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Albert Pujols, Cardinals Contract Deadline Passes With No Deal

Pujols Cardinals No Deal

TIM REYNOLDS   02/16/11 03:38 PM ET   AP

JUPITER, Fla. — The St. Louis Cardinals made Albert Pujols what they said was their best offer.

It wasn't enough.

So get ready, baseball: Pujols seems headed for the open market next fall.

The deadline Pujols set for the Cardinals to reach a new contract agreement passed Wednesday with no deal, making it likely the three-time MVP will become a free agent after the World Series. The Cardinals said they will respect Pujols' wishes and not request more talks during the season, unless their first baseman surprisingly changes his mind.

"A difference of opinion in determining Albert's value simply could not be resolved," said Pujols' agent, Dan Lozano.

The Cardinals would not reveal their offer, though it was believed to be somewhere around $200 million for eight years, possibly with an opportunity for Pujols to obtain an ownership stake in the franchise once his playing days are complete.

When – and if – talks resume, it's unclear if St. Louis will increase its offer to Pujols' liking.

"We explored a number of different things in the negotiation," Cardinals chairman William DeWitt Jr. said at a news conference. "Without getting specific in what those were, there was discussion about other things that could be part of the contract. ... You can be sure that we explored a number of different avenues."

Pujols will make $16 million this season in his contract's final year, with $4 million of the money deferred with no interest. A nine-time All-Star, Pujols is the only player in major league history to hit 30 or more home runs each of his first 10 seasons – all with the Cardinals, the franchise he's previously said he wants to remain with for the rest of his career.

Now, that hardly seems like a lock.

"I don't think there's a better guy for us to have on the team," Cardinals teammate Skip Schumaker said. "He's the face of the franchise. You respect both sides of it. You respect what the Cardinals are doing, you respect the management and what Albert's agent is doing. It's a tough situation, as everybody knows. He's an iconic player."

Pujols is expected to be in Cardinals' camp on Thursday, two days ahead of when position players were asked to report. Lozano said Pujols does not want to discuss his contract status either now or during the season.

Nor, for that matter, does St. Louis manager Tony La Russa.

"We don't want to get our minds cluttered as a team," La Russa said. "There's enough to do. ... The competition in the Central and the National League has got our complete attention. And that's just what we're going to think about. You can choose what you think about. That's what we're going to think about."

Already, there's buzz around baseball on where Pujols could go. A big-spending club like the Red Sox, Yankees or Angels? Perhaps the rival Cubs? The Texas Rangers?

Before the first pitch of the season, the first debate of the 2011 offseason is underway.

"Goes on the open market, who knows what he'll get?" said Cubs right-hander Braden Looper, a former Pujols teammate.

Added Rockies right-hander Aaron Cook: "I'm surprised something didn't get done. He has the right to become a free agent and get what he wants. I hope for their sake it doesn't become a distraction."

The only absolute in the process, it seems, is what the Cardinals will give.

In short, they aren't prepared to set records. The team's payroll this season will be between $100 million and $110 million, DeWitt said, noting that the Cardinals lack the revenue streams to keep up with baseball's biggest checkbooks.

"We're not the Yankees or the Red Sox or the clubs that have revenues multi-tens of millions of dollars greater than ours," he said. "How they react remains to be seen. They're great fans. They're the best in baseball. To draw the way we draw in a market the size of ours is extraordinary. No one else can do it. Cardinal fans, they step up year in and year out."

There is no framework for a deal in which St. Louis would get the right of first refusal on any future Pujols offer. Still, the Cardinals believe a deal can eventually get done – and aren't fearing that it will turn into a situation where Pujols simply winds up playing for the highest bidder.

"We know what we can do and what we can't do," general manager John Mozeliak said. "When you operate in that way, you tend not to make bigger mistakes."

The closest Pujols came to an appearance at camp Wednesday morning was a sighting of his black pickup with Missouri license plates in the parking lot of the team's spring training complex.

Pujols was not with the vehicle.

"It really doesn't matter to us," said Cardinals pitcher and union rep Kyle McClellan, when asked about the ongoing Pujols contract watch. "It's none of our business. It's none of anybody's business. ... The truth is, I've never been on the mound and thinking of Albert Pujols' contract."

La Russa said Tuesday that he believes Pujols was feeling pressure from the union to "set the bar" with his next deal. The baseball record is Alex Rodriguez's $275 million, 10-year pact with the New York Yankees.

