Every offseason, the primary focus for baseball fans is on trades and free agent activity. Naturally, major league free agent signings garner the majority of the attention and generate the most buzz. Minor league signees come with less fanfare, typically with good reason. They tend to be older veterans who are looking to extend their playing careers or perhaps younger names looking to rebound from an injury or a disappointing showing the prior season (sometimes the prior few seasons).
As spring training progresses, we’re seeing an uptick in minor league signings. Free agents who’ve lingered on the market and felt their leverage in negotiations dry up begin to concede and accept non-guaranteed pacts to get to camp in hopes of winning a roster spot.
Salary details for minor league signees isn’t as prominently reported on as it is for players signing guaranteed big league deals. The Associated Press just published a list of free agent signings throughout the winter, including within salary details for a handful of (mostly) recent minor league signings. Many of the salaries reported by the AP were already known and reflected here at MLBTR, but the report does include more than two dozen previously unreported base salaries for players on minor league deals. Here’s a quick rundown (player salary links point back to prior MLBTR posts detailing that minor league signing):
Blue Jays: Jacob Barnes, RHP, $1.4MM | Ryan Yarbrough, LHP, $2MM
Braves: Curt Casali, C, $1.25MM | Buck Farmer, RHP, $1MM
Brewers: Manuel Margot, OF, $1.3MM | Mark Canha, 1B/OF, $1.4MM
Cubs: Brooks Kriske, RHP, $900K | Travis Jankowski, OF, $1.25MM | Chris Flexen, RHP, $1.5MM
Diamondbacks: Garrett Hampson, INF/OF, $1.5MM | Scott McGough, RHP, $1.25MM
Dodgers: Luis Garcia, RHP, $1.5MM
Giants: Lou Trivino, RHP, $1.5MM
Mariners: Shintaro Fujinami, RHP, $1.3MM | Trevor Gott, RHP, $1.35MM
Padres: Yuli Gurriel, 1B, $1.35MM ($100K higher than initially reported)
Rangers: Nick Ahmed, SS, $1.25MM | Jesse Chavez, RHP, $1.25MM | David Buchanan, RHP, $1.375MM | Kevin Pillar, OF, $1MM
Red Sox: Matt Moore, LHP, $2MM
Royals: Luke Maile, C, $2MM | Ross Stripling, RHP, $1.75MM
White Sox: Brandon Drury, INF/OF, $2MM | Mike Clevinger, RHP, $1.5MM
A few things bear emphasizing. First, this is clearly not a comprehensive list of minor league signings throughout the league — nor is it even a comprehensive list of the listed teams’ non-roster invitees to camp. Secondly, many of these sums are of little consequence to the team. They’re not even guaranteed, after all, and even if a player makes the Opening Day roster and earns the full slate of his minor league salary, most of these salaries aren’t going to carry significant payroll ramifications.
That’s not true across the board, though. For instance, the Rangers are fully intent on remaining under the $241MM luxury tax threshold. At present, RosterResource projects them at $235.7MM of luxury obligations. Opting to select the contract of Buchanan or Chavez rather than allocating those innings to pre-arbitration players who’s being paid at league-minimum levels (or a few thousand dollars north of it) would inch the Rangers’ CBT number forward. They’re not going to hit the tax line even in if they wind up adding multiple NRIs to the actual roster, but selecting their contracts will further narrow the resources president of baseball ops Chris Young will have at his disposal for midseason dealings.
The Red Sox, meanwhile, are effectively seated right at the tax threshold. RosterResource has them with $241.4MM of luxury considerations. Team president Sam Kennedy said after signing Alex Bregman that he expects his team will be a CBT payor in 2025. As things stand, the Sox could duck back under that threshold, but selecting the contract of Moore, Adam Ottavino (also $2MM) or another prominent NRI would further signal ownership’s willingness to return to luxury tax status for the first time since 2022.
There’s probably no getting back under the tax line for the Blue Jays, who currently have a $273.3MM CBT number. However, the front office would presumably like to avoid reaching $281MM in tax obligations, as that’s the point at which Toronto’s top pick in the 2026 draft would be dropped by ten spots. In-season trades will have more of an effect on their tax number than decisions on NRIs like Barnes, Yarbrough, Eric Lauer and others, but it bears mentioning that the Blue Jays are around $8MM shy of what many clubs consider to be the most detrimental impact of straying to deep into CBT waters.
If Jacob Barnes is on your roster, you’ve already lost.
He seemed like a very nice guy when he was a Tiger, just not a good pitcher! ♂️
Still picks up 1.4. Bah.
They thought they’d signed Corbin Burnes. Then they were like “Jacob Barnes? Wait a MINUTE…”
The interplay between the luxury tax and roster decisions can have a substantial long-term impact on a team’s flexibility and strategy, especially for organizations close to or exceeding the tax threshold.
We can expect Gurriel to be on the Pobres opening day roster. His good buddy Yu will likely be on the IL…
If there’s one thing ‘MLB the Show’ taught me it’s too save a little bit of scratch for filling out your roster and mid season acquisitions.
Are the minor league contracts nothing more than a roster holder spot until the Disabled Injured list goes into full effect? Which grows your 40 man list to a greater number.
Not officially but yes, that’s how they’re used. That’s why the players have opt out opportunities as well, so if their MLB role isn’t materializing, they can opt out to go sign with the team decimated by injury
Giants missing a few surely maybe not all detail are out yet but they have the catcher mentioned from previous article. Also they have Lucchesi, and Lamb.
Looch was a disappointment with the Mets. Better luck to him in SF.
Dealing Endy Rodriguez for him looked like it might be a disaster after Endy SCORCHED A+, AA, and AAA in 2022 at 22, but his star has dimmed significantly since. Wonder what happened…
The Mets are not listed there. Guess they haven’t found a SP ;that will work for $10/hour yet. I’m sure Stearns is doing his best to get that guy at his price. Their staff as it is now will not get them further that 3rd place and ma;ybe the Nats will pass them too. Spent all that money for Soto and piece mealed the pitching staff. I hope Cohen realizes this before it is too late.
He’s the only lefty at this point with miller mia.
Four former Cincinnati Reds and both of the catchers are former Reds. Basically you’re telling me that my favorite teams former players are only getting minor league deals for a shot at making the big clubs. Ouch!
Seriously though, I would love to see Farmer, Casali, Maile and Drury make the Braves, Royals and White Sox opening day rosters coming out of camp. I will always root for former Reds to do well elsewhere whenever they go to another team.
“Meanwhile” has to start the sentence, not come in the middle between commas.