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Post by Commish Emeritus (Scott) on Jan 2, 2015 20:10:31 GMT -5
Highest AAS (average annual salary) is the determining factor. In the case of an AAS tie, the total dollars offered and years will decide the winner.
If there are two bids with an AAS of $2.5M and one is for 2 years, $5M and the other is for 3 years, $7.5M, the latter gets the player.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 10, 2015 18:40:26 GMT -5
so if guy A) bid 3 yrs 9M (AAS 3M)
can I swoop in and bid 4yrs 12M (AAS 3M)? or would that be bad etiquette?
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Post by Commish Emeritus (Scott) on Jan 10, 2015 18:46:02 GMT -5
That's not bad etiquette at all. It's completely within the rules and allowed. You'd be matching AAS and increasing the number of years.
So go ahead and match my Scherzer $22M AAS offer and give him 4 or more years.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 10, 2015 19:02:00 GMT -5
LOL, I DONT THINK I CAN AFFORD SCHERZER
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Post by Miami Rays (Michael) on Jan 12, 2015 8:48:30 GMT -5
Just to be sure: AAS trumps total dollars and years, yes?
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Post by Cleveland Braves (Drew) on Jan 12, 2015 8:48:52 GMT -5
Correct.
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