The deadline to tender contracts to arbitration-eligible players is tonight at 7:00pm Central. There will be a frenzy of non-tenders and trades today, but also some signings.
For many players, there’s little pressure to agree to terms this week. The deadline for exchanging figures isn’t until January 13, with the hearings taking place in March. However, players that are borderline non-tender candidates might get a low-ball offer at this time, with the team hoping that the looming possibility of a non-tender compels the player to accept. As such, deals at this part of the baseball calendar have a higher likelihood of coming in under projections.
One new wrinkle from the new collective bargaining agreement is that all of these deals will be guaranteed. Previously, teams could cut a player during Spring Training and only pay a portion of the agreed-upon figure. However, the new CBA stipulates that any player who settles on a salary without going to a hearing will be subject to full termination pay, even if released prior to the beginning of the season.
MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projected salaries for each team’s arbitration-eligible players last month but, as mentioned, it’s not uncommon for the deals agreed to at this time to come in below projections. This post may be updated later as more agreements come in…
Latest
- The Tigers announced agreement on a deal with outfielder Austin Meadows. Financial terms are undisclosed. Meadows was projected for a $4MM salary. He’s coming off an injury-plagued first season in Detroit but is arbitration eligible twice more. [UPDATE: Meadows signed for $4.3MM, according to Joel Sherman of the New York Post.]
- The Braves avoided arbitration with Mike Soroka on a $2.8MM contract, the club announced. It’s the same salary he’s made in each of the past two seasons, which is typical for an arbitration-eligible player who didn’t see any MLB action but was nevertheless tendered a contract. Soroka hasn’t pitched since 2020 on account of a pair of Achilles ruptures and some late-season elbow soreness, but he’s expected to compete for a rotation spot in Spring Training. He’s arbitration eligible once more next winter.
Earlier Deals
- The Pirates and infielder/outfielder Miguel Andujar agreed at $1.525MM, per Murray. Andujar was claimed off waivers from the Yankees in September.
- The Padres announced that they have agreed to a one-year contract with left-hander Jose Castillo. The terms have not been disclosed.
- The Diamondbacks announced they’ve agreed to a deal with reliever Cole Sulser. Financial terms haven’t been disclosed, but Sulser has been projected at $1MM. Arizona recently claimed him off waivers from the Marlins.
- The Cubs and right-hander Adrian Sampson agreed to a $1.9MM salary, while fellow right-hander Rowan Wick will take home a $1.55MM salary in 2023, according to Jordan Bastion of MLB.com. Sampson broke out in 2022, finishing with a 3.11 ERA across 104 1/3 innings. Wick tossed 64 innings of relief, finishing up with a 4.22 ERA.
- The Yankees and right-hander Lou Trivino agreed to a salary of $4.1MM, per Feinsand. Trivino had been a solid reliever for Oakland over the past couple of years but struggled to a 6.47 ERA with them in 2022. He was dealt to the Yankees and then righted the ship with a 1.66 ERA the rest of the way.
- The Rockies and Brent Suter avoided arbitration by agreeing to a $3MM salary, per Murray. Suter was claimed off waivers from the Brewers earlier today.
- The Brewers and righty Matt Bush have agreed at $1.85MM, per Murray. Bush came over from the Rangers in a deadline deal. He posted a 2.95 ERA prior to the deal and a 4.30 after.
- The Marlins and Dylan Floro are in agreement on a contract for 2023, reports Craig Mish of the Miami Herald. He’ll make $3.9MM, Mish reports. Floro tossed 53 2/3 innings in 2022 with a 3.02 ERA.
- The Brewers and right-hander Adrian Houser agreed on a $3.6MM salary, per Robert Murray of FanSided. The ground ball specialist saw his ERA jump from 3.22 in 2021 to 4.73 this year as his ground ball rate dropped from 59% to 46.7%. He’s likely the club’s sixth starter going into the winter and could jump into the rotation if someone gets injured.
