A lot of people in the
national media are making Johnny Damon’s move to the Yankees into a
larger-than-life event. It shifts the balance of power in the American League,
the pundits say, and that may very well be true. The lineup that Joe Torre will
pencil in on Opening Day 2006 will probably be the most well-rounded lineup
since the last work stoppage in 1994.
But what the media lacks more and more in this age of
instant information is the ability to look beyond tomorrow. Sure, Damon to the
Yanks is a coup for the clean-shaven men in pinstripes this season, but what
will it look like in 2008 or 2009, when Damon is 35 and making $13 million?
The most common comparison for Damon is Bernie
Williams, and while some will write off the latter’s decline to injuries, age
has also surely played an important role. The similarities between Damon and
Williams are intriguing: in 1999 and 2000, when Bernie Baseball was in his 30-
and 31-year old seasons, he averaged 155 games played, 183 hits, 32 doubles, 28
home runs, and 11 stolen bases. His batting average over those two seasons
comes to about .330, and his slugging percentage was about .545. (Statistics
like RBI are more reflective of a player’s role on his team, so the more
significant differences between Williams’ and Damon’s statistics in those
seasons is not as relevant to the comparison.)
Damon just turned 32 at the beginning of November, so
his 30- and 31-year old seasons were 2004 and 2005. In those years, Damon
averaged 149 games played, 194 hits, 35 doubles, 15 home runs and 19 stolen
bases. He hit about .308 over those two years and slugged slightly north of
.450.
I have not just cherry-picked statistics, either. If
you look at Damon’s and Williams’ numbers across the board, in those two
seasons, the only major differences come in home runs, RBIs and slugging
percentage, in which categories Williams had the advantage. It is even fair to
say that their defensive strengths (range) and weaknesses (arm strength) are
very similar.
Why is it not reasonable, then, to anticipate that
Damon’s decline will likely mirror Williams’? If anything, in their example
seasons, Williams was the better player!
And yet by 2003 and 2004, when Bernie was the same age Damon will be in the
last two years of his recently-signed contract, Williams was hitting .262 with
a slugging percentage more than 100 points lower than during his peak seasons.
The moral of the story is that, yes, the Yankees have
gotten themselves a fantastic player for 2006 and, likely, 2007 as well.
Damon’s performance over the next two seasons is not, however, the reason the
Red Sox were unwilling to pony up the big bucks. While people rightly say that
the Red Sox are still on a different salary structure than most of Major League
Baseball, it is false to assume that there are only two tiers. The Yankees form
a level all to themselves, where they can absorb $15 million mistakes like the
Royals absorbed 9th-inning losses in 2005.
It is still imperative that the Red Sox be more
fiscally responsible than the Yankees. Letting Damon go to the Bronx in 2006
allows the Sox to make a trade for a player who in 2008 and 2009 will be closer
to his peak years than his decline years, something that can not be said about
Johnny Jesus. The “gaffe” that Sox co-GMs Hoyer and Cherington committed when
they allowed Damon to go to the Yankees might not win the division for the boys
from Beantown in 2006, but it could very well do that in 2008 and 2009.
I'm a junior history and economics double major at Wake Forest University, and I have spent the fall semester studying abroad in Cambridge, England. Home is in Fort Wayne, Indiana, but I owe my sports allegiances to spending my formative years in a little town outside of Boston, Massachusetts . Baseball is my first love and my greatest passion; I also enjoy soccer (football, as its called on this side of the pond), and am an avid supporter of Wake Forest sports.