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Ohtani, Bellinger headline 169-player MLB free agent class

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NEW YORK (AP) — Two-way star Shohei Ohtani was among seven players who received $20,325,000 qualifying offers from their former teams Monday as the free agent market opened.

All seven players are likely to turn down the offers by the Nov. 14 deadline to accept in favor of multiyear contracts on the open market.

In addition to the Los Angeles Angels’ offer to Ohtani, the others to receive qualifying offers were outfielder Cody Bellinger (Chicago Cubs), pitchers Josh Hader and Blake Snell (San Diego), Aaron Nola (Philadelphia), Sonny Gray (Minnesota) and third baseman Matt Chapman (Toronto).

By making a qualifying offer — the average of the top 125 contracts by average annual value — a team would receive an additional selection in next July’s amateur draft if a player signs elsewhere before then. A team signing the player could lose one or two draft picks.

In a sign of the relative weakness of the free agent class, half as many players received qualifying offers as last year. Qualifying offers began after the 2012 season, and 10 of 124 offers have been accepted.

FOLLOW THE MONEY: MLB player salaries and payrolls for every major league team

Ohtani heads a free agent class that also includes starting pitchers Eduardo Rodriguez and Jordan Montgomery, along with Nola, Snell, Gray and Japanese star Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who is not attached to draft-pick compensation.

Among the 169 players who became free agents, Milwaukee’s Colin Rea was the only one to re-sign during the five-day period for exclusive negotiations with a former club. He agreed to a $4.5 million, one-year contract.

On the last day to resolve contract options, Atlanta exercised a $20 million option on right-hander Charlie Morton, who went 14-12 with a 3.64 ERA in 30 starts and turns 40 on Nov. 12. The Braves declined options on outfielder Eddie Rosario ($9 million) and right-handers Collin McHugh ($6 million) and Kirby Yates ($5.75 million). Rosario gets a $1 million buyout and Yates $1.25 million.

Mark Canha’s $11.5 million option for 2024 was exercised by Detroit, two days after the outfielder was acquired from the Milwaukee Brewers for minor league pitcher Blake Holub. Milwaukee could have paid a $2 million buyout and allowed Canha to become a free agent.

Right-hander Michael Wacha went free after San Diego declined to exercise $16.5 million options for 2024 and ’25 and the pitcher turned down player options at $6.5 million for 2024 and $6 million for each of the following two years.

Miami declined options on right-handers Johnny Cueto ($10.5 million) and Matt Barnes ($9 million). Cueto gets a $2.5 million buyout and Barnes $2.75 million.

Other players whose options were exercised were San Francisco right-hander Alex Cobb ($10 million), Mets left-hander Brooks Raley ($6.5 million) and Los Angeles Dodgers right-hander Blake Treinen ($1 million).

Tigers shortstop Javier Báez, Giants outfielder Michael Conforto and right-hander Ross Stripling, Miami first baseman Josh Bell and Cubs pitcher Drew Smyly decided not to opt out.

Báez kept salaries of $25 million in each of the next two seasons and $24 million apiece in 2026 and ’27 after slumping to a .222 average, nine homers and 59 RBIs in his second season with Detroit.

Conforto retained an $18 million salary for next season after hitting .232 with 15 homers and 58 RBIs, and Bell kept a $16.5 million salary after batting .247 with 22 homers and 75 RBI for Cleveland and the Marlins, who acquired him on Aug. 1. Stripling kept a $12.5 million salary after going 0-5 with a 5.36 ERA in 11 starts and 11 relief appearances.

Smyly kept a $10.5 million salary. He went 11-11 with a 5.00 ERA in 41 appearances last season, including 23 starts.

Mets right-hander Adam Ottavino declined a $6.75 million player option. He was 1-7 with a 3.21 ERA in 66 relief appearances.

