The deadline for players and teams to exchange arbitration figures passed at 1pm ET yesterday, meaning over the next few hours, there will be a landslide of settlements on one-year deals to avoid an arbitration hearing. We’ll track today’s minor settlements from the American League in this post. Once all of the day’s settlements have filtered in, I’ll organize them by division to make them a bit easier to parse.
It’s worth mentioning that the vast majority of teams have adopted a “file and trial” approach to arbitration, meaning that once arbitration figures are exchanged with a player, negotiations on a one-year deal will cease. The two parties may still discuss a multi-year deal after that point, but the majority of players who exchange figures with their team today will head to an arbitration hearing.
As always, all salary projections referenced within this post are courtesy of MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz, and we’ll also be updating our 2019 Arbitration Tracker throughout the day…
Today’s Updates
- Yankees 1B Greg Bird will make $1.2 MM next season, per Bob Nightengale on Twitter.
- The controversial Roberto Osuna will make $6.5MM next season, per Feinsand. Teammate Jake Marisnick, who again scuffled in ’18 after a promising 2017, will make $2.2125MM.
- Per Mark Feinsand on Twitter, A’s lefty Sean Manaea $3.15MM in what’s sure to be an injury-marred 2019.
- Hard-throwing reliever Mychal Givens will make $2.15MM, per Eduardo A. Encina of the Tampa Bay Times (via Twitter), with additional incentives for making the All-Star team or placing in the Top-3 for the Rivera/Hoffman Reliever of the Year Awards, added MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand (via Twitter).
- The Mariners agreed on a $1.95MM deal with outfielder Domingo Santana, per MLB.com’s Greg Johns (via Twitter). Santana is the second and last of the Mariners’ arbitration-eligible players.
- The Angels agreed to contracts with a pair of players yesterday, per Maria Torres of the LA Times (via Twitter). Reliever Hansel Robles signed for $1.4MM. Robles threw 36 1/3 innings of 2.97 ERA baseball after the Angels claimed him off waivers from the Mets in June. Luis Garcia, acquired via trade from the Phillies this winter, signed for $1.675MM.
- The Tigers and reliever Shane Greene settled on $4MM, per USA Today’s Bob Nightengale (via Twitter).
- The Yankees reached an agreement with Sonny Gray for $7.5MM, per Nightengale. Gray, of course, has been involved trade rumors most of the winter, but for the time being, he stands to play a role in the Yankee pen while providing insurance for the rotation.
- Didi Gregorius has also come to an agreement with the Yankees on a one-year, $11.75MM deal in his final season before free agency, per USA Today’s Bob Nightengale (Twitter links).
- New Yankee James Paxton signed for $8.575, per Nightengale (via Twitter). Paxton is under contract for the 2020 season as well.
- The Houston Astros came to an agreement with Collin McHugh for $5.8MM, per Nightengale (via Twitter). McHugh could be moving back into the rotation after a stellar season in the pen, either way this will be his final season of arb eligibility before hitting the open market.
- Jonathan Villar comes away with $4.825MM for what will be his first full season in Baltimore, per Nightengale (via Twitter).
Earlier Updates
- Among other deals, the White Sox have struck deals to pay Carlos Rodon $4.2MM and Yolmer Sanchez $4.625MM, per MLB.com’s Scott Merkin (via Twitter).
- In his second season of eligibility, outfielder Randal Grichuk has a $5MM deal with the Blue Jays, Shi Davidi of Sportsnet.ca tweets. Righty Aaron Sanchez receives $3.9MM and outfielder Kevin Pillar gets $5.8MM, Sportsnet’s Ben Nicholson-Smith adds (Twitter links).
- Angels righty Cam Bedrosian is slated to earn $1.75MM, J.P. Hoornstra of the Southern California News Group (via Twitter).
- The Rangers have deals with outfielders Nomar Mazara ($3.3MM) and Delino DeShields ($1.4MM), Levi Weaver of The Athletic tweets.
- Power righty Dellin Betances is in agreement on a $7.125MM deal with the Yankees in his final season of arb eligibility, Sweeny Murti of WFAN tweets.
- The Tigers have avoided arbitration with outfielder Nicholas Castellanos, according to Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press (Twitter link). It’s a $9.95MM deal. Castellanos had projected for $11.3MM.
- The Twins will pay starter Kyle Gibson $8.125MM, per Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN (Twitter link). Outfielder Eddie Rosario gets $4.19MM, per LaVelle E. Neal III of the Star Tribune (via Twitter), while lefty Taylor Rogers takes home $1.525MM as a Super Two, Murray tweets.
