Wednesday, Feb. 20 11:10am ET
Phillies sign OF Abreu to five-year extension
PHILADELPHIA (Ticker) -- The Philadelphia Phillies have made
Bobby Abreu the highest-paid player in team history, signing the
All-Star right fielder to a five-year extension worth $64
million
Phillies general manager Ed Wade announced the deal on Wednesday
morning.
Abreu receives a $3 million signing bonus and the Phillies will
have an option for a sixth season at $16 million in 2008 or a $2
million buyout.
In addition, the contract includes numerous award bonuses and
salary escalator provisions should Abreu finish in the top three
of the National League Most Valuable Player Award which could
raise the total to $78 million.
The average annual salary of Abreu's five-year contract is worth
$12.8 million, which ranks 18th in baseball, just below the $13
million annual average of catcher Mike Piazza and pitcher Chan
Ho Park.
"Our stated objective has been to keep the core of the club
together for a long time," Wade said. "Signing Bobby is a clear
indication that what we say is what we mean.
"We signed Mike Lieberthal to a deal prior to the 2000 season
that bought out his free agency, and that was the first move we
made towards keeping this group together. And, moving forward,
we plan to make the same types of commitments to the players who
we want to be a big part of our team now."
The signing of Abreu was a clear message to third baseman Scott
Rolen, who has turned down a lucrative long-term deal and is
eligible to become a free agent after the 2002 season. Rolen has
often cited the team's unwillingness to spend money in order to
compete as the primary factor in his decision to not make a
commitment to the Phillies.
Abreu, who turns 28 in March, was to enter the final year of a
three-year, $14.25 million contract that was slated to pay him
$6 million this season. But he was not eligible for free agency
until after the 2003 season.
Abreu is recovering from an emergency appendectomy earlier this
month but is expected to report to camp later this month.
Abreu is coming off a season in which he hit .289 and set career
highs with 31 homers, 110 RBI, 118 runs scored and 36 stolen
bases. He was the first Phillie ever to hit 30 homers and steal
30 bases in the same season and finished fourth in doubles with
48 and tied for third in walks with 106.
A lifetime .307 hitter, Abreu has a career on-base percentage of
.408 -- trailing only Barry Bonds, Jeff Bagwell and Brian Giles
among National League players with at least 2,800 plate
appearances.
The acquisition of Abreu in November 1997 for shortstop Kevin
Stocker stands as one of the greatest trades in franchise
history.
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