- The Phillies and right-hander Sam Coonrod have agreed on a salary of $775K, per Mark Feinsand of MLB.com. He posted a 4.04 ERA in 2021 but was limited to just 12 2/3 innings this year due to a shoulder strain.
- The Tigers and left-hander Tyler Alexander agreed on a salary of $1.875MM, per Murray. Alexander got into 27 games in 2022, 17 of those being starts. His 4.81 ERA was certainly on the high side, but he had a 3.81 in 2021.
- The Yankees and shortstop Isiah Kiner-Falefa avoided arbitration by agreeing to a $6M salary. You can read more about that here.
- The Braves and left-hander Tyler Matzek avoided arbitration by agreeing to a two-year deal. You can read more about that here.
- The Giants and outfielder Mike Yastrzemski avoided arbitration by agreeing to a one-year, $6.1MM deal, per Jeff Passan of ESPN. He first qualified for arbitration a year ago as a Super Two player and earned $3.7MM in 2022. He took a step back at the plate this year with a line of .214/.305/.392 but still provided value with his glovework.
sliderwithcheeze
The players received way too much in the CBA. Many of us firmly believe they should still be locked out.
BeansforJesus
Many of us? Do you have mice in your pockets?
fljay73
If I don’t see lower ticket or concession prices why should I care what the players are making?
htbnm57
Oh those poor billionaire owners who are so much fun to watch play.
JJBird
You think a millionaire can buy a franchise? Without the billionaire to fund these overpriced salaries, there’d be no major sports franchises. Why you libs hate people who’ve made money is insane. Get wealthy yourself, or shut up!
htbnm57
I was answering the complaint that the players got too much, which is ridiculous because they are the reason people watch the sport. There is an increasing issue with wealth distribution where 1% of people own 31% of the wealth and they have a ridiculously oversized control of the political process with their ability to sway politicians. We have a very few people with too much power.
George44
I’m broke as he’ll, but I still want to see players, amd people in general make as much as $ as possible, Why would anyone wish for their fellow man/woman to do as well as possible?
MannyPineappleExpress9
If the Brewers have 6 healthy starters they’ll probably use a 6 man rotation. So I think Houser will have a spot unless something wild happens before opening day/week.
Burnes/Woodruff/Lauer/Peralta/Ashby/Houser is my guess on the 6 starters as of now.
Trump4TheWin
Burnes and Woodruff should be on the hill every fifth day. The others – let their performance dictate if they need to rotate four guys in three starts.
MannyPineappleExpress9
Just going on what Counsell has done in the past. I’d say Lauer and maybe Peralta every 5th day as well, but Peralta doesn’t seem to hold up physically and for that reason I don’t argue much with the 6 man rotation..only letting them go 4-5 innings then using 6 relievers every game, not really in favor of.
kripes-brewers
Yeah, a lot of the short outings are due to Counsell watching metrics arguably a little too closely. Always worried about going through the order a third time with these guys. Let them get lathered up and learn to battle through, keep changing speeds and not letting those hitters sit on the one they want. I’d trust the starters to do that more than the bullpen guys who have fewer offerings (typically).
Chris Koch
I think some of the pitching restrictions were due to returning from a IL stint. Theres also max inning limits that are watched on. Now a season further you can stretch out an IP. But you are right, Counsell really does a bit to much analytics and brings in RPs who “analytically ” should produce better in the long run over letting guys pitch after 6. Just Crew had a bunch of inept Relievers losing games after great 5-6IP starts.
George44
Maybe Ashby & Peralta as well?
Redwolves3
What’s LaStella’s status?
Holy Cow!
Signed for one more year.
Pete'sView
Unusable.
tigerfan4ever
Glad to see the Tigers tendered Austin Meadows. He had the Murphy’s Law of seasons, health wise in 2022.
GabrielJames
The Matt Bush story is so crazy, across the board. First pick in the draft back in 2004. He’s on track to hit free agency for the first time in 2025, 21 years after he was drafted, at the age of 39.