​The Yankees made the move of the offseason, and we haven't even gotten to the Winter Meetings.





New York agreed to take on Giancarlo Stanton's monster contract and bring him to the Bronx to join up with the likes of Aaron Judge and Gary Sanchez. And we can't neglect to mention that GM Brian Cashman accomplished all of this without giving up any of the Yankees' prized prospects.





This is unheard of, and the Evil Empire is alive again.

Yankees fans to Jeter after the Stanton trade pic.twitter.com/6vpXiH5x5n — Bleacher Report MLB (@BR_MLB) December 9, 2017

One of the losers of the trade, however, would appear to be current Nationals superstar Bryce Harper. With the corner outfield spots now taken for the long-term, and plenty of money devoted to keeping it that way, it would appear there's no obvious fit for Harper in New York.





Not so fast, my friend. Harper's agent Scott Boras would like you and reporter Ken Rosenthal to know that he disagrees with this assessment:

Scott Boras had a response to me labeling his client, Bryce Harper, one of the “losers” of the Stanton trade. Naturally he disagreed, and I rewrote that section to include his thoughts. Boras took an, uh, operatic approach. https://t.co/Bbj559V6Uy — Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) December 9, 2017

“A Bronx opera . . . The Three Tenors . . . Hal’s genius, vision,” Boras said, referencing Yankees principal owner Hal Steinbrenner. “Alone the three were stars . . . now a galaxy of international popularity.”





Rosenthal promptly added this note to his column. Boras suggests that the Yankees could theoretically find room on their payroll for Harper by moving around expiring deals. By 'three tenors', he's referencing a trifecta of corner outfielders the likes of which haven't been seen before. Of course, they'd also have to split time at DH.





Our heads are spinning.