On the Coming Deluge of Non-Tenders
As many readers have likely deduced from some of the early offseason transactions and the flurry of cuts made to scouting, player development, and other parts of baseball ops, owners are tightening their belts after a gate-less season and the repercussions are diffusing across the industry. If these early moves — like Brad Hand’s $10 million option being declined, and no team picking him up on waivers — are indications of how teams are going to behave this offseason, then this will, among other things, modulate some of the already-changing, pre-COVID shifts in the thinking surrounding payroll allocation and roster construction, which was already cutting deeper into the bottom of rosters.
I’d like to specifically talk about how I think the COVID-19 financial ripples will impact the way teams approach non-tendering players this offseason. It’s logical to assume that teams will be apt to non-tender players more often this year than ever before because of financial fallout from the pandemic, but based on recent trends, the game was perhaps likely to see a record number of non-tenders anyway. Here are the past 12 years of league-wide non-tender totals:
Year | Number of Non-Tenders |
---|---|
2008 | 35 |
2009 | 39 |
2010 | 52 |
2011 | 29 |
2012 | 37 |
2013 | 43 |
2014 | 33 |
2015 | 36 |
2016 | 35 |
2017 | 25 |
2018 | 41 |
2019 | 53 |