[Note] O's non-tender Scott but leave door op
As expected, the Orioles have non-tendered Luke Scott on Monday,
opting against offering a contract to the outfielder --
who is coming off season-ending surgery --
but not completely closing the book on his return.
The 33-year-old Scott, who would have been eligible for free agency
after the 2012 season, instead immediately becomes a free agent.
"He's had some good years for the club," Dan Duquette, executive vice
president of baseball operations, said of Scott, who was the team's MVP
in 2010. "We'd like to see what the market is for him. We would like to
keep the door open on that."
Scott, who has said that he would like to remain in Baltimore,
underwent surgery in late July to repair SLAP and posterior tears
in his right shoulder. The procedure, combined with the fact that
he made $6.4 million last season, made him a prime candidate to be
non-tendered, thus Monday's announcement is hardly a shock.
After his career year in 2010, Scott was plagued by shoulder pain --
a situation believed to have begun in camp --
and never looked comfortable at the plate this past season.
In 64 games he batted .220 with nine homers, 22 RBIs and a .703 OPS.
There's a chance the Orioles could work out a deal to keep Scott at a
lesser rate, depending on how his rehab progresses and what other
offseason moves the organization makes.
According to baseball's Basic Agreement, when teams tender contracts,
they can't cut any more than 20 percent of what a player earned in
salary and performance bonuses the previous season, or 30 percent
of those figures during the past two seasons. Non-tendered players,
however, can be re-signed by their teams at larger cuts.
In addition to Scott, the Orioles also declined to offer contracts
to pitchers Jo-Jo Reyes and Willie Eyre before Monday's midnight
ET deadline. Eyre was designated for assignment last week to make
room for Dana Eveland on the team's 40-man roster. Monday's moves
give the Orioles 38 players on the 40-man roster and it means they
will tender a contract to Brad Bergesen, who was a potential non-tender
candidate, along with the rest of their arbitration-eligible players.
Reyes was claimed on waivers from Toronto in August, and the lefty
pitched to a 6.16 ERA in nine games (five starts) for Baltimore.
While originally acquired to add depth, the 27-year-old Reyes --
who was estimated to get a contract around $1.5 million in 2012 --
wasn't overly impressive, and the Orioles will look to find more
value through free agency or trade.
A former fourth-round pick in the 2004 Draft, Bergesen is "Super Two"
eligible, meaning -- based on previous service time --
he earns a fourth year of salary arbitration instead of the usual
three. While Bergesen made the league minimum in 2011, he could make
over $1 million in arbitration given his time as both a starter and
reliever. Bergesen posted a 5.70 ERA in 34 games for the Orioles in
2011, including 12 starts, and ended the year 2-7.
The team tendered contracts to its other six arbitration-eligible
players: outfielder Adam Jones, infielder Robert Andino and pitchers
Eveland, Jeremy Guthrie, Jim Johnson and Darren O'Day.
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