November 22, 2024
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Another bad news hits the Miami Marlins: The head coach of the Miami Marlins shed tears as four of his star players made a final decision to terminate their huge contracts.

The Miami Marlins have received more unfavorable news: Four of their key players have decided to end their enormous contracts, causing the head coach to cry.

In a bid to win two years in a row, two-time batting champion Luis Arraez was defeated by the Miami Marlins on Wednesday in salary arbitration.

Arraez requested $12 million, but the team offered him $10.6 million instead. After hearing arguments the day before, Keith Greenberg, Stephen Raymond, and Richard McNeill made the ruling.

After hitting.316 with eight home runs and 49 RBIs to win the AL batting title for Minnesota in 2022, Arraez was moved to Miami in January 2023 and prevailed in arbitration when a tribunal decided to grant his $6.1 million request over the Marlins’ $5 million offer.

With a.354 average, 10 home runs, and 69 RBIs, he set career highs to win the NL hitting title last year.

Jason Adam, a reliever for Tampa Bay, lost to the Rays for a second consecutive year when a panel decided to accept the team’s $2.7 million offer instead of his $3.25 million request on Tuesday.

With three cases still pending, the players lead 7-5. The cases involve Alec Bohm of Philadelphia ($4 million vs. $3.4 million), Harold Ramírez of Tampa Bay ($4.3 million vs. $3.8 million), and Tanner Scott of Miami ($5.7 million vs. $5.15 million), a left-hander. .

For the second year in a row, Ramirez attended a hearing.After hearing arguments on Wednesday, Chris Cameron, Allen Ponak, and Scott Buchheit are scheduled to make a decision on Thursday…

After winning last year at $2.2 million after the team made a $1.9 million offer, Ramírez went on to record career highs with a.313 average, 12 home runs, and 68 RBIs. .

Ryan O’Hearn, an outfielder and first baseman for the Baltimore Orioles, and the team decided to sign a $3.5 million, one-year contract on Wednesday, avoiding an arbitration hearing. When the teams exchanged proposed salaries last month, the accord fell between O’Hearn’s $3.8 million and the Orioles’ $3.2 million. A $7.5 million team option for 2025 is part of the deal; if the player plays in 120 or 150 games this season, the option price will increase by $500,000.

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