Tue Jun 03, 2014 8:11 pm
Actually, George Springer reportedly--and if so, smartly--refused a similar deal, which was reportedly why he didn't start the year in Houston. Bud Norris and Mark Mulder--as your article I cant access reportedly says--called Singleton out for accepting the deal, insinuating he was foolish--and, according to Mulder, under-confident--for accepting such a deal that nullifies possibly better money from future arbitration.
Singleton is an excellent hitting prospect (if he can stay away from the ganja), and Houston is definitely counting on him to both be their regular first baseman and form a solid core with Springer (who' rocks) and, hopefully, Mike Foltenywiecz and Domingo Santana, so the deal isn't particularly high-risk for them.
It will be interesting to see if more teams follow Houston's lead and if the MLB player's union puts up any substantial objections to it. If teams do, I truly doubt more substantial prospects than Singleton--such as Kris Bryant or Jonathan Gray--will accept them.
Last edited by
l.strether on Tue Jun 03, 2014 8:42 pm, edited 1 time in total.