I was crunching the numbers to figure out how much extra luxury tax the Mets would owe if they signed Alonso.
If the Jays were to front-load a deal at $30 million and the Mets matched it next season, the Mets would have to pay an additional $16.775 million in luxury tax on top of the $30 million in salary for Alonso. That means Alonso would effectively cost them just under $47 million total, factoring in the extra tax charge if they signed him for $30 million.
Keep in mind that the Mets already have Vientos as an option at first base, who profiles to have a similar WAR to Alonso. They also have Winker at DH. While Alonso is undoubtedly better than Winker, the difference might only be around 1 WAR. Considering this, the Mets would essentially be paying almost $47 million for just 1-1.25 WAR.
If the Jays were to add a $30 million dollar bat, the extra CBT charge would be $7.26 million. So, effectively, it would cost them $37 million, instead of $47 million.
If the Jays were to front-load a deal at $30 million and the Mets matched it next season, the Mets would have to pay an additional $16.775 million in luxury tax on top of the $30 million in salary for Alonso. That means Alonso would effectively cost them just under $47 million total, factoring in the extra tax charge if they signed him for $30 million.
Keep in mind that the Mets already have Vientos as an option at first base, who profiles to have a similar WAR to Alonso. They also have Winker at DH. While Alonso is undoubtedly better than Winker, the difference might only be around 1 WAR. Considering this, the Mets would essentially be paying almost $47 million for just 1-1.25 WAR.
If the Jays were to add a $30 million dollar bat, the extra CBT charge would be $7.26 million. So, effectively, it would cost them $37 million, instead of $47 million.