IIRC, many on this board thought the Woody contract was a really bad for a small market team to offer at the time. There were legit concerns, and I think it was a tough call for the FO.
BUT plenty of us also felt that it was the right thing to do, even given the chance that Woody never fully recovered (and, hey we're only two MLB starts in). That determination was based on the idea that even a half year of good Woody might net enough WAR to justify the cost of the contract, even before you consider the added benefit of the goodwill and the team appreciating Woody's early-career, very economically advantage for the club, contributions.
I think this is a situation where both sides should feel really good about what they did. I don't think anyone owes or should expect anything moving forward, but I will say this:
I know Woody says he had multiple offers. I absolutely believe him. It's hard for me to see anyone paying THAT much more than 2yr/17.5, though, especially when you know one of those years is a total rehab year. I mean, maybe the Dodgers and Yankees can afford to spend 9 mil on zero production. But would they? In practice? I mean, why commit that much of your luxury tax space in a given year to a guy you are SURE will do nothing? Especially when you can just let some other team take a shot, see if he's good, and then offer him a boatload to take him away after you KNOW he's still got it? It doesn't make sense. And no smaller market is going to do that deal either, unless they have deep history with Woody.
All of which is to say, I don't think Woody gave the Brewers a hometown discount. The team stepped up and gave him, in the immortal words of Will Wade, a "strong-[keister] offer." I disagree with Turning's idea that Woody was lucky to get as much as he did, but I certainly buy the point that the Brewers committed to the guy in a way that demonstrates real belief and loyalty. The team made a hard choice and the right ethical choice if you ask me. It may even end up being the smart baseball choice too. I just wouldn't want to see the Brewers' role here reduced to some kind of "pity pick." No one's saying that, exactly, but I think maybe the team's commitment here might be being underrated by some.
I have no idea what a 32-year-old Big Woo is getting on the open market. Hard to imagine much more than a 3-4 yr deal. I'd absolutely pay the guy 3/70 and feel fine about it. You'd be betting on the guy to be worth about 7 WAR over those three years. The QO will probably be what? 22-23 mil? I'd do that.