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Nightmare Contract May Force The Phillies To Pay A Player $60 Million To Go Away

ryan howard phillies
ryan howard phillies

John Bazemore/AP Ryan Howard's $125 million contract has become a nightmare for the Phillies. After the Phillies gave Ryan Howard an unprecedented five-year, $125-million contract in 2012, Howard's skills rapidly started declining with his age.

Howard, who is 35, was benched several times last year as he batted .223 with 23 home runs, 95 RBIs, and a .310 on-base percentage.

The Phillies haven't been shy about wanting to trade Howard. General Manager Ruben Amaro Jr. recently said on a radio show, " I told him that in our situation it would probably bode better for the organization not with him but without him."

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But getting rid of Howard will be difficult for the Phillies. Howard has a no-trade clause in his contract that allows him to reject trades to 20 MLB teams. The nine teams Howard can't reject a trade to — the Yankees, Royals, Tigers, Angels, Mariners, Rangers, Rays, Orioles, and Red Sox — either don't have a need for a first baseman or designated hitter, or have small payrolls and wouldn't want to pay the balance of Howard's monstrous contract.

Howard is owed $25 million through the next two seasons. For 2017, the Phillies have a $23 million team option on Howard and a $10 million buyout option, so he's guaranteed a minimum of $60 million through the next two years.

Howard has failed to live up to the value of his contract, making him extremely difficult to trade. This chart shows Howard's career earnings versus his career value:

Ryan Howard Chart
Ryan Howard Chart

BusinessInsider.com

With a dry trade market, the Phillies may be forced to eat the next two years of Howard's contract — $50 million in total, plus the $10 million buyout of his 2017 team option.

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