I have no idea what they're doing. It's just a recipe for mediocrity.
I just don't get it.
To me, the whole point of committing to a guy early based on a small sample size should be that you get a big discount if that small sample size turns out to be legit sustainable play. Alex Burrows as an example.
But instead we see these deals where the player is getting signed a year early, the team is assuming all the risk ... and they're getting zero discount if the player sustains their play and only small discount if the player absolutely explodes, while they might waste $millions in cap space if the player has a regression.
And I guess I can sort of get it as a 'statement' with a young player that you believe in him, although something like the Guenther deal is still nuts to me. Even if Guenther scores 30-35 goals this year ... he wasn't going to be getting more than that deal next summer.
But where I really don't get it is with middling players like this. What are you actually gaining here? How do the odds here make sense?