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Archives for January 2016

Padres To Sign Carlos Villanueva

By Steve Adams | January 13, 2016 at 3:01pm CDT

The Padres have reached agreement on a one-year, $1.5MM deal with righty Carlos Villanueva, Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports reports on Twitter. Villanueva is represented by Relativity Sports.

The 32-year-old Villanueva spent the 2015 campaign with St. Louis, where he worked in a multi-inning relief role, logging 61 innings across 35 appearances. With the Cardinals, he worked to a very strong 2.95 ERA with 8.1 K/9, 3.1 BB/9 and a 42.4 percent ground-ball rate. Villanueva stranded an inordinate amount of baserunners, prompting sabermetric ERA estimators like FIP, xFIP and SIERA to peg him more for an ERA in the mid- to upper-3.00 range, so a repeat of that sub-3.00 ERA might not be something Padres fans should count on. He’ll also most likely be moving to an inferior defensive club, although on the flip side, he’ll be moving to a more pitcher-friendly home park.

Villanueva could compete for a rotation spot or a reprise his bullpen role with the Padres, as he has experience in both capacities. However, if he’s to assume the role of long reliever/swingman, that would seem to make Odrisamer Despaigne a somewhat redundant piece. Despaigne soaked up 125 1/3 innings for the Padres in that capacity last season, although he also posted a sky-high 5.80 ERA and saw his strikeout rate drop considerably in his second season of Major League action.

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San Diego Padres Transactions Carlos Villanueva

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Alexei Bell Departs Cuba In Search Of MLB Deal

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 2:09pm CDT

Yet another Cuban ballplayer has departed the island, as 32-year-old outfielder Alexei Bell has left in search of an opportunity in the majors, according to Jorge Ebro of Baseball de Cuba. Bell is preparing for a showcase in two or three weeks, MLB.com’s Jesse Sanchez adds.

Bell, a long-time mainstay on the national team, is said to have left Cuba legally. It’s unclear whether that will impact his clearance timeline in any way, but regardless, the first order of business for his representatives at DPX Sports will presumably be to obtain an official declaration of free agency. Bell will not be subject to international bonus restrictions due to his age and long experience in Cuba.

Starring with Santiago in Cuba’s Serie Nacional for many years, Bell compiled a robust .319/.417/.547 batting line in 3,441 career plate appearances. That made him one of the island nation’s most productive hitters. Notably, he has just eight more strikeouts (439) than he does walks (431) in that span, and didn’t end a Cuban campaign with more K’s than walks in a single season after 2008.

As Ben Badler of Baseball America wrote this time last year, however, Bell has shown inconsistency at times with the Cuban national team. He does feature a plus arm and could fit in right field, said Badler.

Bell’s current status and major league prospects remain somewhat unclear, however. He spent the 2015 season with the Capitales of Quebec, in the Canadian-American Association, and the results weren’t all that promising. Over 241 plate appearances, Bell slashed .317/.363/.424 with two home runs (and an uncharacteristic 24:14 K:BB ratio).

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Rangers Sign Pedro Ciriaco

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 1:42pm CDT

The Rangers have signed infielder Pedro Ciriaco, according to an announcement from VP of communications John Blake. Texas will extend a spring invite with the minor league pact.

Ciriaco, 30, is a defensive wizard who doesn’t offer much with the bat. Last year, he slashed .261/.275/.352 over 151 plate appearances for the Braves. Ciricaco has taken 649 total turns at bat in parts of six seasons in the majors.

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Texas Rangers Transactions Pedro Ciriaco

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Nationals Avoid Arbitration With Wilson Ramos

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 12:51pm CDT

The Nationals have avoided arbitration with backstop Wilson Ramos, according to a team announcement. He’ll earn $5.35MM in 2016, according to a tweet from Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com.

Entering the offseason, MLBTR projected the veteran receiver to earn $5.3MM through arbitration, just shy of the amount agreed upon. He played last season at a $3.55MM salary.

Set to reach free agency after the season, Ramos will look to improve upon a disappointing 2015 campaign. While he stayed healthy, which had been a significant issue in recent years, Ramos slashed just .229/.258/.358 over 504 plate appearances. Though he swatted 15 home runs, that overall line was down significantly from the .269/.317/.432 career batting line he carried going into the season.

Ramos is generally regarded as a solid-but-unspectacular defensive catcher. He rated as a slightly-below-average framer last year, though he’s had positive numbers in past seasons. And Ramos did throw out 24 baserunners while permitting thirty stolen bases in 2015, marking his best rate as a big leaguer.

