Braves Superstar Urged To Cut Ties With Atlanta For $140M Red Sox Deal

Boston seems like it's about to hand out a large contract
Mar 15, 2015; Lake Buena Vista, FL, USA; The Atlanta Braves logo painted on the field during a spring training baseball game at Champion Stadium. The Toronto Blue Jays beat the Atlanta Braves 10-5. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images
Mar 15, 2015; Lake Buena Vista, FL, USA; The Atlanta Braves logo painted on the field during a spring training baseball game at Champion Stadium. The Toronto Blue Jays beat the Atlanta Braves 10-5. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images / Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images

The Boston Red Sox seem like a team that is about to open the checkbook and land a big free agent.

Rumors have been swirling about Boston for weeks, and pretty much all of the chatter has been consistent with the fact that the Red Sox seem like they are going to be spending this winter. Boston has opted against massive deals as it has built up its farm system, but it sounds like things are changing.

The most obvious hole the Red Sox have is at the top of the rotation and NBC Sports Boston's John Tomase suggested a $140 million deal with Atlanta Braves ace Max Fried would solve this issue.

"Even after extending a $21 million qualifying offer to Nick Pivetta, the Red Sox need to add an arm to the top of their rotation. Perhaps no one fits the sweet spot better than Fried, a left-hander who has spent his entire career with the Braves while twice finishing in the top five of NL Cy Young Award voting. The 30-year-old pitched in the same high school rotation as Red Sox right-hander Lucas Giolito, who is lobbying his former Harvard-Westlake teammate to come to Boston.

"The two-time All-Star is 73-36 with a 3.07 lifetime ERA, and he's got oodles of postseason experience, too. Red Sox owner John Henry has long opposed big-money free agent deals for starting pitchers, but getting Fried for less than $30 million annually represents a relative bargain."

Fried clearly is a star and he is left-handed, which Boston needs. It doesn't seem like there is a better fit on the open market.

More MLB: Red Sox $21M Hurler Urged To Join Cardinals If He Leaves Boston


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Patrick McAvoy
PATRICK MCAVOY

Patrick McAvoy's experiences include local and national sports coverage at the New England Sports Network with a focus on baseball and basketball. Outside of journalism, Patrick also is pursuing an MBA at Brandeis University. After quickly rising as one of the most productive writers on the site, he expanded his reach to write for Baseball Essential, a national baseball site in Sports Illustrated Media Group. For all business/marketing inquiries regarding Inside The Cardinals, please reach out to Scott Neville: nevilles@merrimack.edu