On Wednesday, La Russa insisted that he'd said too much already – then, moments later, reiterated his words from a day earlier.

"I said if I was running the union or part of the union, I'm not sure I'd handle it any different," La Russa said, about two hours before the noon deadline passed.

Union officials have denied pressuring Pujols or Lozano.

Pujols has a .331 career batting average and averaged 41 homers and 123 RBIs. He's also won six Silver Slugger Awards and two Gold Gloves. Last year he batted .312 with 42 homers and 118 RBIs and finished second in MVP balloting.

"I'm not really concerned about having any issues with Albert in the short-term, or in the long-term for that matter," Mozeliak said. "In terms of the fan base, I hope they understand and recognize that we put a very strong effort out there to try and get something done."

___

AP Baseball Writer Janie McCauley in Scottsdale, Ariz., and AP Sports Writer Rick Gano in Mesa, Ariz. contributed to this report.

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JUPITER, Fla. — The St. Louis Cardinals made Albert Pujols what they said was their best offer. It wasn't enough.
JUPITER, Fla. — The St. Louis Cardinals made Albert Pujols what they said was their best offer. It wasn't enough.
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Cameron Hodge
Canadian Liberal Elitist
02:52 PM on 02/18/2011
He will probably make close to 35 m next year for the Cubs, you really expect a conservative to not go for every last dime?

Besides, think off all that endorsement cash he lost out on when someone told him "Sure Mr Alcantara, 'Poo-Holes' will be a great name for you to adopt through your MLB career..."
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johnnygoodwud
06:43 AM on 02/18/2011
send him to the cubs, they're very big on giving huge contracts to aging players.
12:19 PM on 02/17/2011
Let's Hear It For Another Cardinal, STAN MUSIAL !
Stan (The Man) Musial had the Presidential Medal of Freedom placed and graced around his neck earlier this week by President Obama. Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics was another sports all-time-great so recognized and honored by President Obama.
We read about the salaries paid out to today's sports celebrities. Gotta wonder. What would Stan Musial, Bill Russell or any other truly great player get in today's market.
12:09 PM on 02/17/2011
ALBERT WANTS O-U-T, DON'CHA GET IT? - - And - - WHAT HAVE YOU DONE, LATELY?
Some news reports have Albert Pujols insisting on a $300 Million contract - - $30M a year for 10 years, not the $20M a year noted in the article. And now he wants a piece of Cardinal ownership, too? Albert could always marry into the Busch family, I guess. He's refused to discuss his long-term employment situation in St. Louis until after the World Series . (As spectator or participant, but I digress). The guy wants out and he's set the bar for any team wanting to negotiate with him.
Albert Pujols is a legend, to be sure. But legends have their best years behind them, not ahead of them.
What he does - - and doesn't do - - in the 2011 regular season will , however, have a strong impact on his salary and benefit requests for at least next year, never mind the next 20 or 30 years.
We should all have these worries.
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Son of Sensi
To be or not to be, is that seriously a question?
11:28 AM on 02/17/2011
maybe the worst "no-sign" ever
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
11:02 AM on 02/17/2011
There's a great deal of justifiable speculation that Pujols is up to three years older than he claims to be. So, although his decline phase will be masked by his near-certain use of performance enhancing drugs (MLB doesn't test for HGH or any of a dozen other well-known PED's - thank you, union), it should still be accelerated. A ten year deal could be an unacceptable burden.

On the other hand, he is the best of the best. That counts for a lot. Plus he's a church-going conservative family man, so he's a decent person . . .oops . . .I mean, he's the devil incarnate.
AliveInNYC
Actually in DC now but still fighting the fight
03:03 PM on 02/17/2011
"near certain use of performance enhancing drugs"

Do you have anything, and I mean absolutely anything to back up that statement?
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dkrypt
Unencumbered by political correctness
03:35 PM on 02/17/2011
Yes. My own lying eyes are the #1 backup. I ignored them in the past, before all the PED info came out. Now I trust them completely. Pujols is thick as molasses. His body is thick and he also has PED-face, thick like McGwire, Bonds, Arod, etc.

Pujols came up in the PED era. He was super muscular from day one in the minor leagues, unlike his lean form in college where he played shortstop.