Arizona Diamondbacks (4): Lourdes Gurriel, Evan Longoria, Mark Melancon, Tommy Pham 

Atlanta Braves (6): Jesse Chavez, Brad Hand, Collin McHugh, Kevin Pillar, Eddie Rosario, Kirby Yates 

Baltimore Orioles (5): Jack Flaherty, Adam Frazier, Shintaro Fujinami, Kyle Gibson, Aaron Hicks 

Boston Red Sox (6): Adam Duvall, Corey Kluber, Adalberto Mondesí, James Paxton, Joely Rodríguez. Justin Turner 

Chicago Cubs (7): Cody Bellinger, Brad Boxberger, Jeimer Candelario, Tyler Duffey, Michael Fulmer, Shane Greene, Marcus Stroman 

Chicago White Sox (7): Tim Anderson, Elvis Andrus, Mike Clevinger, Yasmani Grandal, Liam Hendriks, Bryan Shaw, José Ureña 

Cincinnati Reds (4): Harrison Bader, Curt Casali, Buck Farmer, Joey Votto 

Cleveland Guardians (3): Kole Calhoun, Lucas Giolito, Reynaldo López 

Colorado Rockies (3): Chase Anderson, Chris Flexen, Brent Suter 

Detroit Tigers (4): Matt Boyd, Miguel Cabrera, José Cisnero, Eduardo Rodríguez 

Houston Astros (5): Michael Brantley, Martín Maldonado, Phil Maton, Héctor Neris, Ryne Stanek 

Kansas City Royals (3): Matt M. Duffy, Zack Greinke, Brad Keller 

Los Angeles Angels (7): C.J. Cron, Eduardo Escobar, Randal Grichuk, Aaron Loup, Mike Moustakas, Shohei Ohtani, Giovanny Urshela 

Los Angeles Dodgers (16): Ryan Brasier, Kiké Hernández, Jason Heyward, Daniel Hudson, Joe Kelly, Clayton Kershaw, Lance Lynn, Jake Marisnick, J.D. Martinez, Shelby Miller, Jimmy Nelson, David Peralta, Alex Reyes, Amed Rosario, Julio Urías, Kolten Wong 

Miami Marlins (6): Matt Barnes, Johnny Cueto, Yulieski Gurriel, David Robertson, Jorge Soler, Joey Wendle 

Milwaukee Brewers (9): Víctor Caratini, Andrew Chafin, Josh Donaldson, Wade Miley, Colin Rea, Darin Ruf, Carlos Santana, Jesse Winker, Justin Wilson 

Minnesota Twins (8): Joey Gallo, Sonny Gray, Dallas Keuchel, Kenta Maeda, Tyler Mahle, Emilio Pagán, Donovan Solano, Michael A. Taylor 

New York Mets (2): Carlos Carrasco, Adam Ottavino 

New York Yankees (7): Isiah Kiner-Falefa, Zach McAllister, Keynan Middleton, Frankie Montas, Wandy Peralta, Luis Severino, Luke Weaver 

Oakland A’s (3): Tony Kemp, Trevor May, Drew Rucinski 

Philadelphia Phillies (4): Rhys Hoskins, Craig Kimbrel, Michael Lorenzen, Aaron Nola 

Pittsburgh Pirates (3): Jarlín García, Andrew McCutchen, Vincent Velasquez 

St. Louis Cardinals (1): Drew VerHagen  

San Diego Padres (12): Ji-Man Choi, Garrett Cooper, Luis Am. García, Josh Hader, Rich Hill, Seth Lugo, Nick Martinez, Drew Pomeranz, Jurickson Profar, Gary Sánchez, Blake Snell, Michael Wacha 

San Francisco Giants (8): Scott Alexander, John Brebbia, Brandon Crawford, Jake Junis, Sean Manaea, Joc Pederson, Roberto Pérez, Alex Wood 

Seattle Mariners (3): Teoscar Hernández, Dominic Leone, Tom Murphy 

Tampa Bay Rays (3): Chris Devenski, Jacob Diekman, Robert Stephenson 

Texas Rangers (12): Aroldis Chapman, Mitch Garver, Robbie Grossman, Austin Hedges, Travis Jankowski, Ian Kennedy, Brad Miller, Jordan Montgomery, Jake Odorizzi, Martín Pérez, Will M. Smith, Chris Stratton 

Toronto Blue Jays (7): Brandon Belt, Matt Chapman, Jordan Hicks, Jay Jackson, Kevin Kiermaier, Whit Merrifield, Hyun-Jin Ryu 

Washington Nationals (1): C.J. Edwards 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY