Projected Arbitration salaries for the 2024 Atlanta Braves roster
The Atlanta Braves entered last season with a top ten payroll in baseball, owing to their propensity for long-term extensions to core players like Ronald Acuña Jr, Matt Olson, and Austin Riley.
But around half of the roster - 13 players - are still in the arbitration process and, as such, Atlanta doesn't know what they'll be paid for next season. Thankfully, the fine folks over at MLB Trade Rumors have developed an arbitration calculator over the years that does a pretty good job of estimating a player's salary in the arbitration process, although it's subject to variance based on where the player and team initially submit their proposals.
What is MLB arbitration and how does it work?
Players with more than three but less than six years of service time - and with as little as two-plus years in specific situations, called "Super 2" players - are not paid league minimum salaries but rather are arbitration eligible.
For "arb-eligible" players, if the player and team do not reach an agreement on what their salary should be for the next season, both parties submit a salary figure to a neutral panel of three arbitrators. At a specific point in the offseason, a hearing is held, where the player's representative and the team's representative meet and make their cases to the panel. One of the two salaries is chosen by the panel, and that's the player's salary for the next season - there is no compromising by the panel; they are required to choose one of the two options presented prior to the hearing.
And this isn't always a friendly process - the team is, in essence, making the case to the arbitrators (who are not baseball people) that the player isn't worth their requested figure. It can (and does) get acrimonious sometimes, and many players choose to not attend the hearings because of the feelings of ill will it can engender between the two parties.
An important consideration here that is frequently missed by the discourse surrounding who "won" and "lost" arbitration hearings - the difference between the player's number and the team's number is often smaller than what it was during their salary negotiation. A common response when the difference is small, such as the $100,000 gap between Mike Foltynewicz's requested $2.3M and Atlanta's offered $2.2M in 2018, is that the team should have just given the player the request rather than go to a potential relationship-harming hearing.
There's two reasons this sometimes happens. First is that the figures are always wider apart during the negotiation process - the "one or the other" nature of arbitration naturally lends itself to a more conservative ask than when you're actively negotiating. The other is the recent trend amongst MLB front offices known as "file and trial" - increasingly, after the salary negotiation reaches the point of officially submitting salary figures to arbitrators and scheduling an hearing, many MLB front offices refuse to negotiate from that point onward, preferring to let the arbitrators make the final decision. Some teams make exceptions to negotiate for a multi-year deal, but most front offices cut off all salary discussion until after the hearing.
Who is arbitration-eligible on the 2024 Braves roster?
Here's the list, in order of service time, as well as their projections from MLB Trade Rumors:
UPDATE: Atlanta has removed ten of the thirteen players off the roster, with only three arbitration eligibles remaining for 2024. We have updated blurbs for each player to reflect their new teams, if applicable.
RP AJ Minter - Arb 4 (Super 2 player, with 5.154 service time) = $6.50M
SP Max Fried - Arb 4 (Super 2 player, with 5.148 service time) = $14.4M
SP/RP Huascar Ynoa - Arb 1 (3.011 service time) = $1M
SP Yonny Chirinos - Arb 4 (Super 2 player, with 5.114 service time) = $2M
SP Michael Soroka - Arb 4 (Super 2 player, with 5.009 service time) = $3M
RP Nick Anderson - Arb 2 (4.153 service time) = $1.6M
INF Nicky Lopez - Arb 3 (Super 2 player, with 4.139 service time) = $3.9M
SP Kolby Allard - Arb 1 (3.162 service time) = $1M
RP Ben Heller - Arb 2 (3.102 service time) = $900k
OF Sam Hilliard - Arb 1 (3.094 service time) = $1.1M
RP Michael Tonkin - Arb 1 (3.074 service time) - $1M
SP Kyle Wright - Arb 1 (3.062 service time) = $1.4MM
INF Andrew Velazquez - Arb 1 (3.033 service time) = $740k
Who would you make a point to retain, and who would you let walk? Let us know!
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