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Transactions Washington Nationals Wilson Ramos

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Astros Have Inquired With Braves On Ender Inciarte

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 11:23am CDT

The Astros have spoken with the Braves about center fielder Ender Inciarte, according to ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick (Twitter link). It’s not clear what level of interest Houston has at this point.

Inciarte, 25, went to Atlanta as a key part of the sizable package sent by the D’Backs in exchange for Shelby Miller. He’s emerged as a sneakily valuable player over the last two seasons, delivering outstanding glovework with a solid bat at a bargain price. If he can keep churning out top-notch defensive metrics and repeat his strong .303/.338/.408 slash from last year, Inciarte would profile as a first-division regular.

Of course, Atlanta  surely won’t part with Inciarte for anything less than a compelling price. The organization would have ample cause to keep him as a piece of their rebuilding plan, though obviously the same could have been said of some now-former Braves players — Andrelton Simmons, in particular. High-upside players at or near the majors would presumably top the Braves’ wish list, though the Astros have already shipped out quite a few of those in other recent swaps.

It’s not immediately obvious what Houston could have in mind with Inciarte. The team already has a high-upside veteran in center in Carlos Gomez, though he fell short of expectations after being acquired last summer, along with a cheap and speedy backup in Jake Marisnick. And the club seems set in the corners with George Springer and Colby Rasmus — both of whom are also capable of playing center.

It is intriguing to consider the possibilities, though, if the interest is serious. Crasnick says that he’d expect Houston would need to deal away Gomez if it were to cut a deal for Inciarte. That’s certainly one plausible scenario, though they’d be selling low — and in a potentially weak market — after giving up a major haul to get him just months ago. While we’re on hypotheticals, it’s conceptually possible that the team could dangle Springer for an elite young pitcher. We’ve heard suggestions before that the organization isn’t completely unwilling to consider such a scenario, and teams such as the Indians and Rays could theoretically match up. But that’s all pure speculation at this point, of course.

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Atlanta Braves Houston Astros Ender Inciarte

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Royals “Focused” On Kennedy, Talking With Gallardo

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 9:30am CDT

The Royals are still pushing to add a rotation arm, according to multiple reports this morning, and appear to have their sights set upon the top of the remaining free-agent market. Kansas City “seems very focused” on Ian Kennedy, Jon Heyman tweets, but is still “talking” to Yovani Gallardo as well, per Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports (via Twitter).

Signing either Kennedy or Gallardo would, of course, require Kansas City to part with its top draft choice. While that’s not as painful as it would be for most teams, as the Royals won’t pick until the end of the first round, it’s obviously necessary for the team to take account of that sacrifice.

The Royals were said to have interest in free agent Wei-Yin Chen, but he just agreed to terms with the Marlins. If nothing else, though, that pursuit showed the seriousness of the Royals’ efforts as well as its willingness to punt a pick. Chen’s signing also showed that there’s still hope that the other top remaining free agents can match the lofty contract expectations that led them to decline qualifying offers.

As things stand, K.C. will run out a staff fronted by Edinson Volquez and Yordano Ventura. The three leading candidates for the remaining slots are the recently-re-signed Chris Young along with Danny Duffy and Kris Medlen, either of whom could also function as swingmen. There’s some minor league depth, including pitchers like John Lannan, Chien-Ming Wang, and Brian Flynn, but it isn’t hard to see why the Royals would want to add another option.

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Kansas City Royals Miami Marlins Chien-Ming Wang Chris Young Danny Duffy Edinson Volquez Ian Kennedy John Lannan Kris Medlen Wei-Yin Chen Yordano Ventura Yovani Gallardo

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Marlins Designate Tommy Medica, Andre Rienzo

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 9:02am CDT

The Marlins have designated infielder Tommy Medica and righty Andre Rienzo for assignment, according to a club announcement. The moves were made to clear 40-man space for the signings of Chris Johnson and Edwin Jackson, both of which were made official.

Medica, 27, was claimed late last season. He might have had a chance to compete for playing time as a right-handed-hitting bench bat, but Miami seems set to give that role to Johnson. Medica struggled at the Triple-A level last year. He owns a .246/.308/.417 batting line over 338 major league plate appearances.

Likewise, the 27-year-old Rienzo was displaced by the addition of Jackson. Both players profile as swingmen, and Miami obviously decided to give Jackson the first crack at that role. Rienzo has thrown 140 1/3 MLB frames, working to a 5.90 ERA with 6.7 K/9 against 4.7 BB/9.

