The GM Meetings are underway, now that the little matter of the 2022 World Series is settled (sorry Bryce, still no title for you). And thus the 2022-2023 off-season is underway. We’ll have our regular content (things like Rule-5 protection analysis/predictions, non-tender deadline predictions, and of course prospects), but first up is the Qualifying Offer!
The player’s union really wants to get rid of it; the owner’s don’t really care since it operates as yet another safeguard on their payrolls. This past summer the owners offered to get rid of the QO in return for an international draft … which in my mind would likely kill foreign baseball in a number of countries. The union thankfully said no thanks, so here we are.
Here’s the 14 players who got a QO:
2022 | Aaron Judge | RF | PSI Sports Management | New York Yankees | 1yr/$19M | 19 | 19 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | Jacob deGrom | SP | VC Sports | New York Mets | 5yr/$137.5M | 27.5 | 33.5 |
2022 | Xander Bogaerts | SS | Scott Boras/Boras Corporation | Boston Red Sox | 6yr/$120M | 20 | 20 |
2022 | Dansby Swanson | SS | Excel Sports Management | Atlanta Braves | 1yr/$10M | 10 | 10 |
2022 | Trea Turner | SS | CAA | Los Angeles Dodgers | 1yr/$21M | 21 | 21 |
2022 | Willson Contreras | C | ?? Unknown | Chicago Cubs | 1yr/$9.625 | 9.625 | 9.625 |
2022 | Carlos Rodon | SP | Scott Boras/Boras Corporation | San Francisco Giants | 2yr/$44M | 22 | 22.5 |
2022 | Chris Bassitt | SP | Pro Star Management | New York Mets | 1yr/$8.8M | 8.8 | 8.8 |
2022 | Brandon Nimmo | OF | CAA | New York Mets | 1yr/$7M | 7 | 7 |
2022 | Nathan Eovaldi | SP | ACES | Boston Red Sox | 4yr/$68 | 17 | 17 |
2022 | Anthony Rizzo | 1B | Sports One | New York Yankees | 2yr/$32M | 16 | 16 |
2022 | Joc Pederson | OF | Excel Sports Management | San Francisco Giants | 1yr/$6M | 6 | 6 |
2022 | Martin Perez | SP | Octagon | Texas Rangers | 1yr/$4M | 4 | 4 |
2022 | Tyler Anderson | SP | GSE | Los Angeles Dodgers | 1yr/$8M | 8 | 8 |
Notice something about this list? They’re all Big market teams! Breakdown by team:
- Yankees: 2
- Mets: 3
- Red Sox: 2
- Dodgers: 2
- Giants: 2
- Cubs: 1
- Rangers: 1
- Braves: 1
I mean … there’s not one “mid-sized” or smaller market team here. its basically a list comprised of players from the largest markets in the land. By CMSA:
- New York: 1
- Los Angeles: 2
- Chicago: 4
- San Francisco: 5
- Boston: 6
- Dallas: 7
- Atlanta 10.
That missing #3 spot? Yeah that’d be us. Washington-Baltimore CMSA is now the 3rd largest in the area, having recently overtaken Chicago.
the larger point is this: these are the sport’s biggest and wealthiest teams basically set to gain a bunch of extra picks because they happen to have a bunch of highly paid players on their rosters.
Now that being said … there are some obvious QO candidates and some guys who just got tagged in one who… are kind of a surprise. Lets categorize:
Players who will reject the QO and will get FAR more in AAV:
- Judge, DeGrom, Turner, Bogarts,
- These are all going to be major FAs this off-season, getting 30M or more a year.
Players who will reject the QO and who will get a bit more in AAV but longer term deals:
- Swanson, Rodon: probably getting 5-6 years at $22-$25M per.
- Contreras is the #1 catcher available and likely gets a 4-5 year deal at a tick above the QO.
Players who may struggle to get an AAV contract matching the $19.65M QO
- Nimmo: interestingly he’s always had solid production but is “only” on a 1yr/$7M deal at the end of his arb years. Odd. He stepped up his power this year though and MLB trade rumors is projecting a 5yr $110M deal. We’ll see. Seems farfetched.
- Eovaldi: he was decent this year, but not earth shattering while making $17M AAV. I could see him getting like a 3-4 year deal at $20M AAV.
- Rizzo: 34yrs old, had a great 2022 in a lefty-hitter’s paradise in NY, but is 1B only. I can’t imagine him doing much better than his $16M AAV contract, and needs to be careful where he goes.
- Bassitt is a serviceable mid-rotation starter with solid stuff. He’s the kind of guy you get in the 15th round of your fantasy draft and you look like a genius. He only made $8.8M this year, but seems set to get a decently sized contract right above the QO.
Players who may want to take that QO
- Pederson: he blew it up in 2022, putting in a 144 OPS+ season after not really being effective at all the last few seasons. Is this enough for a team to sign him to a multi-year deal at $20M per? Doubt it: he clearly likes SF and he should take that QO to see if he can replicate 2022, then go back out on the market unencumbered in 2023.
- Perez: he went from years of ERAs in the 4s and 5s to a 2.73 ERA season in 2022. He played for just $4M this year; he’s almost a lock to accept the QO since no other team is going to give up a pick for a guy who might regress to the mean.
- Anderson: Like Perez, he went from a 4.81 ERA to a 2.57 ERA with the Dodgers, and after making just $8M this year seems a lock to take the QO and give it another go with Los Angeles.