Major-league baseball teams operate on an uneven playing field. Some have a great deal of money to work with, while others have relatively little. With their new stadium, the Twins have moved into the upper echelon of team payrolls, but they still operate on a somewhat restricted budget that keeps them from being able to retain all of the free agents they'd like to.
Fortunately, baseball has a system in place to soften the blow for clubs losing valuable contributors to free agency. If a player amasses statistics sufficient to qualify him for Type A or Type B status, he can be offered arbitration that -- if declined -- puts his erstwhile employer in line for draft pick compensation once he signs with a new team.
The Twins have a slew of players with expiring contracts this year, and a number of those players qualify as Type A or Type B free agents. Here's the breakdown:
TYPE A: Matt Guerrier, Carl Pavano
TYPE B: Jesse Crain, Brian Fuentes, Orlando Hudson, Jon Rauch
Acquiring additional high draft picks is key for the Twins, who have done an excellent job of maximizing the value of their top selections in recent years. Their first-rounders from 2007 through 2009 -- Ben Revere, Aaron Hicks and Kyle Gibson, respectively -- arguably rank as the organization's top three prospects. Revere and Gibson could make an impact as soon as next year.
But offering arbitration in these situations can be a gamble. When the player is a marquee free agent in the vein of Carl Crawford or Cliff Lee the decision is a no-brainer, but in some cases a player will opt to accept the guaranteed one-year contract rather than testing the open market. With several of the players listed above, offering arbitration is a risk the Twins cannot afford.
Guerrier is one good example. He's a Type A free agent, so if he declined arbitration and signed with another team the Twins would get back two high draft picks, including a possible first-rounder. However, if offered arbitration Guerrier would almost certainly accept it, knowing that in spite of his quality work over the past several years he'd have a hard time finding a suitor, given that the team signing him would have to relinquish a draft pick. If he accepted arbitration, Guerrier would stand to make around $5 million next year -- a price the Twins probably cannot afford with their current commitments.