St. Louis Cardinals
St. Louis Cardinals: Arbitration Players and Anticipated Figures
St. Louis Cardinals

St. Louis Cardinals: Arbitration Players and Anticipated Figures

Published Jun. 30, 2017 6:28 p.m. ET

The 2016 St. Louis Cardinals off-season will begin like many before by the organization facing those players who are arbitration-eligible.

Players under team control but entering a season with no contract after a set number of years of active duty on a team are known as arbitration-eligible.  I realize this is an oversimplification of a complicated aspect of baseball but it helps to quickly dive into the St. Louis Cardinals players who are on the arbitration list.

The off-season, despite having no active baseball, is one of my favorite times of the baseball year.  I love watching teams wheel and deal and move players.  The one part of the off-season that bores me, however, is the arbitration process.  I understand the value of this for players and teams under the CBA, I just find it tiresome and something that stands in the way of trades.

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But wait, that’s not entirely fair is it?  The arbitration process helps with trades as it adds value to players or detracts values from players and helps drive the trade mentality of a team.  Okay, so I might have misjudged a little.  Please don’t burn effigies of me.  Let’s look at the St. Louis Cardinals facing arbitration this season.

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Michael Wacha is noted as having 3.062 seasons of active duty for the St. Louis Cardinals.  He completed his one-year contract in 2016 valued at $539,000.  This was cheap but the Cardinals, in all honesty, did not get too much for this money.  Let’s look at his stats:

Year Age Tm W L ERA G IP H ER HR BB SO FIP WHIP
2013 21 STL 4 1 2.78 15 64.2 52 20 5 19 65 2.92 1.098
2014 22 STL 5 6 3.20 19 107.0 95 38 6 33 94 3.17 1.196
2015 ★ 23 STL 17 7 3.38 30 181.1 162 68 19 58 153 3.87 1.213
2016 24 STL 7 7 5.09 27 138.0 159 78 15 45 114 3.91 1.478
4 Yrs 33 21 3.74 91 491.0 468 204 45 155 426 3.60 1.269
162 Game Avg. 13 8 3.74 36 193 184 80 18 61 167 3.60 1.269

Wacha is under team control until 2020.  His 2016 stats do nothing to help his arbitration case if he was hoping to make money.  That said, MLBTR predicts that Wacha could land a deal valued at $3.2MM.  This feels a touch high to me for the value but thinking of replacing his potential from the market makes me feel a little better about this figure.

Next up is Carlos Martinez who is noted as having 3.073 seasons of active duty for the St. Louis Cardinals.  He completed an outstanding year in 2016 sitting atop the Cardinals rotation.  His 2016 contract was an absolute steal at $539,000.  An absolute steal at stats like this:

Year Age Tm W L ERA G IP H ER HR BB SO FIP WHIP
2013 21 STL 2 1 5.08 21 28.1 31 16 1 9 24 3.08 1.412
2014 22 STL 2 4 4.03 57 89.1 90 40 4 36 84 3.18 1.410
2015 ★ 23 STL 14 7 3.01 31 179.2 168 60 13 63 184 3.21 1.286
2016 24 STL 16 9 3.04 31 195.1 169 66 15 70 174 3.61 1.224
4 Yrs 34 21 3.32 140 492.2 458 182 33 178 466 3.36 1.291
162 Game Avg. 11 7 3.32 46 161 150 60 11 58 152 3.36 1.291

Martinez is under team control, thankfully, until 2020.  His 2016 stats certainly help raise his value.  This all-star should see some green in arbitration, right?  MLBTR predicts that he would make a deal valued at $5.3MM.  I think, on the other hand, that the team will lock him up with an extension and avoid arbitration.

Kevin Siegrist has notched 3.116 years of service to the St. Louis Cardinals.  Siegrist is a stalwart in the Cardinals pen even though he has experienced his share of hiccups.  His 2016 contract, like Wacha and Martinez above, was at the league minimum of $539,000– yet another steal.  These are his stats:

Year Age Tm W L ERA G SV IP H ER HR BB SO FIP WHIP
2013 23 STL 3 1 0.45 45 0 39.2 17 2 1 18 50 2.29 0.882
2014 24 STL 1 4 6.82 37 0 30.1 32 23 5 16 37 4.62 1.582
2015 25 STL 7 1 2.17 81 6 74.2 53 18 4 34 90 2.91 1.165
2016 26 STL 6 3 2.77 67 3 61.2 42 19 10 26 66 4.43 1.103
4 Yrs 17 9 2.70 230 9 206.1 144 62 20 94 243 3.49 1.153
162 Game Avg. 5 3 2.70 68 3 61 43 18 6 28 72 3.49 1.153

Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 11/1/2016.More from Redbird Rants

    Siegrist will have great worth for the Cardinals in 2017 with the absence of Zach Duke. This, I think, will keep him from arbitration and will instead have him receiving an extension.  Siegrist is under team control 2020 which seems to be a trend for the Cardinals.  MLBTR predicts Kevin’s arbitration figure at $1.9MM which could be the outcome if the organization thinks he will regress.

