Ranking the 12 worst contracts in MLB after 2021 trade deadline
It's too early to say that the 10-year/$341 million deal that the New York Mets signed Francisco Lindor to after acquiring him from Cleveland was a mistake, but Steve Cohen and company perhaps wish they would have waited until after the four-time All-Star's first season in Queens to make such an ambitious commitment.
The reality is that the way Lindor -- currently on the injured list with a right oblique strain -- has played in 2021 almost certainly wouldn't have earned him that deal even on the free agent market.
Across his first 88 games, Lindor has slashed .228/.326/.376 with 11 home runs, 36 RBIs and a .702 OPS. Lindor has walked at a career-high 11.2% clip and posted four defensive runs saved, so he's hardly been a detriment to the Mets.
But there's a realistic chance that if the Mets had allowed Lindor to play out his contract year, he may have had to settle for a qualifying offer this offseason to rebuild his value, rather than inking a deal that runs through the 2031 season. If Lindor declined the qualifying offer, the Mets could have attempted to re-sign him to lesser deal on the free-agent market, or collected draft compensation if he departed. It's not like there wouldn't have been other options at shortstop to pivot to -- Carlos Correa, Corey Seager, Trevor Story, Javier Báez and Brandon Crawford can all become free agents this offseason.
We're not going to bet against Lindor figuring things out, but if he peaked in Cleveland, that's a scary proposition for the Mets when you consider that his new contract won't even begin until the 2022 season.
While we wait to see how Lindor's deal pans out, here are the 12 worst contracts in baseball currently, with MLB's trade deadline having recently passed: