One year after earning a record salary through arbitration, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and the Toronto Blue Jays avoided another boardroom faceoff by agreeing to a one-year, $28.5 million deal on Thursday.
The pact is the third largest ever landed by an arbitration-eligible player, trailing only the $31 million that Juan Soto got from the New York Yankees last year and the $30 million that Shohei Ohtani received from the Los Angeles Angels in 2023.
Guerrero, 25, made $19.9 million in 2024 after the arbitration panel went with that figure over the $18.05 million that the Blue Jays had offered.
Toronto got its money’s worth, as Guerrero turned in a fourth straight All-Star season, captured his second Silver Slugger Award and finished sixth in American League MVP voting. The first baseman hit .323 with a .396 on-base percentage, a .544 slugging percentage, 30 homers and 103 RBIs in 159 games.
Through six major league seasons, all with the Blue Jays, Guerrero owns a .288/.363/.500 batting line with 160 homers and 507 RBIs in 819 games.
Thursday was the deadline for unsigned arbitration-eligible players and teams to exchange figures.
–Field Level Media
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