    Next up is Seth Maness who has served the Cardinals with 3.154 years of service.  2016 was somewhat of a down year for Maness who experienced injury and then working back from this injury.  Maness, one of Mike Matheny‘s bromances (Siegrist too), was likely tired from overuse throughout Matheny’s tenure.  These are his stats:

    Year Age Tm W L ERA G SV IP H ER HR BB SO FIP WHIP
    2013 24 STL 5 2 2.32 66 1 62.0 65 16 4 13 35 3.44 1.258
    2014 25 STL 6 4 2.91 73 3 80.1 77 26 7 11 55 3.38 1.095
    2015 26 STL 4 2 4.26 76 3 63.1 77 30 7 13 46 3.78 1.421
    2016 27 STL 2 2 3.41 29 0 31.2 34 12 2 8 16 3.72 1.326
    4 Yrs 17 10 3.19 244 7 237.1 253 84 20 45 152 3.55 1.256
    162 Game Avg. 5 3 3.19 68 2 66 71 23 6 13 42 3.55 1.256

    Maness, like Siegrist, could find great worth for the 2017 Cardinals in the Duke absence.  Like all of the players listed in this article, Maness is under control until 2020.  Maness’ 2016 contract was worth more than the others listed here at $1.4M.  MLBTR predicts Maness to earn $1.6MM in arbitration.  I look for the Cardinals to go to arbitration in this case.

    Matt Adams could be great, let’s all admit, and we have witnessed some flashes of this during his 4.033 years of service.  We have also witnessed some lackluster performances.  How about 2016?

    Year Age Tm G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS
    2012 23 STL 27 86 8 21 6 0 2 13 5 24 .244 .286 .384 .669
    2013 24 STL 108 296 46 84 14 0 17 51 23 80 .284 .335 .503 .839
    2014 25 STL 142 527 55 152 34 5 15 68 26 114 .288 .321 .457 .779
    2015 26 STL 60 175 14 42 9 0 5 24 10 41 .240 .280 .377 .657
    2016 27 STL 118 297 37 74 18 0 16 54 25 81 .249 .309 .471 .780
    5 Yrs 455 1381 160 373 81 5 55 210 89 340 .270 .314 .455 .770
    162 Game Avg. 162 492 57 133 29 2 20 75 32 121 .270 .314 .455 .770

    Adams is under team control until 2019 and received $1.65M in 2016.  MLBTR predicts that he could earn $2.88MM in a deal through arbitration.  If the St. Louis Cardinals are thinking of keeping Adams in the long term (with Brandon Moss likely leaving), an extension now wouldn’t be out of the question.  I predict that they might allow arbitration in this case.

    The final name on the list of arbitration-eligible players for the Cardinals this season is Trevor Rosenthal.  At 4.058 years of service, Rosenthal enters these negotiations coming off an injured year.  Rosey lost the closing job this season which might not help his case for money.

    Year Age Tm W L ERA G SV IP H ER HR BB SO FIP WHIP
    2012 22 STL 0 2 2.78 19 0 22.2 14 7 2 7 25 3.10 0.926
    2013 23 STL 2 4 2.63 74 3 75.1 63 22 4 20 108 1.91 1.102
    2014 24 STL 2 6 3.20 72 45 70.1 57 25 2 42 87 2.99 1.408
    2015 ★ 25 STL 2 4 2.10 68 48 68.2 62 16 3 25 83 2.42 1.267
    2016 26 STL 2 4 4.46 45 14 40.1 48 20 3 29 56 3.72 1.909
    5 Yrs 8 20 2.92 278 110 277.1 244 90 14 123 359 2.67 1.323
    162 Game Avg. 2 5 2.92 68 27 68 60 22 3 30 88 2.67 1.323

    All considered, however, Rosenthal is a great arm to have in the pen.  It was rumored that the Cardinals were considering stretching him into a starter.  Will that play into the negotiations?  MLBTR predicts that Rosey could earn $6.3M (was paid $5.6M in 2016).  I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Cards avoid arbitration with Rosenthal who is under control until 2019.

    Many things could be put into motion should the Indians close out the World Series tonight.  Clocks will start clicking on free agents, qualifying offers, options, and arbitration.  Of these names, who would you offer contracts and who would you battle through arbitration?  Follow us on Twitter and let us know!

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