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Miami Marlins Transactions Andre Rienzo Chris Johnson Edwin Jackson

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Latest On Rays’ Pitching

By Jeff Todd | January 13, 2016 at 8:43am CDT

With many — but not all — of the top free agent arms now gone from the market, the Rays appear to be ramping up discussions involving their pitchers. Tampa Bay has long been said to be willing to listen on its array of starters and late-inning relievers, though it hasn’t made any deals since shipping Nate Karns to the Mariners to kick off the winter’s activities.

Here’s the latest:

  • The Rays are engaged in “’many’ active trade conversations” involving pitching, Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports reported yesterday on Twitter. It seems as if the club’s previous talks, which appeared to have some steam during the Winter Meetings, have been re-joined now that the market has gained additional clarity.
  • Indeed, Tampa Bay has “picked up the pace” on discussions, ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick tweets. The team is still holding conversations involving top relievers Jake McGee and Brad Boxberger as well as various starters. The one name that clearly is not in play is staff ace Chris Archer.
  • The Cubs have remained in “constant contact” with the Rays, reports Jim Bowden of ESPN.com (audio link). It’s previously been suggested that Chicago could have interest in Alex Cobb, but Bowden hints that Jake Odorizzi could make a nice fit for Chicago in a deal. The hang-up, though, is that the Cubs are trying to swing a deal without giving up Jorge Soler, Javier Baez, or other major league pieces.
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Chicago Cubs Tampa Bay Rays Alex Cobb Brad Boxberger Jake McGee Jake Odorizzi Javier Baez Jim Bowden Jorge Soler

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Arbitration Breakdown: Manny Machado

By Matt Swartz | January 13, 2016 at 7:56am CDT

Over the next few weeks, I will be discussing some of the higher profile upcoming arbitration cases. I will rely partly on my arbitration model developed exclusively for MLB Trade Rumors, but will also break out some interesting comparables and determine where the model might be wrong.

Manny Machado has reached arbitration eligibility at the young age of 23, and has already put up solid numbers in his career, including a breakout year in 2015. Machado hit .286 this past year, which is not all that much better than the .278 career mark he had going in, but his 35 home runs more than doubled his career high. After Machado’s 51 doubles in 2013 suggested he would eventually show more power than the 14 home runs that accompanied them, injuries in 2014 limited him to 354 PA. As a result, Machado’s pre-platform performance and overall career numbers are not as strong as his platform year, which makes him somewhat of a tricky case. Few comparables cases present themselves, so although his $5.9 million projected salary seems plausible, it could easily miss by a lot.

Machado’s strong defense also makes his case trickier as well. Although my model has repeatedly shown that defense does not consistently affect arbitration cases, many of the hitters who could be considered comparables for Machado were far worse fielders, and this could certainly help him earn more than them. Just because the model does not prove the importance of any specific defensive statistic, that does not mean that defense never enters into a case—we know from firsthand reports that it does. Machado’s relatively low number of RBIs for a guy who hit 35 home runs also makes his case unique as well.

Perhaps the best comparable could be Chris Davis’ case three years ago, although nearly everything about Davis’ case is slightly worse. Davis hit .270 with 33 home runs and 85 RBIs, which is a near match of Machado’s .286/35/86 in his platform year. Davis also did not have many home runs pre-platform, so his career 77 home runs at the time are not much different than Machado’s 68. However, Davis’ career average of .258 is way below Machado’s .281. Davis also plays an easier defensive position than Machado. However, the Orioles could certainly try to argue that Machado should not out-earn Davis’ $3.3 million award by too much.

Although it was seven years ago, Ryan Ludwick’s case looks very similar to Machado’s when Ludwick earned $3.7 million in 2009. He hit .299/37/113 in his platform year and had .273/65/209 career numbers, and although Ludwick’s platform numbers were slightly better, Machado’s career .281/65/215 is extremely similar. The Orioles could try to argue that a little salary inflation on Ludwick’s $3.7 million would put Machado between $4 and $5 million.

If Machado wants to argue for a salary closer to his $5.9 million projection, one potential comparable that Machado could consider is Dan Uggla, who had 32 home runs and 92 RBIs in his platform year before reaching arbitration eligibility, and who received $5.3 million. However, this was back in 2009 and cases that old are rarely used. Uggla also only hit .260, although he did have 90 career home runs, far exceeding Machado’s 68.

