There’s a noon ET deadline today for players and teams to exchange arbitration figures, meaning over the next few hours, there will be a landslide of settlements on one-year deals to avoid an arb hearing. Currently, Nolan Arenado’s $26MM figure from last winter stands as the record, although the expectation is that Mookie Betts will set a new benchmark. A few reminders:
- Players are typically arbitration-eligible three times. Three years of Major League service time is the standard entry point for the arbitration process; a player remains arbitration-eligible until he either signs a multi-year deal buying out his arbitration seasons or until he accrues six years of MLB service time, thus qualifying him for free agency. Typically, players are given raises based on their prior year’s work. The arbitration process tends to focus on fairly basic stats: e.g. plate appearances, batting average, home runs and RBIs for hitters, as well as innings pitched, wins, ERA, saves, holds and strikeouts for pitchers.
- The top 22 percent of players (in terms of total service time) with between two and three years of service are also eligible as “Super Two” players. These players are eligible for arbitration four times. Brewers reliever Josh Hader, for instance, became arbitration-eligible in this manner this winter.
- Players who are non-tendered before reaching six years of service time can reenter the arbitration system. Last year, for example, the Angels non-tendered right-hander Matt Shoemaker when he had four-plus years of service. He signed a one-year free-agent deal with the Blue Jays, accrued a full year of service in 2019, and is currently arb-eligible as a player with between five and six years of service.
- It’s become fairly standard for teams throughout the league to adopt a “file and trial” approach, meaning they’ll cease negotiating on one-year deals once salary figures are exchanged. Clubs that exchange figures with a player will sometimes continue working toward a multi-year deal, but it’s become increasingly rare for teams and players to negotiate one-year deals following the exchange deadline. Arbitration hearings typically begin in early February. Negotiations can continue right up until the point of a hearing.
- Arbitration contracts, unless specifically negotiated otherwise, are non-guaranteed. Teams can cut any player who agrees to a standard arb deal and owe him only 30 days’ termination pay (roughly one-sixth the salary) up until halfway through Spring Training. Cutting him in the second half of Spring Training but before Opening Day entitles the player to 45 days of termination pay. Arbitration contracts are guaranteed come Opening Day. There are a few fully guaranteed arb deals every year. Royals lefty Mike Montgomery already agreed to one such pact earlier this offseason.
As is the case every offseason, MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz has projected arbitration salaries for all of the eligible players. It’s a blanket, algorithm-based approach that doesn’t factor in context of unique or atypical cases, but the model has generally been an accurate barometer. For some higher-profile and/or atypical cases, Matt has gone into detail on why the model may or may not be at risk of missing; you can read these in his Arbitration Breakdown series. Also, as we do every year, we’re providing an Arbitration Tracker to follow along with settlements and, for those that reach the point of exchange, proposed salary figures. You can bookmark MLBTR’s 2020 Arbitration Tracker as a means of keeping up, and we’ll also be running a pair of posts to track settlements in the American League and National League throughout the morning.
lowtalker1
Don’t think arb should ever get higher than a qo
khopper10
Then maybe the QO should be higher. Arenado was still a bargain at 26M.
Steve Adams
Why should the very top players in MLB — Betts, Arenado, etc. — have their pre-FA earnings capped by a figure that is arbitrarily (no pun intended) based on the average of the game’s 125 highest-paid players?
Linking the two would be tantamount to saying that Betts can’t get to $29-30MM because Josh Reddick only makes $13MM. I don’t see the logic in that.
There are glaring flaws throughout the arbitration system and qualifying offer system alike, but there’s no reason they should be linked. Betts is going to make around $30MM this year, and that’s still a bargain relative to what he’d earn in free agency.
DarkSide830
the whole system is garbage. players should be paid based on the numbers of their previous season’s numbers alone. if you play at a $30 million level the previous year, you get $30 million the next year. and scrap the QO, it really only helps teams.
redmatt
I’m sure a few of the young guys that have signed potential-based contracts would like a word.
deweybelongsinthehall
The problem is non players can’t relate. Imagine going into your boss and saying I realize my year wasn’t as good as the prior one but it was still damn good and I deserve a 30% raise. Maybe it’s time to incentivize contracts and arb awards with bases being awarded now and then at the end of the season, bonuses are added based on individual and team goals.
mr. g
The real problem is the cap hit. I think arbitration players should only count 80% towards the cap hit. Players get to keep getting paid but the owners get to enjoy “cheap(er)” labor from their young guys.
MafiaBass
This post doesn’t show up in my Red Sox feed on the app
megaj
Screw the arbitration system, Everything in baseball should be performance based. Wouldn’t this be fun?
Position Players, Minimum 500 PA:
700 OPS or lower= League minimum
.701-.749 2.5M
750 .799 5M
.800-.849 10M
.850-.899 17.5M
.900- .949 OPS = 25M
.950-999 = 30M
1.000 or higher 35M
1M Bonuses: GG, MVP, ROY
Starting Pitchers, minimum 28 starts
ERA 5.00 or over= League minimum
4.50-4.99= 2..5M
4.00-4.49 =5M
3.50-3.99 =10M
3.00-3.49 =17.5M
2.50-2.99= 25M
2.00-2.49 30M
Under 2.00=35M
1M Bonuses= GG, ROY, Cy Young, MVP
920kodiak
Personally, I think Charles Finley was right years ago. Every player should be a free agent after every season.
peyton
Lol imagine the chaos if that happened
Baseball would just become one big offseason, with no games actually played anymore