The contract is for roughly $6.5 million over the next two seasons; Franklin will make $2.75 in 2010 and approximately $3.75 in 2011. From a monetary standpoint, that really isn't too very bad.
Actually, let me take that back. The money isn't bad at all if you're talking about a top flight closer. In fact, in that case, the price is dirt cheap. On the other hand, if you're talking about a top flight setup man, then it's just a pretty good deal. And if you're talking about a really good middle reliever, then it's just a flat-out bad deal.
So the question, of course, becomes which one of those guys is Ryan Franklin?
The problem, of course, comes when we start digging a little deeper than that. Franklin's Fielding Independent Percentage alone is enough to raise a red flag; his FIP stands at 3.11. Now, that's still very good, but the gulf between his ERA (1.05), and FIP isn't anything to sneeze at, either. FIP is proven to be a very good predictor of future performance; unfortunately for Franklin and the Cardinals, it's a predictor he isn't nearly as good as he's looked this year.
Even worse, when we look at some of his other peripherals, the picture looks even grimmer. Franklin is stranding over 90% of runners on base this season; his career average is just under 78%. His batting average on balls in play is .220; he's giving up a fairly average percentage of line drives at 18.3%, so one would expect his BABIP to move back toward an average number. Franklin's career BABIP is .277, and that isn't something pitchers can really control. And finally, only 3.5% of the fly balls Franklin has allowed this season have left the park. Again, that simply isn't a sustainable rate; about 10-11% of all fly balls a pitcher allows will turn into home runs. Ballparks themselves certainly play a part in that final number, but not to the point one can expect any pitcher to continue giving up barely a third as many homers as pretty much every other pitcher in baseball. Take all that into account, and you have a pitcher who is giving up fewer hits, fewer home runs, and allowing fewer runners to score than he should be, and none of those things are likely to continue.