It's been reported that prior to signed Beltran the Yankees offered Reds right fielder Shinn soo choo a 7 year contract valued at 140M. Wait for it.............he turned it down. 20M a year for a player who over the last 2 FULL seasons had the following #s............ 2012 16 HRs, 67 RBI & a BA of 283 2013 21 HRs, 54 RBI & a BA of 285 Where do I start? Just hearing that the Yankees thought this type of production warrented a 20M per year contract had desperation written all over it. This is one of those deals that I'm glad didn't happen. Unbelievable.
And then you consider that the guy can't touch lefties, much worse than Granderson, Choo is a borderline platoon player he's so bad against LH, he may get on base, but a walk is not as good as a hit, so you have to wonder what the Yankees were thinking with that offer, and what Choo was thinking turning it down, I really doubt he gets more.
I'll be surprised if he gets anything near 15M in which case he should fire his agent for turning down the Yankee offer.
Smh that we are willing to pay 20 million to this guy for 7 years... Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk
He got it http://riveraveblues.com/2013/12/heyman-rangers-agree-to-seven-year-deal-with-shin-soo-choo-98084/
All I've gotta say is...........................................HOLY SHIT! He can't hit lefties, 215 on the year. And away from his hitters friendly home park he hit 251.
Yeah, if I was a middling 30+ lefty hitter, I'm not sure I'd turn down 140M guaranteed to hit in Yankee Stadium. Good luck to Choo, but as a Mariners fan I hope he's outhit by Brendan Ryan this year. And Good Job to Scott Boras, getting his client 130M.
Rick, it makes no sense, he a nice player but not worth 20 million. I guess what they say is true, there is so much money in baseball right now and his OBP gives Fielder someone to drive in.
10 million saved in taxes he would have to pay. (Approximately) as the great state of Texas has no income taxes Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk
I am an accountant...ask Derek Jeter about his residency status...there was a big thing in the paper of him trying to pass off being a Florida res when new York slammed him. Even still as a non res earning half his income in the state of NY he still would pay nonresident taxes for the time spent in ny. 184 non consecutive days while maintaining an abode makes you a reaident Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk
...well, my wife is a CPA, so what? ...one more time, Choo is not a resident and does not "maintain an abode" in NYC. As far as Jeter, he has every right to claim Florida as his legal residence because, well, he IS. You might want to check on his house in St Pete, which is his primary residence. ...and any "non resident" tax Choo might have to pay would be dwarfed by the "$18 Mil" difference in his contract the Yanx would have had to pay above the $130 Mil Texas paid him. What this boils down to is that tax considerations were not the only factors in his decision to sign with the Rangers instead. ...like I said, there are ways to pays less taxes than usual...we all pretty much do it because, well, it's the "American way". Why should high dollar athletes be lambasted for using perfectly legal "loop holes" just as we do? Who the hell wants to pay any more tax than they actually have to?
Wow you love picking fights. Lets review...Mr Choo if proven to be a resident... would pay roughly 6 to 7% in income taxes. Ask the CPA on all his world wide income. Mr jeter building s mansion does not automatically = residency. No where did i say his choice to go to Texas was due solely on taxes. Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk
...lol...how the hell am I "picking a fight"?...you're the one who interjected "I'm an accountant", which is irrelevant, not me...and you're the one who brought up Jeter, which also is irrelevant, not me. I simply countered your irrelevancies with another view and from that, you extrapolate me picking a fight?...seriously? So when someone disgrees with you, they are picking a fight?...yeah, I must be bullying you. (rolls eyes) ...you also now claim that you "never said his choice to go to Texas was due solely on taxes"...but when asked why he signed with Texas instead, it was certainly the ONLY reason you presented. Let us review, you replied by saying "10 million saved in taxes he would have to pay. (Approximately) as the great state of Texas has no income taxes " ...sorry, to break it to you, but Jeter's primary residence IS in Florida...and Choo is not a NY resident and likely would never have been even if he had signed with the Yanx. If you can refute these points with something actual and tangible, I'm all ears.
Go check the news..Google jeter vs Nys. He settled with nys for an undisclosed amount. See him selling (trying to sell his NYC trump tower condo) why..because it could make him a nyc reaident. Again the law us 184 days spent in ny. Hard to refute when you own and live at least 81 days in nyc not to mention off days and days before and after the season. And by me saying something about the tax code that must mean that is the only reason...god forbid I keep my retorts to short verses when I'm using my phone to chime in with an opinion. Lately you can't have ANY opinion outside of yours that could possibly be correct. Maybe Choo prefers a warmer climate...maybe Texas is slower pace than nyc. Perhaps his family didn't want to come. Maybe he saw a better fit for his talent. Maybe he thinks they are closer to winning a championship. ..it could be many reasons...I suggested 1 reason. Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk
NY State tax auditors are laser focused on sport stars, Hollywood and media folks. As I understand it, the players for the opposition team get a tax bill for every 3/4 game series in the Bronx. All the AM talk radio hosts talk regularly about tax bills when they have to host a show from the NY radio HQs. And I know attorneys that get hit with bills just for running depo's in NY. Uberlib regime states like NY, CA and now NJ, CT, MA and MD continually perfect extracting cash from their subjects.