Retiring Gil Meche Puts A Price Tag On His Pride: It's $12 Million

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No matter who you are or how much you think of your integrity and principles, it has to be hard for anyone to walk away from a guaranteed $12 million for a year of work.
Yet that's exactly what Kansas City Royals pitcher Gil Meche is doing as he's decided to retire from baseball with one year and $12 million remaining on the five-year, $55 million contract that shocked the baseball world after the 2006 season.
Rather than try to junkball his way out of the bullpen through the final year, Meche thinks it's a fairer choice for everyone if he takes the right arm that former manager Trey Hillman treated with reckless abandon and calls it a career with an 84-83 record and a ERA+ of 99 (for the uninitiated, 100 is league average).

All at the relatively young age of 32, too.
Here's part of Meche's statement that was released on Tuesday morning:
"As a competitor my entire life this is the hardest decision that I've ever faced, but it's not fair to me, my family or the Kansas City Royals that I attempt to pitch anymore. I came into this game as a starting pitcher and unfortunately my health, more accurately, my shoulder, has deteriorated to the point where surgery would be the only option and at this stage of my life I would prefer to call it a career rather than to attempt to pitch in relief for the final year of my contract."
Considering that Meche has already banked more than $50 million in his career, there's no doubt that the cynics are yawning and saying "big deal."
But how often do we complain about an athlete picking up a paycheck when he's not earning it?
And how easy would it have been for Meche to trot himself out to spring training, go on the disabled list a short while later and spend one more year cashing pay stubs bigger than what some Americans make in a lifetime?

After the way he was treated by Hillman and the Royals — his 128-pitch start with his already-fragile arm last May will go down in infamy — no one could have blamed him.
Indeed, no one outside of Joe Posnanski Land would have noticed if Meche struggled his way through this final year and got paid handsomely for it. But it's clear that the same pride that allowed Meche to perform and pitch near his contract's value in 2007 (an All-Star season) and 2008 is apparently the same pride that has him saying "I'm not worth it" as he leaves $12 million behind on his way out the door.
For that, he should be commended.
 

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I respect the man for walking away, but if one were to sit down in his position and truly go over everything...what the fuck is 12 million on 50 million? If you can't live off of 50 million but need 62 million, fuck you. You're a POS.
 

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...yet 98% of today's athletes would have taken that 12 million. I think that's the point here.
 

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...yet 98% of today's athletes would have taken that 12 million. I think that's the point here.

Irrelevant.

It is commendable to not take the money, but not a wise decision.

I guess he feels guilt that he should not feel. Professional athletes are entertainers and well paid. That is the way it is.

Anyone who complains about players not playing well and earning large sums of money is subconsciously jealous. Plain and simple. Players aren't doing anything illegal or wrong by accepting money offered to them. They earned those contracts with their play on the field in previous years.
 

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Irrelevant.

It is commendable to not take the money, but not a wise decision.

I guess he feels guilt that he should not feel. Professional athletes are entertainers and well paid. That is the way it is.

Anyone who complains about players not playing well and earning large sums of money is subconsciously jealous. Plain and simple. Players aren't doing anything illegal or wrong by accepting money offered to them. They earned those contracts with their play on the field in previous years.

I mostly agree to this but there is some POS who get the huge pay day and give no effort. a few that come to mind albert haynesworth,baron davis.
 

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I mostly agree to this but there is some POS who get the huge pay day and give no effort. a few that come to mind albert haynesworth,baron davis.

I will concede this.

However, I doubt Gil Meche was one of those players.
 

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Irrelevant? Maybe to you or the 98% of which I wrote. But to some people (Meche) moral values, pride, etc. are more important. Don't get me wrong, I'm not sure I would do what he did. But it is refreshing.
 

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I went to high school with him. Although I was a senior and he was a freshman. This does not surprise me one bit. He is that kind of person. Judging by his way of life, you would swear he is not rich. I bet he still has over 95% of the money he has ever made. Probably over 100% when you consider investment returns. There are people that make 2% of the money he makes with twice as big a house.
 

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He is to be commended for it, but in reality the Royals would have known the 5th year may be worth less than the others, so he's probably short-changing himself on some money he actually earned in prior years.
 

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Yes, he is short changing himself. WILLINGLY. That's the whole point. He is doing it of his own will.
 

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I'd get lit up for 12-mil. Someone inform the Royals that I'd even do it for half of that.
 

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