Arrieta and Davis have until Nov. 16, to either accept or decline the qualifying offer from the Cubs. Obviously if they accept, they'll be under contract for the 2018 season at the $17.4 million salary. If not, they'll be made available for every team in MLB. Anyway, the chances of Arrieta and Davis accepting the offers are slim to no chance in hell. Well, more so in the case of Arrieta, considering he's one of the two best starting pitchers available this offseason. Davis, 32-years-old, won't get more than the $17.4 million per year on any deal he signs, so there's maybe a slight chance he accepts. However, he'll most likely seek out some long-term security. For reference, the biggest contracts for closers are:
- Aroldis Chapman: 5 years, $86 million
- Kenley Jansen: 5 years, $80 million
- Mark Melancon: 4 years, $62 million
- If the free agent signs an offer worth more than $50 million of total value AND the team he came from receives revenue sharing, that team will get a compensatory draft pick after the first round ends. If a team receives revenue sharing but the deal is worth less than $50 million, that picks comes after Competitive Balance Round B (which occurs directly after the second round).
- If the team that loses a free agent after extending a qualifying offer pays the luxury tax, their compensation pick will come after the fourth round is over. If they didn’t, and also didn’t receive revenue sharing, that pick will come after Competitive Balance Round B.
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