Tarik Skubal won his salary arbitration hearing with the Detroit Tigers on Thursday, and the two-time American League Cy Young Award winner will be paid a record $32 million this year instead of the team’s $19 million offer.
Jeanne Charles, Walt De Treux and Allen Ponak made the decision one day after listening to arguments.
“This was about Cy squared,” Skubal’s agent, Scott Boras, said in a reference to Skubal, a left-hander who turned 29 in November, winning the AL’s Cy Young honor in both 2024 and last season. “It’s an Einsteinian theory, kind of like mc-squared.”
Boras said he introduced Blake Snell’s $36.4 million average salary with the Los Angeles Dodgers as a comparison, allowable because Skubal is within a year of free-agent eligibility.
A provision in the collective bargaining agreement between Major League Baseball and the player’ union states “the arbitration panel shall, except for a player with five or more years of major league service, give particular attention, for comparative salary purposes to the contracts of players with major league service not exceeding one annual service group above the player’s annual service group.”
Boras said he told the panel there was no limit on raises.
“This was a CBA rights case,” Boras said. “When you put a platform Cy at the top of five MLS (major league service years’) market, when has that happened before? Well, Jack McDowell. He was on top for the five MLS market, ahead of (Barry) Bonds, ahead of (Ruben) Sierra. I said: ‘This is how platform fives get treated.'”
Toronto Blue Jays first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had held the record for the highest salary in an arbitration case decided by a panel, winning at $19.9 million in 2024 in a case decided by Charles, De Treux and Scott Buchheit.
Colorado Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado submitted a record request of $30 million in 2019, then agreed to a $260 million, eight-year contract without a hearing.
Juan Soto’s $31 million contract with the New York Yankees in 2024 had been the largest one-year deal for an arbitration-eligible player. David Price had held the highest negotiated salary in a one-year contract for an arbitration-eligible pitcher, a $19.75 million agreement with the Tigers in 2015.
A two-time MLB All-Star, Skubal will be eligible for free agency after the 2026 World Series. He is 54-37 with a 3.08 ERA in six MLB seasons, all of them spent with the Tigers.
Skubal was 13-6 with an AL-best 2.21 ERA in 31 starts during the 2025 season, striking out 241 batters and walking 33 in 195 1/3 innings while earning $10.5 million. His 0.891 walks plus hits per inning pitched topped the list for qualified pitchers.
After the hearing Wednesday, the Tigers agreed to a $115 million, three-year contact with left-handed pitcher Framber Valdez, a deal pending a successful physical.
Players have won the first three decisions this offseason. Right-handed pitcher Kyle Bradish was awarded $3.55 million instead of the Baltimore Orioles’ offer of $2,875,000, and catcher Yainer Diaz received $4.5 million instead of the Houston Astros’ $3 million proposal.