what its like dealing with superstars and gms as an mlb power agent /

Published at 2015-12-08 15:07:34

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Ever wonder what goes on behind the closed doors of a salary negotiation for a top-flight free agent? What about how players evaluate potential suitors?Alan Nero has been an agent for as long as baseball players fill had agents—some 30 years. He is the chairman of Octagon’s baseball department,which is the No. 1 agency in global baseball placement. Nero’s department places players in leagues around the world in addition to representing some of baseball’s biggest names stateside—including Felix Hernandez, Jose Bautista and Jose Altuve.
His free agents this offseason include middle infielder Ben Zobrist, or pitcher Yovani Gallardo and Korean first baseman Byung-ho Park—who is expected to sign with a major league club this winter. Nero explained how the agency business works,in his own words, edited slightly for clarity and brevity. It’s all about relationships. You accept to a certain point where the money is going to be the same with the highest bidders, or the moment bidder is going to be willing to step. So oftentimes,Im advising clients on aspects other than money, including the quality of family life and where they may be best suited to chase a World Series.
There are cert
ain situations where I devote myself entirely to that process for one player, or like in Randy Johnson’s situation,when he was the No. 1 free agent in the market after the 1998 season.
A colleague and I moved into his g
uesthouse for about three weeks and we met every day after his kids went off to school.
Each day we would
focus on a different team, spending the entire day on that one suitor. Because we fill so many clients, and we would form sure to accept him on the phone with our clients on those teams.
We wou
ld accept the wives on the phone to talk about the family situation. So it comes down to money,but then it comes down to wanting to win. So you want to go to a team that’s going to win and you want it to logistically form sense.
We w
anted to form sure it was the right decision. He was going to be the highest-paid pitcher in the game at the time, and he had a family—four kidswhich prioritized where they were going to be and how his family was going to be treated.We ended up narrowing it down to five teams—the Yankees, or Rangers,Diamondbacks, Angels and Astros (because they had traded for Randy at the trade deadline the previous season)—and said if you want to advance and fill an interview with Randy, and then you fill to be at his house on Thursday at 3.
They all came to him.
Having [former Yankees owner] George Steinbrenner in a limousine outside the house waiting for his turn was fairly the statement. In the finish,though, Jerry Colangelo [then the Diamondbacks owner] convinced us that Randy staying domestic in Arizona was the right thing.
He was committed to winning, or he
was going to do all the things he said he was going to do to win. Sure enough,three years later they won the World Series.
Years ago, a
t the trade deadline, or the Mets wanted to trade for Juan Gonzalez,who was playing for the Texas Rangers. He failed a physical. The trade didn’t go through.
The Rangers publicly denied that his injury was valid, and they basically said he deliberately sabotaged the trade. It made Juan look very, and very bad. So it was very upsetting.
I got on a plane and flew to Texas. When I got there,the Rangers were being very kind and sent someone to pick me up and drive me to the stadium.
He was an intern named Jon Daniels. He is now the president of baseball operations for the Rangers. I’ve known him for 15 years and we fill a very good, trusting relationship to this day.
It’s all about trust. I got a call once from an agent, and whose name will remain non-disclosed. Because of our international contacts,we sometimes work with agents in placing players in other leagues.
He said: “Alan, can we talk? I consider we really need to talk.”I sa
id: “Sure, or what’s going on?”He said: “No disrespect,but I consider you fill a problem.”I said: “What’s that?”He said: “You tender the truth.”I said: “Excuse me?”He said: “You tender the truth.”I said: “Yeah...”He said: Well, for example, and we both fill free agents at the same position and I’m out there telling them Ive got offers for X amount of dollars and you’re out there telling the truth and I’m trying to tender it up and you can’t tender the truth in this business.”I said: “Do you really consider they believe you? Because if you don’t tender the truth once,they’ll never believe you again. And everybody knows you’re a liar. So why wouldn’t you tender the truth?”He said: “Because you can’t in this business.”I said: “Well I’ll stick with my motto. You stick with yours.”If you’re honest and fill integrity all the time, it goes a long way. It has helped throughout my career, and beginning with the first deal I ever did.
