I know this is confusing, and there may be some holes in the rules that will require revision, but here is what we are working with:
Article 1 Section 3: Immediately after the inaugural draft, owning teams are able to, but are not obligated to, sign each eligible draftee to a contract extension as per the CONTRACT RULES established in Article IX below.
(a) Cot’s Baseball contracts will be used for determining a player’s term of service, rounded up, for the purposes of offering contract extensions after the inaugural draft (
https://legacy.baseballprospectus.com/c ... tion/cots/).
(b) Draftees must have three or more years of service time in order to be eligible for a contract extension.
(c) Contract extensions take effect prior to the start of season 1 and count toward the inaugural salary cap.
You need to make to extend or not to extend draftees with 3 or more years of service time. If the player has 5 or more years of service time he becomes a free agent if you do not extend. If the player has 1-4 years of service time you can choose not to extend and will still exercise control over the player for his remaining years of service.
Article IX. Section 6 Any player with an expiring contract that has less than 6 years of service time, but makes more than the salary scale above can be renewed for another year at the same salary. Players with more than 6 years of service time and an expiring contract are eligible for free agency.
I have not specified a deadline for signing contract extensions or cutting player under team control, but this rule implies a deadline of Nov. 30th. I would say that any player with 6+ years of service time who is not offered a contract extension at this time automatically becomes a Free Agent, and any player that is not specifically cut or resigned by this date is automatically in arbitration.
The issue Randy is raising about timing is a good one, as it would be possible to cut a player with the full knowledge of how they performed during the season. This is a big advantage if the player suffers a career ending injury. I understand the limitation and am open to discussion of moving the decision date back, perhaps to the mid-season Supplemental Free Agent signing period? While we would still have a half season of information to act on, it would increase the difficulty of the decision making process. Thoughts?
Paul_Long71 wrote:
so am I right that the options for me with Kris Bryant (5 years of service, $6.91M) are:
1. Sign him to a 5 or more year deal at 6.91 per year (YES as far as 5 or more years, but money is determined by the average of the top 25% of players salaries at the same PRIMARY position, or $6.91M, whichever is higher?).
2. release him after this year (YES)
3. go to arbitration and either get him for $4mil or his next year's SOM salary (whichever is higher) (YES)
My answers are above merely to see if I have a clue as to what's going on.
Madal is correct. My intent in having different arb rules for 5th year players versus 3-4 year players was to force GMs to make a tough choice between "buying out" the arb years of a promising young player on the cheap for four more years, or waiting for the last year before free agency and potentially paying a steep price. Since the players cannot negotiate their contracts, I included this rule to model some level of negotiation into the game.
Take Vlad Guerrero Jr. who was signed for $950,000. He will be resigned for $950,000 next year (because his SOM draft salary is higher than the league minimum of $600,00 for a year 2 player). In year 3 he will again be resigned for $950,000 (higher than the league minimum of $700,000). Now it gets challenging. In year 4 Vlad is eligible for arbitration, meaning that he can be resigned for $2 mil for one year (the league minimum for a 4 year player) or for the SOM value of his card that year. Let's assume Vlad has a monster year and you are pretty sure he has a $9 card coming out. What do you do? Take him to arbitration? Probably not or you will be paying through the nose. How about a contract extension? At least you can lock him up for four more years at a price that puts his salary in the top half of players rather than the HOF salary he's likely to win in arbitration. The cost? You will lose him to Free Agency after four years.
However, if Vlad has a career ending injury at any time over these three years, you could cut him.
I hope this helps.