ŸÀÌ°ÅÁî ±¸´ÜÀÌ ¼ÅÁ®¶û Àç°è¾à ³íÀǸ¦ ÇÞ¾úÀ¸³ª °á±¹ °ÅºÎµÆ´Ù´Â ¼Ò½ÄÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
½ÃÁð Áß¿¡´Â Àç°è¾à ³íÀǸ¦ ÇÏÁö ¾Ê°Ú´Ù°í Çϳ׿ä.
¹¹ ´ç¿¬ÇÑ°ÅÁÒ.
ÆäÀÌ·Ñ ¶§¹®¿¡ ½ÅÀ½ÇÏ´Â µðÆ®·ÎÀÌÆ® ±¸´ÜÀÌ ÁÙ ¼ö ÀÖ´Â µ·Àº ÇÑÁ¤µÇ¾îÀÖÀ»Å×°í,
»çÀÌ¿µµµ Å¿°Ú´Ù, Á¦°¡ ¼ÅÁ®¶óµµ FA ³ë¸®°Ú½À´Ï´Ù.
¿ÃÇØ Æø¸ÁÇؼ °ü½É°¡Áö´Â ±¸´ÜÀÌ ¾ø´Â °Ô ¾Æ´Ï¶ó¸é Àç°è¾àÇϱâ´Â Èûµé °ÍÀ¸·Î º¸À̳׿ä.
°á±¹ ¿ÃÇØ ½ÂºÎ¸¦ °É¾î¾ßÇÑ´Ù´Â °Çµ¥, ¸ÁÇÒ ·Ðµ· ¸ÁÇÒ ÀÌ±Û -_-;;
The Tigers announced Sunday morning that Max Scherzer rejected a "substantial, long-term contract offer" that "would have placed him among the highest paid pitchers in baseball" and extension talks have broken off.
It's rather odd that the Tigers felt compelled to announce the development in this way, but the end result shouldn't surprise anyone after the reigning American League Cy Young winner made clear over the winter that his negotiation deadline was Opening Day. Scherzer will be able to name his price next winter if he can produce a reasonable facsimile to last season's 21-3 record, 2.90 ERA and 240 strikeouts. Scherzer's camp surely asked Detroit for an offer that would have easily topped Homer Bailey's recent six-year, $105 million deal. "Moving forward," Detroit's statement on the matter closes, "there will be no further in-season negotiations and the organization will refrain from commenting on this matter."