- The Athletics have agreed with shortstop Marcus Semien a $5.9MM deal, per Bob Nightengale of USA Today (via Twitter). Fellow infielder Jurickson Profar will receive $3.6MM, Robert Murray of The Athletic tweets.
- Newly acquired righty Alex Colome will earn $7.325MM with the White Sox, Nightengale also tweets.
- Righty Brad Peacock gets $3.11MM from the Astros, per Chandler Rome of the Houston Chronicle (Twitter link). Fellow right-hander Lance McCullers Jr. will earn $4.1MM, Mark Berman of FOX 26 tweets, though he’ll miss all of the 2019 campaign due to Tommy John surgery. A third Houston righty, Will Harris, settled at $4.225MM, per MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart (Twitter link).
- The Red Sox have agreed to a $2.475MM salary with catcher Sandy Leon, according to Alex Speier of the Boston Globe (links to Twitter). Lefty Eduardo Rodriguez, meanwhile, is slated to earn $4.3MM while infielder Brock Holt takes down $3.575MM.
- The Tigers have deals in place with a series of pitchers. Lefty Matthew Boyd will play on a $2.6MM salary in 2019, Robert Murray of The Athletic tweets. Lefty Daniel Norris gets $1.275MM, Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press tweets. Fellow southpaw Blaine Hardy also has a deal, Fenech tweets, with MLB.com’s Jason Beck putting the price at $1.3MM (Twitter link).
- Backstop Mike Zunino receives $4,412,500 from the Rays, MLB.com’s Mark Feinsand tweets. Infielder Matt Duffy has agreed to a $2.675MM payday, Murray tweets.
- The Blue Jays will pay righty Marcus Stroman $7.4MM for the upcoming season, per Nightengale (via Twitter).
- While the Orioles have now reached deals with all of their eligible players, per Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com (Twitter link), we don’t yet have salary terms. Dylan Bundy, Mychal Givens, and Jonathan Villar make up the arb class. Bundy takes down $2.8MM, per another Kubatko tweet.
- The Angels have a $3.7MM deal for the 2019 season with lefty Tyler Skaggs, tweets Nightengale. He comes in $100K north of his $3.6MM projected salary and can be controlled for another two seasons before reaching free agency.
- Miguel Sano and the Twins agreed to a $2.65MM salary with another $50K of plate appearance incentives, tweets Nightengale. Sano’s deal is $450K shy of his $3.1MM projection, and he can be controlled through the 2021 season.
- The Rays and righty Chaz Roe settled on a one-year pact worth $1.275MM, tweets Murray. Roe, who’d been projected at $1.4MM, is arb-eligible for the first time and controlled through 2021.
- Brandon Workman and the Red Sox settled at $1.15MM, tweets Alex Speier of the Boston Globe. The second-time-eligible righty is controlled through the 2020 campaign and had been projected at $1.4MM.
- The Yankees and outfielder Aaron Hicks have agreed to a $6.0MM salary, tweets Nightengale. The deal comes in just short of his $6.2MM projection. The 29-year-old is entering his final season of arbitration eligibility before reaching free agency.
- Blue Jays infielders Brandon Drury and Devon Travis have agreed to one-year deals worth $1.3MM and $1.925MM, respectively, according to Ben Nicholson-Smith and Jamie Campbell of Sportsnet (Twitter links). Each of the pair falls short of their respective $1.4MM and $2.4MM projections. Drury, a Super Two player, will be arbitration-eligible three more times and is controllable through 2022. Travis, meanwhile, has three-plus years of MLB service and is under team control through 2021.
- The Twins and right-hander Jake Odorizzi have settled on a one-year deal worth $9.5MM, tweets Nightengale. Odorizzi, who is in his final year of arbitration eligibility before reaching free agency, receives slightly more than his $9.4MM projection.
- Max Kepler and the Twins have reached an agreement on a $3.125MM salary, tweets Murray. A Super Two player, this is Kepler’s first season of arbitration eligibility. Coming in just under his $3.2MM projection, Kepler will remain under team control through 2022.
- Mariners left-hander Roenis Elias has agreed to a one-year deal, tweets Greg Johns of MLB.com. Financial terms are not yet known. Elias, controllable through 2021, had been projected to earn $1.0MM.
- The Astros and righty Ryan Pressly have settled on a $2.9MM salary, tweets Chandler Rome of the Houston Chronicle–slightly less than the projected $3.1MM figure. Pressly enters his last year of arbitration eligibility and can reach free agency as early as next winter.
