DALLAS — Shortly after striking a record $765 million, 15-year contract for Juan Soto with the New York Mets, agent Scott Boras walked into Nick & Sam's, a restaurant near the winter meetings hotel, with about a dozen of his staff.
They were given a bottle of celebratory champagne and dined on deviled eggs, crab, shrimp and a New York strip steak — appropriate given that the Mets had stripped the All-Star outfielder from the rival Yankees.
''Scott is coming with his army of personnel. It was kind of like the `Gladiator,''' said Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora, who watched from across the steakhouse Sunday night.
Soto's deal, the largest and longest in baseball history, was pending a physical. The agreement reverberated across the winter meetings and stung the Yankees, who on Sunday morning had raised their offer to $760 million over 16 years from $712.5 million for 15 years.
''My first thought is that my oldest kid is going to be 28 when he's done playing. That really puts it in perspective for me,'' San Francisco president of baseball operations Buster Posey said.
Yankees manager Aaron Boone learned of Soto's decision when his flight arrived in Dallas.
''Literally that the wheels hit the runway and the alert hit my phone that he had signed with the Mets,'' Boone recalled.
He texted an emoji of a face to Mets manager Carlos Mendoza, a former Yankees coach. Mendoza wasn't sure what Boone meant.