Another possibility Machado could use to try to push his salary closer to his projection, who is more recent than Uggla, is Giancarlo Stanton’s case just two years ago. Although Machado could be a similar match in terms of stardom, Stanton’s injuries kept him to 504 PA in his platform year and only 24 home runs, while he hit .249. He did have 117 career home runs though. While he played a different position, Stanton could be considered a comparable. He earned $6.5 million in 2014. Like with Uggla, the difficulty for Machado if he tries to argue for Stanton as a comparable is that both Uggla and Stanton had many more career home runs than Machado does.

Other potential comparables that Machado could use are Mark Trumbo, Chris Carter, and Pedro Alvarez, who all reached their first year of arbitration eligibility in the last couple years and earned $4.8, $4.175, and $4.25 million. They each hit between 34 and 37 home runs and between 88 to 100 RBIs in their platform year. Although they had more career home runs than Machado, ranging from 85 to 95 between them, their batting averages are much worse than Machado’s. They each hit between .227 and .233 in their platform year and between .222 and .250 in their careers. Machado could make the case that he had similar power to them, but a better average, so he deserves to have somewhere above $5 million.

It is difficult to find obvious cases where Machado exceeds his $5.9 million projection. There are a number of players with higher salaries who had similar platform years, but more home runs, while there are a couple of players who earned less money with career numbers that look similar to Machado, but whose cases are weaker in one way or another. Machado has a better batting average and defense than just about all of these players, including the players with more career home runs. However, I think Machado is probably likely to under-earn his projection.

A potential wild card that could come into play is a similar player who is also reaching his first year of eligibility this year, Nolan Arenado. With a similar breakout performance in 2015 along with strong defense at the same position, Arenado could easily help or hurt Machado’s case for arbitration this year if he reaches an agreement first.

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Arbitration Breakdown Baltimore Orioles MLBTR Originals Uncategorized Manny Machado

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156 Players File For Salary Arbitration

By Steve Adams | January 12, 2016 at 11:37pm CDT

The Major League Baseball Players Association announced today that 156 players have filed for salary arbitration. Players and teams will formally exchange arbitration figures on Friday, and in the five to six weeks that follow, dozens of agreements will be reached. Players and teams that are unable to find a middle ground will head to arbitration hearings in mid to late February, and, on the flip-side of things, some will hammer out multi-year deals in order to avoid the process in the future (possibly even extending the contract into would-be free agent years).

We’re keeping track of all of the arbitration settlements in the 2016 version of MLBTR’s annual Arbitration Tracker (bear in mind that some agreements have already happened) and will continue to do so as each case is resolved, whether by one-year agreement, multi-year deal or hearing. Here’s a team-by-team rundown of the players that filed for arbitration, with each player’s service time in parenthesis in addition to MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz’s projected salary for each.

AL West

Angels

  • Kole Calhoun (2.130) — $3.6MM
  • Garrett Richards (3.148) – $6.8MM
  • Fernando Salas (5.048) – $2.2MM
  • Projected total spend: $12.6MM

Astros

  • Jason Castro (5.104) – $4.6MM
  • Josh Fields (3.000) – $800K
  • Evan Gattis (3.000) – $3.4MM
  • Marwin Gonzalez (3.133) – $1.9MM
  • Dallas Keuchel (3.089) – $6.4MM
  • Luis Valbuena (5.148) – $5.8MM
  • Projected total spend: $22.9MM

Athletics

  • Yonder Alonso (4.116) – $2.5MM
  • Josh Reddick (5.050) – $7.0MM
  • Fernando Rodriguez (4.032) – $1.3MM
  • Danny Valencia (4.118) – $3.4MM
  • Projected total spend: $14.2MM

Mariners

  • Charlie Furbush (4.121) – $1.7MM
  • Leonys Martin (3.063) – $3.75MM
  • Evan Scribner (2.142) – $700K
  • Projected total spend: $6.15MM

Rangers

  • Robinson Chirinos (3.103) – $1.4MM
  • Jake Diekman (3.049) – $1.0MM
  • Mitch Moreland (5.067) – $5.6MM
  • Jurickson Profar (2.167) – $508K
  • Tanner Scheppers (3.111) – $800K
  • Shawn Tolleson (3.122) – $2.6MM
  • Tom Wilhelmsen (4.089) – $3.0MM
  • Projected total spend: $14.908MM

AL Central

Indians

  • Cody Allen (3.076) — $3.5MM
  • Lonnie Chisenhall (3.158) — $3MM
  • Jeff Manship (2.130) — $700K
  • Bryan Shaw (4.081) — $2.8MM
  • Josh Tomlin (4.151) — $3.1MM
  • Projected total spend: $13.1MM