- Twins right-hander Trevor May has agreed to a one-year deal worth $900K, tweets Murray. This marks May’s second year of arbitration eligibility; he will remain under team control through 2020.
- Closer Ken Giles and the Blue Jays have settled on a one-year, $6.3MM contract, tweets Nicholson-Smith. Projected to earn $6.6MM, Giles is in his second year of arbitration eligibility and is controllable through 2020.
- Outfielder Byron Buxton and the Twins have agreed to a one-year deal worth $1.75MM, as Darren Wolfson of 1500 ESPN first tweeted. Buxton, a Super Two player entering arbitration for the first time, had been projected to earn $1.2MM and will remain under team control through 2022.
- Angels starters Andrew Heaney and Nick Tropeano have settled on one-year deals worth $3.4MM and $1.075MM, respectively, tweets Bob Nightengale of USA Today. Heaney’s 180 innings in his first full season back from Tommy John surgery helped him to top his $2.8MM projection handily. Tropeano had been projected at $1.5MM. Both pitchers have three-plus years of MLB service time and are controlled through 2021.
- Yankees catcher Austin Romine agreed to a one-year deal worth $1.8MM, tweets Nightengale. The 30-year-old, who had been projected to earn $2MM, is entering his final season of club control before reaching free agency.
- The Red Sox and Blake Swihart settled on a one-year deal worth $910K, tweets Murray. That checks in south of his $1.1MM projection. As a Super Two player who’s arbitration-eligible for the first time, Swihart will be arb-eligible three more times and is controlled through 2022.
- The Blue Jays and Joe Biagini settled at $900K, tweets Murray, which lands just shy of his $1MM projection. Biagini barely qualified as a Super Two player this offseason and will be arb-eligible three more times. He’s controlled through 2022.
- The Athletics and Mark Canha agreed on a one-year deal worth $2.05MM, tweets Robert Murray of The Athletic, landing just shy of his projected $2.1MM figure. With three-plus years of MLB service, Canha is in his first season of arbitration eligibility and is controllable through 2021.
- Angels infielder Tommy La Stella settled with his new team at $1.35MM, tweets Murray. Projected to receive $1.2MM, La Stella is entering his penultimate season of team control before hitting free agency.
southern lion
Finally! Some things getting done!
xabial
Yea Sonny Gray got 7.5M, instead of mlbtr projected 9M
This will be a huge boon to his trade value, naysayers. Sorry, have to call out a certain poster(s). Aiming for a fringe, lower-end Top-100 MLB prospect 😉
Polymath
The article above is very disorganized. Why not break it out by team and division?
bobtillman
SWIHART at 900K!!!!!!!! Biggest bargain since Trout was at MLB minimum!!!!!
jessethegreat 2
Swihart is certainly but Trout even at his contract is still the biggest bargain in baseball.
There is not a team in baseball that wouldn’t take his current deal. Even teams that have serious depth in the outfield with players they’re high on. Even the most penny pinching of organizations would take him without a question asked.
angelsinthetroutfield
Trout’s contract is not the biggest bargain in baseball. Not to say that it’s not great, but Bregman is an excellent player who’s super cheap with lots more control. Jose Ramirez/Cisco Lindor/Mookie Betts ect. all make substantially less than MNT but are only marginally lesser players.
gotothevideotape
angel.
love your username
Michael Chaney
I agree with both of you; everyone in baseball would take Trout at his current contract, but I would argue that the best *dollar for dollar* value is probably Jose Ramirez. He was a 7-8 win player last season and is only signed for somewhere around $4-6 million a year (I don’t remember the exact numbers). The other guys except for Trout are still under team control but they didn’t sign extensions like Jose did.
sufferforsnakes
Even Carlos Carrasco has very affordable contract.
MrSeptember
Trout’s amazing, but he made $34M last year. Guys like Aaron Judge who were pre-arb with an 8 War in 2017 making $554K or Ramirez at an 8 WAR and $2.8M last year are way better deals.
But I would happily take Trout at that number.
Dkaner
Well as they save a bundle on him, they just gave Mookie a 10 million raise to 20 million and he’s going to get a 10 year 300+ million deal so enjoy the 200k savings as they pay 10 million more than last year. Good thing Red Sox won it because they lost a ton of good players and their young guys are about to get paid. Welcome to the new “Cap” era because this was the year where the penalties really start to hurt if you go over the Luxury Tax threshold. By the time the new deal gets negotiated in 2021, the penalties get worse. Baseball needs to have a bottom now otherwise its just going to be teams fielding 4a players to save money. If those owners can’t afford to spend the money or don’t want to, force them to sell because their are many billionaires willing to have a team and will spend what it takes to win.
