Yu Darvish, the top pitcher on a listless free-agent market, on Saturday agreed to sign with the Chicago Cubs for $126 million over six years, sources told Yahoo Sports.
Darvish, 31, fills a gap in the Cubs rotation left by Jake Arrieta’s free agency. He’ll join Jon Lester, Kyle Hendricks and Jose Quintana in a talented and deep Cubs rotation that is hoping to pitch its way back to the World Series in 2018. If Darvish performs well, according to reports, incentives could make his Cubs deal as much as $150 million. He would need to win multiple Cy Youngs for that to happen. The Dodgers, reports say, were also interested in bringing back Darvish and had a similar offer, but he opted to join the Cubs.
In the past three months Darvish had been rumored to be negotiating with more than a half-dozen teams, among them the Houston Astros, Milwaukee Brewers, New York Yankees, Texas Rangers, Minnesota Twins and Dodgers. He spent part of his offseason working out with Clayton Kershaw near Dallas.
Kershaw recently said he’d spoken only vaguely with Darvish about potential destinations.
“We don’t talk a ton about where he’s at,” Kershaw said. “Obviously, I’ve made my sales pitch. So, we’ll just see what happens. We don’t talk about what offers he’s gotten or anything like that. I don’t want to pressure him too much. But, looks good playing catch, I’ll say that.”
An All-Star in each of his four full seasons (he missed all of 2015 and part of 2016 because of Tommy John surgery), Darvish in 131 career starts is 56-42 with a 3.42 ERA. His 2017 season showed a slight decline from seasons past, both in Texas and then, after a mid-summer trade, in Los Angeles. He was, at times, the pitcher who was second – to Max Scherzer – in the 2013 AL Cy Young balloting, and then oddly vulnerable in the strike zone.
In the 2017 postseason alone, he limited the Arizona Diamondbacks and Chicago Cubs to two runs over two starts and 11 1/3 innings, then, in the World Series, amid suspicions he was tipping his pitches, twice failed to pitch out of the second inning against the Houston Astros. In Game 7 at Dodger Stadium, he was booed from the field, having recorded five outs and allowed five runs.
In three months with the Dodgers, and at the club’s urging, Darvish attempted to adjust his mechanics and slightly alter his approach. In his final three regular-season starts, his ERA was 0.47 with 21 strikeouts and one walk. What lasts in Los Angeles, however, are the two failed World Series starts, two losses that, coupled with a dismal Game 5 start from Clayton Kershaw, doomed the Dodgers.
Six years ago, the Rangers paid more than $110 million to acquire Darvish — $60 million in salary and the rest to Darvish’s team in Japan, the Nippon Ham Fighters, for whom Darvish pitched seven seasons and established himself as the best pitcher in the Pacific League. Darvish made two postseason starts for the Rangers, one each in 2012 and 2016, and lost them both. When it appeared the Rangers would not challenge for a playoff berth, they dealt Darvish at the trade deadline for three minor leaguers, including outfielder Willie Calhoun, one of the Dodgers’ top prospects.
While it has been several years since Darvish carried both the workload and raw results of a true No. 1, the long and elegant right-hander led a starter market that also included Arrieta, Lance Lynn and Alex Cobb, along with Japanese right-hander Shohei Ohtani, who signed with the Los Angeles Angels and has hopes of being a two-way player. In 2017, Darvish did make 31 starts and throw 186 2/3 innings, his highest totals since 2013. Among major league pitchers with at least 180 innings, he ranked 14th in ERA, ninth in WHIP, eighth in strikeouts per nine and 12th in strikeouts per walk.
David Price (seven years, $217 million with the Boston Red Sox), Kershaw (seven years, $215 million with the Dodgers), Scherzer (seven years, $210 million with the Washington Nationals) and Zack Greinke (six years, $206.5 million with the Arizona Diamondbacks) are the highest-paid pitchers.
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