PHILADELPHIA — Arizona catcher Daulton Varsho was the last of 30 players who made the cutoff for salary arbitration, which was set at two years, 128 days of major league service, up from two years, 116 days last offseason.
Varsho hit .235 with 27 homers and 74 RBIs this season and made $721,700. By becoming eligible for arbitration, he likely will get a salary of more than $2 million rather than about $750,000.
He spent the entire 2022 season in the major leagues after being optioned to Triple-A Reno twice in 2021.
San Francisco infielder Thairo Estrada and Cleveland right-hander reliever James Karinchak tied for the most service time in the so-called Super Two class at two years, 169 days, just three days shy of three years of major league service.
Others in the class include Tampa Bay outfielder Randy Arozarena, Texas first baseman Nathaniel Lowe, Los Angeles Dodgers right-handers Brusdar Graterol and Tony Gonsolin, Los Angeles Angels outfielder Taylor Ward and left-hander Patrick Sandoval, Kansas City right-hander Brady Singer and left-hander Kris Bubic, Toronto infielder Santiago Espinal and Philadelphia infielder Edmundo Sosa.
Among those falling short were Los Angeles Angels shortstop Andrew Velazquez (two years, 126 days), Texas Rangers outfielder Nick Solak (two years, 126 days), New York Mets left-hander David Peterson (two years, 125 days), Oakland left-hander A.J. Puk (two years, 124 days) and Philadelphia catcher/pitcher Garrett Stubbs (two years, 120 days).
The top 22% of players by service time with at least two years but less than three are eligible for arbitration as long as they had at least 86 days of service this year. They join the group of three-to-six-year players.
Players and teams are scheduled to exchange proposed salaries Jan. 13, and hearings for those lacking agreements will be scheduled for Jan. 30 to Feb. 17 in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Players were eligible after two years of service from 1974 to 1985, and the threshold increased to three years in 1986. The Super Two class began in 1991 at 17% and it increased to 22% in 2013.
The cutoff was as low as two years, 115 days in 2019 and as high as two years, 146 days in 2011.
Source: www.espn.com