Bert17
Get a sense of humor.
Foreveryankees
Easy!
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
Look for Mookie and the Red Sox to avoid arbitration by agreeing to a $20M 1 year deal… and remember you saw it and read it here first
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
I see someone downvoted me but my sources are never wrong
MrSeptember
Your twitter account source? It was posted there before you made your comment. Congratulations!
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
Red Sox working on locking up Holt on a two-year deal + a 3rd year option … if terms can’t be worked out expect a one-year contract of approximately 3.45 M to be announced later today.
Try and find that anywhere on Twitter
luclusciano
They were wrong
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
How were they wrong?
TwinsTrio
TedYazJimEd: okay so it’s Ted Williams, Carl Yastrzemski, Jim Rice, and “Ed”?
luclusciano
They were right. 🙂
MWeller77
Mr. Ed
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
? Jim Ed is what Rice was called..
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
You are correct they were.. Holt was offered $3.45M for this year plus $4.5 for 2020 with a $500k buyout of a 3rd year option.. but felt discount for multi year guarantee was too steep and opted for 1 year at $3.575M..
Jed Lowrie’s contract was a comp his agent at LSW
sought to use in negotiations.. to no avail.
TeddyBallgameYazJimEd
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Rice
RiverCatsFilms
The hot stove is burning right now fellas
coldbeer
Biagini isn’t worth $90k. Waste of a roster spot.
xXabial
90k hes worth but article is 900k
bobtillman
Since contracts are more service-time related than anything else pre Free Agency, it’s rather difficult to establish the best bargain; i.e. is Ohtani really only worth 1/64 Trout?
BigFred
Heaney is way overpaid. What has he ever done?
canadianyankee
You have no idea what goes on behind the scenes…maybe he keeps the ice cold or changes the batteries in the tv remote controls in the clubhouse…every club needs a “let’s go guys” guy
xXabial
stayed more healthy than most of the angels pitching staff.
davidcoonce74
He managed 180 innings last year, which is good, especially for the Angels and struck out 180 batters in those 180 innings with a league-average ERA. He’s a fourth-starter and 3.4 million bucks is actually pretty good for a fourth starter. Even if he just pitches like he did in 2018 he’s creating some surplus value at that salary. And often, pitchers improve quite a bit a second year after TJ.
ryanw-2
$3 million is chump change for any starting pitcher. Matt Harvey just got $11 million from them for being a failed young ace with somewhat of a revival last year. And then Patrick Corbin got 6 years, $140 million for having just first good, full season since 2013. I’d say Heaney’s salary is more than reasonable.
Ohtani-san
I agree Fred. Never tossed a season under 4.00 ERA, already had TJ’s etc, he’s spent more on the DL than on the mound. He maybe a “serviceable” starter, but almost certainly at the 5 spot in the rotation. I have $5 that says Barria ends the season with more innings pitched and a lower ERA than nick.
Ohtani-san
*Andrew lol
Strike Four
$3.4M is overpaid? What planet are you from??? Worst comment of the day, both wrong, Heaney is totally worth it, and its also too small a number to call overpaid.
Scrap1ron
Players aren’t happy that management isn’t throwing money away for past production and over paying at the end of long term contracts anymore. Elite players are still getting paid, low end players are getting what they’re worth, minimum wage averages 600K. The mid level players have to realize they are not worth as much as they are led to believe, and those 7-10 year 100+ million contracts aren’t happening any more for most. You’re going to get paid for your production over the entire length of your contract with age and production decline amortized into that calculation. The days of team management hoping to get 7 productive years out of a 10 year contract and figuring out how to manage the finances of the last 3 years is over. Get used to it.
angelsinthetroutfield
I think players will begin to place more importance on AAV as opposed to length when bargaining FA contracts. Jake Arrieta last year is a good example. Going by past years I’m sure he expected a 5+ yr guarantee at or around $100m. Settled for 3/$75m, bit less length and bit more AAV. Keuchel will probably be similar this year
TwinsTrio
Only in baseball can you have 90 MLB at bats in a season, and yet your salary triples in value the next season.
canocorn
Only in pop music can you put out pablum and increase your income 30-fold.
odogfenway
Romine would have got more if not for his postseason pitching line
Lefty Grove’s right hand
I like Canha. I think he can still be useful as a fourth outfielder/bench piece. He figured out how to hit MLB LHPs, but struggled against RHPs. Yet, some optimism he can start to hit RHs since his rookie year he hit RHs really well. Maybe, he’ll put it all together next season.
