Alex Call 2026 salary arbitration preview

6 days ago 2

Three of the four Dodgers eligible for salary arbitration this offseason are relief pitchers, with outfielder Alex Call the outlier as the only position player in the bunch.

With two years, 161 days of major league service time, Call is eligible for salary arbitration for the first time as a Super Two player. That distinction is reserved for the top 22 percent in service time among players with at least two years but not yet three years of service. The cutoff this year for Super Two status was two years, 140 days of service time.

Advertisement

The Dodgers acquired Call from the Nationals at the July 31 trade deadline, and he hit .247/.333/.384 with four doubles, two home runs, and a 103 wRC+ in his 85 plate appearances with the Dodgers, starting 12 games and playing in reserve in 26 others. Call was active all postseason and had four hits in 11 at-bats plus three walks and a hit by pitch, for a tidy .533 on-base percentage.

On the season, Call hit .267/.361/.385 with five home runs and a 113 wRC+ in 110 games, and in parts of four seasons with the Guardians, Nationals, and Dodgers Call is a .242/.342/.371 hitter with a 102 wRC+.

Let’s see how that compares with other outfielders with similar service time to go through salary arbitration recently, with the help of MLB Trade Rumors and their excellent tracking of such transactions, going back several years.

Player

Year

PA

HR

BA/OBP/SLG

wRC+

bWAR

fWAR

Salary

Alex Call

2026

1,005

21

.242/.341/.371

102

4.4

3.2

TBD

Jarren Duran

2025

1,432

34

.272.326/.457

114

10.0

8.9

$3,750,000

Mike Yastrzemski

2022

1,168

56

.255/.336/.500

121

7.7

6.5

$3,700,000

Hunter Renfroe

2020

1,450

89

.235/.294/.494

105

5.9

4.8

$3,300,000

Daulton Varsho

2023

1,022

41

.234/.306/.432

101

6.6

6.2

$3,050,000

Taylor Ward

2023

1,098

38

.256/.333/.431

113

3.1

3.9

$2,750,000

MJ Melendez

2025

1,587

51

.221/.303/.397

92

-0.8

-0.5

$2,650,000

David Dahl

2020

921

38

.297/.346/.521

112

2.4

4.0

$2,475,000

Jarred Kelenic

2025

1,423

47

.213/.284/.379

86

0.7

1.4

$2,300,000

Jesús Sánchez

2024

1,025

41

.234/.305/.434

98

2.8

2.5

$2,100,000

Anthony Santander

2021

709

32

.252/.292/.467

96

2.8

1.4

$2,100,000

JaCoby Jones

2020

982

25

.211/.276/.369

70

1.0

0.5

$1,575,000

Mauricio Dubón

2023

740

18

.244/.287/.366

78

1.8

1.5

$1,400,000

Austin Slater

2021

648

14

.258/.346/.388

101

0.1

1.8

$1,150,000

Kyle Garlick

2023

345

17

.229/.281/.439

96

0.1

0.3

$750,000

It’s difficult finding perfectly comparable players, and this group of Super Two players include some outliers. Jarren Duran and Mike Yastrzemski were coming off career years heading into arbitration for the first time. Duran and David Dahl were All-Stars. Daulton Varsho was (and is) an excellent outfielder and also occasionally caught in those early years. Hunter Renfroe averaged over 28 home runs in his first three full seasons. Taylor Ward had a better platform year with 23 home runs and a 136 wRC+ in 2022.

Advertisement

Anthony Santander has similar career numbers to Call, making that $2.1 million from five years ago look like a decent comp. But in 2019, Santander hit 20 home runs in a nearly full season followed up by 11 home runs and a 130 wRC+ in the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign heading into his arbitration.

Call has been quite clearly more productive than MJ Melendez and Jarred Kelenic were to this point in their careers, but both had more than double the home runs hit by Call to date. It’s hard to know how much playing time weighs, but Melendez had to this point a full season’s worth of plate appearances more than Call, while Kelenic batted 41.6 percent more than Call.

JaCoby Jones through 2019 had nearly the same plate appearances and home runs as Call, with Call outperforming him at the plate and in Wins Above Replacement rather handily. To me, that makes the $1.575 million Jones earned in 2020 the floor for Call in 2026, plus whatever inflation adjustment might be needed.

Call was projected to make $1.5 million in 2026 by MLB Trade Rumors, while Cot’s Baseball Contract had the outfielder at $1.4 million. I’ll guess that Call exceeds that and surpasses Jones as well at $1.75 million.

Read Entire Article