Scott Boras: Diamondbacks signing Corbin Burnes shows other teams are just making excuses




PHOENIX — Agent Scott Boras, who represents the two biggest free-agent MLB stars who still are unsigned, had to look only a few feet to his right Wednesday afternoon to illuminate his position this winter.

Spring training starts in just a month, and All-Star third baseman Alex Bregman and All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso remain on the outside looking in, having no idea where they’ll be playing in 2025.

Boras has argued all winter that plenty of teams have the money to meet Bregman's and Alonso’s demands, and for proof, he had to look no further than starter Corbin Burnes, who was being introduced Wednesday after signing a six-year, $210 million contract with the Arizona Diamondbacks, the largest contract in franchise history.

And, the last anyone checked, no one has ever mistaken the Diamondbacks for a large-market club with massive TV rights.

So, if the Diamondbacks can afford to sign Burnes, Boras argues, there should be absolutely no excuses for others not to strongly pursue and sign Bregman and Alonso to lucrative contracts.

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Certainly, there’s plenty of interest in both players, but if anyone was actually offering a deal they believe is worth their true value, they would have been signed before the holidays.


Alonso, who has spent his entire career with the New York Mets and turned down a seven-year, $158 million contract in 2023, was seeking a deal bigger than Freddie Freeman’s six-year, $162 million contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers and Matt Olson’s eight-year, $168 million deal with Atlanta.

Now, he’s willing to take a three-year deal with opt-outs to stay with the Mets, but they’re still at an impasse.

Considering how the Mets have played hard-ball in these negotiations with Alonso, and are willing to let him walk if he doesn't meet their price, the question now is just how much damage has been done in their relationship?

“I don’t want to address preemptive questions about it,’’ Boras said. “You’re going to have to ask Pete how he’s going to feel and what he’s going to do. He’s just in the marketplace listening right now.

“Teams are now getting a little more definition about their teams so I think things will move.’’

While Alonso may be willing to accept a short-term deal with the ability to opt out after the 2025 season, Bregman is not going down that path. He has no desire to accept a short-term contract, and remains engaged with several teams like the Toronto Blue Jays, Detroit Tigers and Boston Red Sox.

“Bregman’s a championship player, teams know it,’’ Boras said. “It’s really a matter of his decision-making and theirs, about how you can close up that gap. There’s substantial interest (in long-term) deals.’’

The qualifying offer attached to Bregman and Alonso is certainly having an adverse effect, Boras said, but he also points out that teams haven’t spent this winter as they have in the past.

“You’re seeing so many teams that are actually not spending,’’ Boras said. “They’re making more, but they’re not spending. They’re spending far less than they did two, three years ago. There’s a quadrant as many as 10 to 12 teams that are in that position. …

“The graduation of being an owner has a different definition that it did 10, 15 years ago, ironically because of the appreciation of the franchise value.’’

There are only seven teams who have increased their payroll by more than $10 million from a year ago, according to FanGraphs.