JJB
Wait until Ocasio-Sanders becomes president and reduces salaries by 90%.
its_happening
She’s feeling the Bern?
martras
For whatever reason, the Twins sure do feel like they owe something to Buxton. It’s such a strangely run franchise. The ownership is extremely risk averse and has the earned reputation of being tight-wads, but then they seem to feel bad when they operate in the same manner every other team in MLB would operate in regard to a nearly failed prospect with a year left to prove they deserve a starting role.
Buxton has 2 months and 200 plate appearances of luck fueled offense in what is otherwise an 800 plate appearance exercise in elite futility.
If Buxton didn’t have that 2 months of success, the Twins wouldn’t have kept him down for service time and wouldn’t have asked if he could play through the pain because they’d already be expecting Buxton to be a 4th outfielder. Likewise, if Buxton was hitting well last year, the service time would never have come into consideration, and even if it had, the Twins would be convinced Buxton had a lot of value in the future and wouldn’t have gambled on angering him.
The fact the Twins kept Buxton in the minors is 100% on Buxton, and the Twins owed him nothing. Guess they think the $500k will mean something if Buxton breaks out? LOL. Okies.
wjf010
Have you seen him play centerfield?
Worth every dime if he could just hit .200 and stay healthy.
TwinsTrio
While I agree Buxton may be the best defensive centerfielder of our era if he gets a chance to play, he also takes insane risks defensively that have contributed to much of his problems at staying healthy. I personally believe he can hit at the major league level, and he must…. Because the days of defensive only players are pretty much history (ala Kiko Garcia). The post by Martras holds merit in the fact that Twins ownership doesn’t deal well with raw talent. They release David Ortiz, and now don’t know what to do with two of the biggest prospects of the past few years in Buxton and Sano. Maybe it will eventually work out for both of them as perennial All-Stars, but not sure it will be with the Twins.
Jjbeach
He should just bunt all of the time. With his speed, he could bunt for a .230 average, then turn those singles into doubles, while all the while annoying the opposing pitcher to death.
KnicksFanCavsFan
what’s the risk to keep a once top prospect with 2 years of control left? $1.8 mil? in the grand scheme of things the Twins did the right thing.
canocorn
Marty;
Twins apparently cursed with a conscience.
Generally a laudable quality, but counterproductive in a business where stealing is encouraged and deception rewarded.
TwinsTrio
Well said. I hope someday the finances of the game change, where players can earn more in their early (productive) seasons, and less in the latter when production wains. It’s hard to blame mid-market teams from even talking to the agents of Machado and Harper.
thelastonetodie
Every one of the jays deals fell below projection.. surprising
clrrogers 2
With so many signings, it might be best to list them by team.
stymeedone
At my place of work, we are not to discuss how much we make. Fireable offense. Don’t know how I would feel about how much I make being made public.
luclusciano
If you are a publicly traded company I can learn the C suite salary and bonus and what stocks have been sold or bought – no different
stymeedone
But sports teams are NOT publicly traded companies, in most instances. So it is different
xabial
Stock ticker: MSG — Listed on the NYSE
You will own a piece of the NBA and NHL’s most valuable* franchises; New York Knicks and New York Rangers.
Most valuable based off Forbes, not on-court*
Almost $300 a share, yet both teams suck lol
RicoD
You would like it, you then can see what others make and if you are fairly compensated. That is what the players and agents are doing. Without it, teams have even more power by keeping salaries and contracts under wraps
canocorn
stymie;
Me too. Makes me feel like I’m playing along with an evil conspiracy.
its_happening
Wonder if Stroman will find something to whine about despite his mutual agreement.
ScottRC
And now to trade Casty.
rxbrgr
I’d say Paxton is under control, not contract, for 2020.
KnicksFanCavsFan
under control means the team has him under contract. not sure what you’re missing.
JaredK38
Mariners – Met trade Idea:
Mariners get: Jeff Mcneil, Todd Frazier, and Jason Vargas
Mets get: Mike Leake and Kyle Seager (Maybe a little cash too)
jjd002
MarisnicK’s 2017 was not promising. They guy is a great defender, but so bad with the bat it makes him a below average player.
LosAngelesAngelesAngelesAngels
Go Angels!
Vizionaire
sign a dang closer first!
warwhatisitgoodfor
Mariners!!!