As part of the mentor program, I was asked a handful of questions. One of them was a question about a 4th year catcher, heading into his final arbitration season. Question is, sign him long term or arbitrate him, which is a question I always struggle to answer properly, so much depends on the team and world's personal situation, so I try to make it a world neutral answer, but I've never had a good feel for what a guy is exactly worth. So I figured I'd turn to the experts on the forum and see what they suggest, not only to help the person who came to me looking for advice, but to gain a little knowledge myself that I can perhaps pass along someday:
http://whatifsports.com/HBD/Pages/Popups/PlayerProfile.aspx?pid=4040637
Above is the player in question.
81 overall, so he'd be a Type A. PC is 88, arm strength is 80, arm accuracy is 66. Very solid defensively, but not off the charts due to the slightly eratic arm.
At the plate, he's got great contact and eye (81/88 respectively) mediocre power 57, and OK splits (61/61). 51 speed
His durabiltiy and health are both ultra high (98/99) so he could be counted on to go every day.
thru his first 5 seasons he's OPSed .729 with a .350 OBP.
He's asking for $7.4 mil a year for 4 years to sign a LTC.
Option 1, you sign him now to that deal (makeup is high enough that he'll always be willing to sign an extension the last season of his contract and not hit the FA market)
Option 2, you take him to arbitration, let him hit FA as a Type A and see if perhaps his Type A status keeps him unsigned and perhaps drives down his price a few days into free agency.
For the contract experts out there, what kind of price do you think he'd command on the FA market? Would he go above his asking pice in the average world? Would his type A status keep him from getting signed right away as teams don't want to pay a high price and lose a draft pick? Its an NL team who could take advantage of a defensively challenged catcher w/ low durability but great bat to use as a pinch hitter and late game sub when the game was out of reach.