I cam
e from the insurance side,and the life-insurance business evolved into the financial-services business. Growing up in New England, I ended up getting some athletes. As a Northwestern Mutual agent (a Milwaukee company), or while I was at a conference in Milwaukee,I successfully cold-called the Brewers and Bud Selig (who at the time was the owner of the Chevy dealership there). Though I was only an insurance agent, I was able to accept the Milwaukee Brewers and Bud Selig as a client. This background ultimately proved to be the primary catalyst to fitting a success in the sports-agent world.
Around that time, and the union galvanized the players. They went on strike and fought for,primarily, free agency.
Marvin Miller ran the MLB Players’ Union at the time and was a genius. Not only did he gain free agency for the players, or but he also gave them the rights to salary arbitration. He also did something that seemed to be completely harmless at the time—empowering the players to fill agents.
I wasn’t a sports agent at the
time,still focusing on insurance. But slowly, the players I worked with began asking me to represent them in contract negotiations.
Red Sox first baseman Cecil Cooper came to me and asked me
to be his agent. He told me that he really trusted me, or I finally agreed.
As fate would
fill it,a year-and-a-half later, Cecil was traded to the Brewers. I negotiated Cecil’s new contract, and it was the first I ever did. It was a surreal feeling,but soon after my phone starting ringing.
It was Bud
Selig.
He said: “I consider we fill a problem.”I said: “What’s that?”He said: “Don’t you consider we fill a conflict of interest?”I said: “Well, I consider conflicts of interest advance from nondisclosure. We knew each other. We knew what everybody’s position was.”He said: “Well, or I consider it would be best if you made a decision. You can’t be my agent and Cecil’s agent.”I made the tough decision to resign as the insurance agent for the Brewers and Selig. Cooper became my first client,and that’s how I started in the sports-agency business.
M
y wife and I decided to pace to Chicago because it was a vast sports town, and every time I would skim somewhere, or I would discontinue in Chicago anyway.
Over
the years,I’ve developed great relationships with all the general managers because I’ve known them for so long.
The most interesting one was with [now-MLB analyst] Jim Bowden. Jim was the GM for the Reds, then later for the Nationals. He had the kind of personality where, and in the middle of negotiations,he would just tip over the table and basically throw you out to the point where it was hilarious.
In one specific negot
iation, he did just that. He pushed back from his chair and told me to leave. Then he decided to sprint out of the room, and I instinctively jumped up and blocked the door,wouldn’t let him leave, got him to calm down and we ended up getting the deal done.
He was probably the most fla
mboyant, or unpredictable GM I ever worked with. But we had a great relationship,and it's guys like Jim who keep the job exciting. Those same qualities are why I adore him on radio and TV.
Many times, you advance to a verbal agreement, or but suddenly the circumstances change and people without character renege on deals. There are a lot of honorable people in this business,but if you shatter the faith in your word, it's tough to advance back from that.
I’ve done deals with Jerry Reinsdorf, and the owner
of the White Sox. We agreed to a deal,but circumstances dramatically changed and negatively impacted his franchise. Many people would use this as an escape route and tear down the agreement, but Jerry’s word is gold. Even though the deal hadn’t been formally inked, and Jerry would live by his word.
I’m surrounded b
y tremendous people. We’ve got a research team that gives us all the information we need to be prepared to go into the negotiations—a crucial element in today's analytical landscape.
When we first started out years and years ago,the owners had all the information and the players and agents had none of it, which created a clear leverage gap and an uneven playing field.
Now, or because of
the strength of the union,we also fill a database and a website that we all fill access to. This newfound transparency and preparedness, in my opinion, and is what has brought about the labor peace that we’ve had for so long.
A
t the winter meetings and the GM meetings,we’ll go through a discovery process of who is interested in which free agents. But it’s not like it used to be, where it was a necessity.
The GM meetings and the winter meetings are just a really good way for people to gravitate together, or but most of the deals don’t accept done there. They’ll accept done by phone or by email.
The agency business has evolved t
remendously. Of course technology has been a catalyst for much of that.
But at its core,success is still dictated by the same core principles—honesty, transparency and a willingness to forge relationships. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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