His manager is LaRussa, the ultimate master of looking the other way on PED's.His hitting coach is Mark McGwire (one of the true PED gods). He began balding quite severely and very young. He's Dominican born. PED use is much more accepted and acceptable in the Dominican. (By the way so is age fraud for baseball players).

But, that's all icing on the cake. I look at him and I see it. If I were a GM, I would take that into account, possibly as a positive (HGH and PED's can extend careers; Barry Bonds could probably still play today if not for being outspoken, careless, and blacklisted). On the other hand, there's suspension and PR risk to calculate too.
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canpete
08:01 AM on 02/17/2011
not feeling any sympathy for pujos.......
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
06:39 AM on 02/17/2011
Forget about him. He's just another greedy conservative that listens to Glenn Beck.
11:50 PM on 02/16/2011
$200 Million over 8 years isn't enough? Poor Pujols... it must be hard to put food on the table making a pittance like that. I mean, never mind those of us who are out of work...clearly this man needs MORE than $25 Million/year to survive.
11:08 PM on 02/16/2011
If my wife and I ever decided to attend a professional BB game again, it would take around $100-125 to attend, assuming so-so seats and a drink and hot dog. This is up from $15-25 when I last attended before the strike that ended a season in the 80's.

I will never attend again even if the tickets are free!
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bhavanibbana
11:04 AM on 02/18/2011
The fact that you invent such wild figures is proof that you've not been to a major league game in decades. Good riddance.
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funcrusherplus
twitter.com/edreese
10:56 PM on 02/16/2011
All the comments in the section are so predictable...a bunch of people, few of whom truly know anything about baseball, jealously complaining about "whiny, spoiled" athletes. What a boring argument. Dudes, pro athletes make a lot of money. These have been the facts for some time now. Get over it. It will never ever change. Some day they will be even richer. But I promise the sun will still rise.

This contract will get done, or it won't. As a Cardinal fan, I would be crushed if he left. But I have no control over it. And if any of you holier-than-thou types had the sort of talent that could command $30 million a year to play baseball, you would be a fool not to try..
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
06:12 AM on 02/17/2011
Yawwwnnnnn.... Did you say something thought-provoking?

How is it holier-than-thou to say that paying 10 years of guaranteed money would be dumb? Was I holier-than-thou when I thought the Rockies were dumb to pay Mike Hampton, the Dodgers to pay Kevin Brown, etc.?

Some of us think that he's not worth that much money or nearly that much time. Sorry about that.
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funcrusherplus
twitter.com/edreese
01:58 AM on 02/25/2011
I don't think it's a good idea to give him 10 years/$300 million either. Not really what I was saying, but I appreciate the condescension.
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canpete
08:02 AM on 02/17/2011
greed is greed no matter how you dress it...
10:44 PM on 02/16/2011
For once I would like the owners to collude and run one of these overly greedy players out of the league, however, I am sure they will love him and accept him as a NY Yankee!
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Keith Cozart
Chaos reigns in Crowley's temple
10:56 PM on 02/16/2011
That is what they did to Barry Bonds, and none of these players are overly greedy
Pujols is absolutely worth at least 30 million a year. Right now, he is only making 16, vastly underpaid.
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Cameron Hodge
Canadian Liberal Elitist
10:38 PM on 02/16/2011
Sounds like Jose Alberto Pujols Alcantara is trying to make up for all the endorsement money he lost by settling on "Albert Pujols"...
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Under Fed yet Fed Up
Business operator
10:29 PM on 02/16/2011
As a St. Louis resident I couldn't help but admire Pujols. That just evapotrated in his consumate greed.
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John Wade
07:13 AM on 02/17/2011
Ah, some jaded St.Louis fan who thought Albert was gonna give them the old hometown discount. He's the best player in the game today, I don't blame him for trying to get paid like the best.
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ruolivert
01:19 PM on 02/17/2011
Yeah whats with that. His given you almost a decade of play that no other player in history can match and you call HIM greedy because he wants to get paid as much as he can. Don't the owners owe it to the fans to get their best player under contract?
08:20 PM on 02/16/2011
Albert is the best player in baseball, but he may be boxed out in his attempts to get ARod money. Economy, advancing age, Yankees already have ARod, etc.
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12:43 AM on 02/17/2011
A-rod is what 35 now? A ten yr contract sound right to you? When A-rod retires how will he make out on his contract?