Royals

  • Drew Butera (5.018) – $1.1MM
  • Lorenzo Cain (4.074) – $6.1MM
  • Louis Coleman (3.018) – $1.0MM
  • Tony Cruz (4.105) – $1.0MM
  • Danny Duffy (4.085) – $4.0MM
  • Jarrod Dyson (4.088) – $1.7MM
  • Mike Moustakas (4.111) – $5.7MM
  • Projected total spend: $20.6MM

Tigers

  • Jose Iglesias (3.036) – $1.5MM
  • J.D. Martinez (4.036) – $7.8MM
  • Andrew Romine (3.049) – $700K
  • Justin Wilson (3.035) – $1.3MM
  • Projected total spend: $11.3MM

Twins

  • Eduardo Escobar (3.128) – $1.8MM
  • Casey Fien (3.143) – $2.2MM
  • Kevin Jepsen (5.163) – $6.0MM
  • Tommy Milone (3.143) – $4.5MM
  • Eduardo Nunez (4.090) – $1.5MM
  • Trevor Plouffe (4.162) – $7.7MM
  • Projected total spend: $23.7MM

White Sox

  • Avisail Garcia (2.167) – $2.3MM
  • Dan Jennings (2.171) – $700K
  • Brett Lawrie (4.055) – $3.9MM
  • Zach Putnam (2.135) – $800K
  • Projected total spend: $7.7MM

AL East

Blue Jays

  • Brett Cecil (5.152) – $3.4MM
  • Jesse Chavez (5.108) – $4.7MM
  • Steve Delabar (3.008) – $700K
  • Josh Donaldson (3.158) – $12.0MM
  • Drew Hutchison (3.128) – $2.6MM
  • Aaron Loup (3.083) – $900K
  • Michael Saunders (5.138) – $2.9MM
  • Drew Storen (5.140) – $8.8MM
  • Projected total spend: $36MM

Orioles

  • Brad Brach (3.063) — $1.1MM
  • Zach Britton (3.158) — $6.9MM
  • Ryan Flaherty (4.000) — $1.5MM
  • Miguel Gonzalez (4.095) — $4.9MM
  • Manny Machado (3.056) — $5.9MM
  • Brian Matusz (5.156) — $3.4MM
  • Chris Tillman (4.113) — $6.2MM
  • Mark Trumbo (5.027) — $9.1MM
  • Projected total spend: $39MM

Rays

  • Alex Cobb (4.061) – $4.0MM
  • Hank Conger (4.051) – $1.8MM
  • Logan Forsythe (4.113) – $3.3MM
  • Brandon Guyer (3.066) – $1.3MM
  • Desmond Jennings (4.101) – $3.1MM
  • Jake McGee (4.127) – $4.7MM
  • Logan Morrison (5.069) – $4.1MM
  • Erasmo Ramirez (2.158) – $2.8MM
  • Rene Rivera (4.082) – $1.6MM
  • Drew Smyly (3.154) – $3.9MM
  • Projected total spend: $30.6MM

Red Sox

  • Joe Kelly (3.101) — $3.2MM
  • Robbie Ross (3.100) — $1.1MM
  • Junichi Tazawa (5.086) — $3.3MM
  • Projected total spend: $7.6MM

Yankees

  • Dustin Ackley (4.087) – $3.1MM
  • Aroldis Chapman (5.034) – $12.9MM
  • Nathan Eovaldi (4.013) – $5.7MM
  • Didi Gregorius (2.159) – $2.1MM
  • Ivan Nova (5.024) – $4.4MM
  • Michael Pineda (4.099) – $4.6MM
  • Projected total spend: $32.8MM

NL West

Diamondbacks

  • Welington Castillo (4.009) – $3.6MM
  • Patrick Corbin (3.105) – $2.3MM
  • Randall Delgado (3.100) – $1.0MM
  • Rubby De La Rosa (3.097) – $3.2MM
  • Daniel Hudson (5.117) – $2.0MM
  • Shelby Miller (3.030) — $4.9MM
  • A.J. Pollock (3.052) – $4.3MM
  • Projected total spend: $21.3MM

Dodgers

  • Luis Avilan (3.077) – $1.1MM
  • Yasmani Grandal (3.115) – $2.7MM
  • Chris Hatcher (2.146) – $900K
  • Kenley Jansen (5.073) – $11.4MM
  • Justin Turner (5.045) – $5.3MM
  • Scott Van Slyke (2.151) – $1.2MM
  • Projected total spend: $22.6MM

