...A tale of two first basemen. Both great pros. Both world champions on National League teams. Both just turned 32 years of age. And both eligible to sign as free agents with the New York Yankees.
That's right. The Yankees. The team that plays in...
The Cashman Zone.
One of them is Anthony Rizzo. Plucky, courageous cancer survivor. First baseman for the Cubs when they won the World Series for the first time in 108 years. After hitting a mere .222 in the Covid season, he is picked up for a bag of magic beans in 2021, when first sacker Luke Voit begins to flounder.
Despite being a lefty, he hits all of .249 in 49 games, with 8 home runs—a mere three of them at the Stadium they call, "Yankee."He does hit a solo homer in four at-bats, in the team's pathetic, one-game elimination from the playoffs up at Fenway Park.
Lifetime—10 years in the Wrigley Field bandbox—he is a .272 hitter, with 242 home runs and an .861 OPS.
Now consider another, first-baseman free agent.
His name is Freddie Freeman, and he is just over one month younger than Mr. Rizzo.
Freeman has just capped a career with the Braves by leading them to the World Series, in a year when he hit 31 homers, batted .300/.896, and led the NL in runs scored with 120. In the World Series win over the Astros, he hit .318 with 2 homers and 5 RBI in 6 games.
Lifetime—12 years in the roomier Atlanta stadiums—the lefty is a .295 hitter, with 271 homers and an .893 OPS.
The choice now falls to Mr. Cashman—and to his boss, a mysterious figure named Hal Steinbrenner, who is rarely seen in public, preferring to spend his time rolling nickels on his yacht, the Corporate Welfare.Who will Cashman, a reputed genius, pick?
Freeman...merits not even a moment of consideration. Instead, the Yankees will go with Rizzo.
Freeman will sign with a team on the West Coast formerly of Brooklyn, known as "the Dodgers," taking a six-year deal for $162 million.
Cashman will sign Rizzo, for a minimum of four years, and $56 million.
Rizzo—impeded in part by the managerial decision to continue to play him with obvious concussion symptoms—will finish his Yankees career with 60 homers in 370 games, and a .234/.326/.409/.735 split. He will miss almost as many games—327, including the entire 2025 season—as he plays. He is retired.
Freeman becomes a doubles machine in L.A. (a home run machine in Yankee Stadium?), leading the NL with 47 (2022) and 59 (2023). He also leads the league in runs, hits, and OBP in 2022. After four years, he has 180 two-baggers, 96 homers, and a .310/.391/.516/.907 split with the Dodgers. He is still the first baseman for a world champion team.
The Dodgers have won two World Series since Freeman arrived. When their teams met in the Series, in 2024, Anthony Rizzo had two singles and no RBI in 16 at-bats, and committed one of the most embarrassing fielding gaffes in World Series history.
Freddie Freeman hit a walk-off, grand-slam home run, and had 4 homers, 12 RBI, and a .300/.364/1.00/1.364 split, en route to being names the Series MVP.
Submitted for your consideration: who got the better of these free-agent deals?
Obviously, it was...the Yankees, because Mr. Steinbrenner, the Man Who Never Smiles, had to pay $106 million less than the Dodgers.
Minus, that is, the $17.5 million they will have paid a certain Mr. Goldschmidt to replace Mr. Rizzo (and play nearly as badly) in 2025 and 2026, which reduces their savings to $98.5 million.
Minus whatever they will have to pay to replace Mr. Goldschmidt in 2026-2027. Minus the reduced playing time and development for the promising young Mr. Rice. Minus—
Never mind. It's simply minus. You are in...the Cashman Zone.





