• Loading stock data...
Saturday, August 16, 2025
Stephen A. Smith vs Clay Travis at Tuned In on September 16 in NYC. Don’t miss it. Buy tickets now!

Soto Contract Echoes 2000 A-Rod Deal. Could Similar Fallout Follow?

The eye-popping numbers surrounding Juan Soto’s historic contract with the Mets are certainly new, but many of the underlying issues surrounding the deal are not. 

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Baseball history doesn’t necessarily repeat, but it certainly rhymes, and the record-breaking $765 million free-agent contract for Juan Soto is poised to create massive fallout across the sport—just as a similarly historic deal for Alex Rodriguez did more than a generation ago.

In late 2000, Rodriguez signed a 10-year, $252 million deal with the Rangers, with the then-unprecedented deal being completed at the same MLB winter meetings hotel in Dallas and with the same agent, Scott Boras, as Soto’s new deal with the Mets. 

The Rodriguez deal was the highlight of a frenetic set of winter meetings that year with nearly $800 million in total player guarantees made in just a few days. The fallout from the financial largess, however, was often ugly—particularly in Texas. With Rodriguez, the Rangers suffered three straight losing seasons, as they were unable to build fully around the star shortstop, before trading him to the Yankees in early 2004, while he also later admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs during this period. By 2010, the entire Rangers franchise was sold in bankruptcy court. 

MLB, meanwhile, suffered both internal and external strife as a result of the Rodriguez deal. The league went through a bruising round of labor negotiations in 2002 with the MLB Players Association, narrowly averting a work stoppage with a last-minute agreement that, among other measures, reinstated the league’s luxury tax. Many small-market team owners decried the Rodriguez deal and the growing economic disparity in the sport, and after experimenting with various formulas, MLB in 2002 also introduced a straight-pool revenue-sharing system in which each team contributed 34% of its local revenue to the pool.

Many of the reforms ultimately were helpful, though, as MLB is now enjoying unrivaled competitive parity in major U.S. pro sports with no team winning a repeat World Series title since 2000. 

Back to the Future

The Soto deal threatens to bring many of those same conflicts back to the surface. Already, the league went through a 99-day lockout before reaching the 2022 labor deal with the players, and many of the sport’s large-scale economic issues are still decidedly unsettled—particularly as the local media industry continues to experience major disruption

The current collective bargaining agreement with the players expires after the 2026 season. Already, expectations have been heavy for another complex and potentially combative round of talks—particularly as the sport’s revenue flow, though growing in the aggregate to more than $11 billion annually, is changing at an accelerating pace. 

The 15-year term of the Soto deal with the Mets, also establishing a league record for its duration, will theoretically cover multiple contract periods with the MLB Players Association, a new set of national TV deals following the current ones expiring in 2028, and perhaps, an eventual reformation of that now-challenged local media landscape. 

The Mets, meanwhile, could still end up with a smaller 2025 payroll than in 2024, even with the historic addition of Soto. The team currently has about $249 million in salary commitments for next year. Even with numerous roster decisions unresolved, that figure is nearly $100 million less than the team’s spending this year, thanks to numerous obligations newly coming off its books, including traded pitchers Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer and free agents such as first baseman Pete Alonso and pitcher Luis Severino, who recently signed with the A’s

There are still some other notable commitments in place for the Mets, however, including the restructured deferral payments for the long-retired Bobby Bonilla that will continue until 2035—just four years before the end of Soto’s deal.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Braintree American batter Ryan Fennell hits the ball against Southeast pitcher Brody Miller during the Little League Baseball World Series at South Williamsport, PA on Thursday, Aug. 13, 2025.

Little League International Condemns Youth Sports Gambling Amid World Series

Licensed sportsbooks prevent gambling on the LLWS and similar events.
Nov 30, 2017; Arlington, TX, USA; General overall view of the Dallas Cowboys logo at midfield during an NFL football game between the Washington Redskins and the Cowboys at AT&T Stadium.

Arlington Pays Off Its Cowboys Stadium Debt 10 Years Early

Another major NFL venue retires its public debt far ahead of schedule.

Twins Sale Reversal Mirrors Troubling MLB Precedent

The MLB club’s situation resembles aborted sales of the Nationals and Angels.
Bridgewater American 12U Little League player Micah Poulter holds a District 7 pin during a send-off rally to the New England regional tournament in Bristol, Connecticut, from Legion Field on Friday, August 2, 2024.

Inside the Little League World Series Pin Trade

The rare little collectibles fuel a frenzy in Williamsport each summer.

Featured Today

Middle Tennessee wide receiver Cam'ron Lacy (86) catches a pass and carries the ball during the season final home football game against New Mexico State on Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024.

How Middle Tennessee State Added $668,000 to Its NIL Budget

The Blue Raiders are creating a new blueprint for cutting costs.
Schultz of Israel-Premier Tech
August 12, 2025

Rice Krispies Treats Are Upending the Billion-Dollar Athlete-Fuel Wars

The world’s most elite athletes are eating like first graders.
Dec 14, 2019; Philadelphia, PA, USA; President Donald Trump wave during the second quarter of the game between the Navy Midshipmen and the Army Black Knights at Lincoln Financial Field
August 9, 2025

‘Political Gold’: Trump Putting His Stamp on College Sports 

Trump has embraced executive action on hot-button college sports issues.
August 3, 2025

Inked Under Anesthesia: Athletes Getting $50,000 Tattoos

High-end studios, elite artist teams, and hours under anesthesia.
August 14, 2025

NBA Embraces Streaming, Adds 75 National Games to 2025–26 Schedule

The NBA announced the 2025–26 regular-season schedule Thursday.
Grant Fisher
August 15, 2025

Grand Slam Track Admits It Is ‘Struggling’ To Pay Athletes Millions They’re..

It’s been weeks since a self-imposed deadline to pay athletes $3 million.
Sponsored

‘Run With the Competition’: Ultra Trail Runner Lotti Brinks Is Back With..

Ultrarunner Lotti Brinks is ready to make her first Courmayeur-Champex-Chamonix podium in her HOKA Mafate 5s.
Sep 22, 2016; Atlanta, GA, USA; View of the logo on a grandstand during the 2016 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club.
August 13, 2025

PGA Tour Finale Revamp Brings Career Earnings Back in Play

From 2019 to 2024, winnings were only considered FedEx Cup bonus money.
August 13, 2025

Venus Williams Granted US Open Wild-Card Singles Entry

The seven-time Grand Slam winner is 45 years old.
August 12, 2025

Fever-Sky Viewership Dips As Clark, Reese Absences Take Toll

It was the eighth game between the two teams since last year.
August 12, 2025

Dana White Says Increasing UFC Pay on Table After $7.7B Paramount Deal

The fighting promotion is doubling its media-rights revenue.