Chief: there is going to be a bit of a problem finding someone with exactly the same performance in 2010 as Livo who signed for precisely $12M last off season. However, ESPN does have
all the SP who signed as FAs last year. I'll put the age, years, AAV, and 2010 WAR, although multi-year contracts should have a dsicount for player job security (normally about 10%) and assume a declining WAR over the length of the contract. I'm using $5MM AAV as a cut, which I think captures most of the pitchers who were thought to be low risk rotation regulars:
Doug Davis, 35, 1 year, $5.25 MM, 0.0 WAR
J. Garland, 31, 1 year, $5.3 MM, 0.8 WAR
R. Harden, 28, 1 year, $7.5 MM, -0.7 WAR
J. Lackey, 31, 5 years, $16.5 MM AAV, 4.0 WAR
J. Marquis, 32, 2 years, $7.5 MM AAV, -0.3 WAR
Brett Myers, 30, 1 year, $5.1 MM, 4.0 WAR
V. Padilla, 33, 1 year, $5+ MM, 1.0 WAR
C. Pavano, 34, 1 year, $7 MM, 3.2 WAR
Brad Penny, 32, 1 year, $7.5 MM, 1.1 WAR
A. Pettitte, 38, 1 year, $11.25 MM, 2.3 WAR
J. Piniero, 32, 2 years, $8 MM AAV, 2.5 WAR
Ben Sheets, 32, 1 year $10 MM, 0.6 WAR
Randy wolf, , 3 years, $9.9 MM AAV, 0.7 WAR
I guess some are "bargains," like Brett Myers and Carl Pavano, while some are "busts," like the injured guys and Wolf. Lackey, Padilla, Pineiro were around the $4 MM per WAR (no bargain or bust), while others were in the ballpark of that price. Livo was more of a bargain than Pavano, and comparabel in age, but Pavano was still cheap relative to a lot of the other pitchers. Myers had close to the same value but younger. Sheets and Harden were dice rolls with injury history, while Davis was hard luck.
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