Kris Bryant is MIA again. What should Rockies do with MLB’s worst contract?

Troy Renck: The pairing represented hope and renewal, but hidden beneath their jerseys were expiration tags that had quietly passed. Before the Rockies’ 2022 home opener, Broncos quarterback Russell Wilson bathed in a standing ovation and threw out the first pitch to slugger Kris Bryant. It was arguably their best moment in Colorado. Wilson went 11-19 in two seasons, paid $124 million before he was cut in March with an $85 million cap hit spread over two years. Bryant has become a ghost in uniform, landing on the injured list seven times in two-plus seasons, earning the title as the worst contract in baseball. Sean, what can the Rockies possibly do next with Bryant, who has “no idea” when he will return after a left rib contusion was diagnosed as an internal oblique strain this weekend?

Sean Keeler: Promotions? Photo ops with fans during games? (“Want an NL MVP to entertain your party at Coors Field? Just text 1-800-BAD-BACK with your seat location!”) Have him serve food to guests inside the Legacy Club? If Bryant were a car, you’d sell him for parts. The logical answer is to cut KB23 and move on from the worst free-agent signing in Rockies history. But since when has Dick Monfort ever subscribed to baseball logic?

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