Giants

  • Brandon Belt (4.128) – $6.2MM
  • George Kontos (2.171) – $1.0MM
  • Projected total spend: $7.2MM

Padres

  • Andrew Cashner (5.126) – $7.0MM
  • Derek Norris (3.102) – $3.4MM
  • Drew Pomeranz (3.013) – $1.3MM
  • Tyson Ross (4.126) – $10.0MM
  • Projected total spend: $21.7MM

Rockies

  • Nolan Arenado (2.155) — $6.6MM
  • Charlie Blackmon (3.102) — $4.5MM
  • DJ LeMahieu (3.128) — $3.7MM
  • Projected total spend: $14.8MM

NL Central

Brewers

  • Wily Peralta (3.033) – $2.8MM
  • Jean Segura (3.065) – $3.2MM
  • Will Smith (2.155) – $1.2MM
  • Projected total spend: $7.2MM

Cardinals

  • Matt Adams (3.033) – $1.5MM
  • Seth Maness (2.154) – $1.2MM
  • Brandon Moss (5.160) – $7.9MM
  • Trevor Rosenthal (3.058) – $6.5MM
  • Projected total spend: $17.1MM

Cubs

  • Jake Arrieta (4.145) — $10.4MM
  • Chris Coghlan (5.148) — $3.9MM
  • Justin Grimm (2.170) — $1MM
  • Hector Rondon (3.000) — $3.6MM
  • Pedro Strop (4.156) — $4.7MM
  • Adam Warren (3.036) — $1.5MM
  • Travis Wood (5.004) — $6.4MM
  • Projected total spend: $31.5MM

Pirates

  • Francisco Cervelli (5.146) – $2.5MM
  • Jared Hughes (3.162) – $2.2MM
  • Jeff Locke (3.020) – $3.5MM
  • Mark Melancon (5.098) – $10.0MM
  • Jordy Mercer (3.095) – $1.8MM
  • Chris Stewart (5.091) – $1.6MM
  • Tony Watson (4.101) – $4.6MM
  • Projected total spend: $26.2MM

Reds

  • Zack Cozart (4.084) — $2.9MM
  • J.J. Hoover (3.102) — $1.1MM
  • Projected total spend: $4MM

NL East

Braves

  • Arodys Vizcaino (2.168) — $1.1MM
  • Chris Withrow (2.132) — $600K
  • Projected total spend: $1.7MM

Marlins

  • Carter Capps (3.007) – $800K
  • Jose Fernandez (3.000) – $2.2MM
  • Dee Gordon (3.154) – $5.9MM
  • Adeiny Hechavarria (3.060) – $2.3MM
  • Tom Koehler (3.016) – $3.9MM
  • Bryan Morris (3.011) – $1.1MM
  • David Phelps (3.156) – $2.5MM
  • A.J. Ramos (3.030) – $2.8MM
  • Projected total spend: $21.5MM

Mets

  • Lucas Duda (4.137) – $6.8MM
  • Josh Edgin (3.015) – $600K
  • Jeurys Familia (3.030) – $3.3MM
  • Matt Harvey (3.072) – $4.7MM
  • Jenrry Mejia (3.085) – $2.6MM
  • Addison Reed (4.002) – $5.7MM
  • Ruben Tejada (4.171) – $2.5MM
  • Carlos Torres (3.114) – $800K
  • Neil Walker (5.166) – $10.7MM
  • Projected total spend: $37.7MM

Nationals

  • Danny Espinosa (4.113) – $2.7MM
  • Wilson Ramos (5.047) – $5.3MM
  • Anthony Rendon (2.130) – $2.5MM
  • Ben Revere (4.149) – $6.7MM
  • Stephen Strasburg (5.118) – $10.5MM
  • Projected total spend: $27.7MM

Phillies

  • Freddy Galvis (3.021) – $1.9MM
  • Jeanmar Gomez (4.063) – $1.5MM
  • Jeremy Hellickson (5.045) – $6.6MM
  • Projected total spend: $10MM

For more information on the arbitration process in general, readers can refer to our breakdown of Arbitration Basics. For those who wish to garner more insight into Swartz’s projection model, check out his explanation of the model and its limitations as well as MLBTR’s Arbitration Breakdown series, in which Swartz examines some unique cases that might leave the model more susceptible to inaccuracy than a standard arbitration case. 

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Arbitration Projection Model Newsstand

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