
[per pitcher]
|
Average individual WAR over
6 seasons
|
Cole Hamels
|
6.4
|
27
|
4.5
|
4.2
|
6.6
|
2.7
|
1.6
|
5.0
|
27.5
|
4.6
|
C.C. Sabathia
|
6.4
|
30
|
3.4
|
0.0
|
-.6
|
1.2
|
3.2
|
2.9
|
10.0
|
1.7
|
Ricky Romero
|
6.4
|
26
|
-1.5
|
-.4
|
--
|
--
|
--
|
--
|
-1.9
|
-.3
|
Jered Weaver
|
6.9
|
28
|
4.3
|
3.6
|
2.8
|
0.4
|
-.7
|
-1.2
|
9.2
|
1.5
|
J. Verlander
|
8.6
|
28
|
8.1
|
4.3
|
0.9
|
2.3
|
7.2
|
6.4
|
29.1
|
4.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
6.9
|
28
|
3.8
|
2.3
|
1.9
|
1.3
|
2.3
|
2.6
|
73.9 [14.2]
|
2.5
|
2012
|
WAR
|
Age
|
‘13
|
‘14
|
‘15
|
‘16
|
‘17
|
‘18
|
Total WAR
(‘13-‘18)
[per pitcher]
|
Average individual WAR over
6 seasons
|
David Price
|
6.6
|
26
|
2.7
|
4.3
|
6.2
|
3.0
|
1.6
|
4.4
|
22.2
|
3.7
|
J. Verlander
|
8.1
|
29
|
4.3
|
0.9
|
2.3
|
7.2
|
6.4
|
6.2
|
27.2
|
4.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
7.3
|
28
|
3.5
|
2.6
|
4.3
|
5.1
|
4.0
|
5.3
|
49.4 [24.7]
|
4.1
|
2013
|
WAR
|
Age
|
‘14
|
‘15
|
‘16
|
‘17
|
‘18
|
‘19
|
Total WAR
(‘14-‘19)
[per pitcher]
|
Average individual WAR over
6 seasons
|
Sanchez
|
6.0
|
29
|
2.3
|
0.2
|
-1.0
|
-.8
|
3.0
|
3.7
|
7.3
|
1.2
|
Scherzer
|
6.4
|
28
|
5.7
|
6.9
|
6.3
|
7.2
|
8.7
|
5.8
|
40.6
|
6.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AVERAGE
|
6.2
|
28
|
4.0
|
3.6
|
2.6
|
3.2
|
5.9
|
4.8
|
47.9 [24.0]
|
4.0
|
So what have here is the last five seasons that have six subsequent seasons, of pitchers with WAR above 6.0 who were listed as between the ages of 26 and 30 in each season, for a total of 18 pitcher-seasons (14 individual pitchers, with Verlander, Sabathia, Wainwright, and Haren making two appearances apiece.) The bottom line is that the average of the 108 subsequent pitcher-seasons here is somewhere between 3.1 and 3.2, by my best eyeball estimate. In other words, the average season that the Yankees might expect from Gerrit Cole over the next 6 years is about where Johan Santana was in 2009 (3.3), or Dan Haren (3.1) was in 2010, or C.C. Sabathia (3.4) was in 2012, or David Price (3.0) was in 2016 , or Anibal Sanchez (3.0) was in 2018:
|
W-L
|
ERA+
|
IP
|
WHIP
|
|
Santana ‘09
|
13-9
|
130
|
166.7
|
1.212
|
|
Haren ‘10
|
12-12
|
106
|
235
|
1.272
|
|
Sabathia ‘12
|
15-6
|
125
|
200
|
1.140
|
|
Price ‘16
|
17-9
|
112
|
230
|
1.204
|
|
Sanchez ‘18
|
7- 6
|
144
|
136.7
|
1.083
|
|
Now, if Cole puts up numbers like these over the next five seasons, are the Yankees going to be happy with this signing? It’s not at all a bad showing, but it’s not even close to Cole’s 6.9 showing in 2019. If Cole puts up these numbers from 2020 through 2024, do you think he opts to walk away from his contract. (He’d have to be pretty sure he’d get a more lucrative deal than $36M for the next four years, and these numbers don’t exactly scream "Superstar hurler walking!") If he did, do you think the Yankees would counter with an additional year at 36M, bringing the total contract to ten years and 360M?
I think "No" and "No," meaning the years from 2025 through 2028 will very likely (if the charts above are roughly predictive) be pretty disastrous for Cole. Weaver, Romero, Johnson, Haren and Santana were all pretty much cooked by season #6. Only Verlander and Scherzer are still superstars past season #6, and the other seven (Wainwright, Lee, Jimenez, Hamels, Price, Sanchez, and Sabathia) are still serviceable in seasons 7-9, but nothing you’d ever willingly pay $36 million for. So the way I see it, it’s about 6-1 against Cole turning in nine seasons on anything like the scale of performance that Yankees are paying for.
It’s beyond obvious to opine that Cole’s contract is a huge gamble in the sense that buying a lottery ticket is a huge gamble, though the Yankees don’t see it like that, and you can understand why. Twenty-one of the 108 subsequent pitcher-seasons here show a WAR of 6.0 or better, and that’s double-counting some of Verlander’s and Wainwright’s 6.0 seasons. It’s unlikely that the Yankees expect more than one future season even approaching Cole’s 6.9 performance of last year, which is presumably what they’re shelling out 36M per year to see. What they’re hoping for is to add to the additional probable season of 4.0-5.9 that they’re likely to get (seventeen pitcher-seasons between those two points here.) If the Yankees can get three seasons, in other words, of 4.0 or better, they’re beating the odds I’m projecting here, and that’s worth all the tea in China to them.
6.0+ WAR
|
4.0-5.9 WAR
|
2.0-3.9 WAR
|
0.0-1.9
|
-0.0- or --
|
TOTAL
|
21
|
17
|
22
|
22
|
26
|
108
|
The largest of these (somewhat arbitrary) groupings is the "-0.0 or –" group, nearly a quarter of all the seasons under scrutiny here, having a negative or null value, which the Yankees can anticipate (and not care) going in.
So do I advocate simply never signing a star free-agent pitcher? What’s the alternative? Is it to let an available superstar at the top of his game slip through your fingers simply to save a few (dozen) million?
Well, kinda, yeah. As I review these "6.0 WAR" pitcher-seasons, two patterns emerge:
1) These guys are TALL—never noticed before doing this study, but so many high-quality pitchers nowadays are gigantic, 6’7", 6’6". Really huge guys who would have been total outliers when I first followed baseball. Nothing to do with what I’m arguing here, just a little surprising how big pitchers have gotten across the board.
2) The really huge contracts—huge in years, huge in megabucks—generally follow, rather than coincide with, the superstar seasons. I kept noticing that the pitchers getting paid the really big bucks (with Verlander and Scherzer the exceptions) were collecting superstar salaries for All-Star (or much worse) performances, again across the board.
Wealthy teams, of course, can spend their money however they like, and I’d bet that the Yankees in this instance will get a terrific season, maybe two or three, out of Cole, that is worth any amount of money to them if it results in another championship. But for most teams, they’d do better not even to consider signing pitchers in Cole’s category, and try to develop their own young pitchers and to scout other teams’ struggling pitchers with an eye towards bumping up their games, a la Arrieta or Dempster, and sink their free-agent money into offensive talent. The rate of return on free-agent superstar pitchers just doesn’t seem to me comparable to that of free-agent superstar batters.