The Chicago Cubs are reportedly offering Pete Crow-Armstrong a lucrative contract, between $60 million and $70 million, reflecting his significant rise in performance and value within the MLB.
Initially, the Cubs used Lawrence Butler and Ezequiel Tovar's contracts as comparison points, but Crow-Armstrong's exceptional performance as an NL WAR leader (tied with Fernando Tatis Jr. and JesĂşs Luzardo) necessitates a reassessment and increased offer.
The article details how the Mets originally acquired Crow-Armstrong in a trade involving Javier Báez and Trevor Williams. However, their decision to trade him is now viewed as a regrettable one, influenced by their playoff push and his injured status at the time.
The Cubs are making in-season overtures toward NL MVP candidate Pete Crow-Armstrong after offering him between $60 million and $70 million on a long-term deal in spring. They’re obviously willing to raise their bid, however, the ask is rising exponentially with PCA exploding.Â
The Cubs were likely using Lawrence Butler ($65.5M) and Ezequiel Tovar ($63.5M) as comps in spring. They know they need new comps now.Â
Folks have been undervaluing PCA — NL WAR leader at 2.9, tied with Fernando Tatis Jr. and JesĂşs Luzardo — for years.Â
The Cubs originally sought pitching prospect Matt Allan (still at Class-A after years of injuries), as Ken Rosenthal reported, before accepting PCA for Javier Báez and Trevor Williams. The Mets liked PCA but were 3 ½ games ahead at the deadline, they wanted to win in Steve Cohen’s first year, PCA wasn’t yet a top-100 player, and he was on the IL at the time, so they made a deal they soon regretted.Â
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