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The biggest bargain on every MLB team
Rich Schultz/Getty Images

The biggest bargain on every MLB team

High-priced stars usually get most of the attention, but great teams need a few bargains to enable big contracts. These players are the biggest bargains on their respective teams heading into the 2023 season.

 
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Arizona Diamondbacks: Corbin Carroll, OF

Arizona Diamondbacks: Corbin Carroll, OF
Robert Edwards / USA Today Sports Images

One of the game's truly elite prospects, Carroll made his MLB debut late last season, hitting .260-4-14 with two stolen bases in 32 games. He's on a 30/30 pac through the first two months of this season. Arizona has Carroll for the league minimum for the foreseeable future.

 
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Atlanta Braves: Spencer Strider, SP

Atlanta Braves: Spencer Strider, SP
Nathan Ray Seebeck / USA Today Sports Images

Atlanta has made it a habit of locking up their young stars long-term, as they did in the offseason with Strider when the parties agreed to a six-year, $75 million contract. Strider is guaranteed that sum, but he will make only $1 million in each of 2023 and 2024. The right-hander emerged as an ace last season with a 2.67 ERA and 202 strikeouts over 131.2 innings, and is the Vegas favorite for NL Cy Young as of early June.

 
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Baltimore Orioles: Ryan Mountcastle, 1B

Baltimore Orioles: Ryan Mountcastle, 1B
Tommy Gilligan / USA Today Sports Images

Baltimore has a well-earned reputation for not spending much money, ranking near the bottom of the league in payroll. Their young stars are making the minimum salary help, with Mountcastle leading the way. He's hit 55 home runs over the last two seasons, yet Mountcastle continues to draw the league minimum of around $700,000.

 
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Boston Red Sox: Garrett Whitlock, P

Boston Red Sox: Garrett Whitlock, P
Paul Rutherford / USA Today Sports Images

Boston is flush with talented young pitchers, none more intriguing than Whitlock. He served in a variety of roles last season, posting a 3.45 ERA with an elite 5.47 K/BB ratio over 78.1 innings before his season ended due to a hip injury. Whitlock is expected to get more opportunities to start this year and will be doing so for only $1.25 million after signing a four-year contract.

 
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Chicago Cubs: Nico Hoerner, 2B

Chicago Cubs: Nico Hoerner, 2B
John E. Sokolowski / USA Today Sports Images

A former first-round pick, Hoerner had a breakout season in 2022, hitting .281-10-55 with 20 stolen bases in 135 games. He will shift over to second base following the Dansby Swanson signing, giving the Cubs one of the best defensive middle infields in baseball. Hoerner remains relatively cheap in his fifth season, making about $2.5 million this year, but has a three-year, $35 million extension beginning next season.

 
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Chicago White Sox: Andrew Vaughn, 1B

Chicago White Sox: Andrew Vaughn, 1B
Rick Scuteri / USA Today Sports Images

The third overall pick in the 2019 draft, Vaughn continues to ascend for the White Sox. He hit .271-17-76 with a .750 OPS in 134 games last season and is replacing Jose Abreu at first base this year. The 24-year-old still draws the league minimum salary.

 
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Cincinnati Reds: Nick Lodolo, SP

Cincinnati Reds: Nick Lodolo, SP
David Kohl / USA Today Sports Images

The rebuilding Reds are full of relative bargains, but none more than Lodolo. The lefty was excellent in his rookie season, posting a 3.66 ERA and 11.4 K/9 in 103.1 innings. Unfortunately, he got off to a slow start early this season before suffering a lower leg injury.

 
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Cleveland Guardians: Triston McKenzie, SP

Cleveland Guardians: Triston McKenzie, SP
Bruce Kluckhohn / USA Today Sports Images

The penny-pinching Guardians have been as good as any franchise at developing their own talent in recent years, and McKenzie is another example. He had a breakout 2022 season with a 2.96 ERA and 190 strikeouts in 191.1 innings over 31 appearances. McKenzie isn't arbitration eligible until next year and will still draw the league minimum salary in 2023. He missed the first two months with a shoulder injury, but has returned healthy in June.

 
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Colorado Rockies: Ezequiel Tovar, SS

Colorado Rockies: Ezequiel Tovar, SS
Matt Kartozian / USA Today Sports Images

Tovar saw action in nine MLB games late last season and has progressed well as the team's starting shortstop in 2023. The shortstop hit .319-14-49 with 17 steals in only 71 games between Double- and Triple-A last season and is still only 21. He draws the league minimum salary this season.

 
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Detroit Tigers: Eric Haase, C

Detroit Tigers: Eric Haase, C
Lon Horwedel / USA Today Sports Images

The Tigers are in a rebuild under new baseball ops head Scott Harris while they wait out several bad contracts. Haase remains one of the team's biggest bargains as a late bloomer who has bashed 36 home runs over the last two seasons. He's the team's starting catcher in 2023 while making the league minimum at age 30.

 
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Houston Astros: Cristian Javier, SP

Houston Astros: Cristian Javier, SP
Troy Taormina / USA Today Sports Images

The reigning World Series champions have generally been big spenders in recent years but have also done a great job with homegrown talent. Javier is a clear example, showing elite talent in his three MLB seasons. He went 11-9 with a 2.54 ERA and 194 strikeouts in 148.2 innings last season. While Javier signed a five-year, $64 million contract recently, the budding ace will make only $3.4 million in 2023. 

 
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Kansas City Royals: Bobby Witt Jr., 3B

Kansas City Royals: Bobby Witt Jr., 3B
Jay Biggerstaff / USA Today Sports Images

Mid-market teams need young talent to compete, and the Royals have several exciting young players. Witt Jr. leads the way following a great rookie season in which he hit .254-20-80 with 30 stolen bases. The exciting youngster is set to make the league minimum again in 2023.

 
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Los Angeles Angels: Reid Detmers, SP

Los Angeles Angels: Reid Detmers, SP
Rick Scuteri / USA Today Sports Images

The Angels stars and scrubs model hasn't worked out well in recent seasons, but some homegrown talent is helping. Detmers was the team's top draft choice in 2020 and managed to make 25 starts at the major league level last season with a 3.77 ERA and nearly one strikeout per inning. He's already made a sizable signing bonus in the draft, but his regular salary will be the league minimum in 2023.

 
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Los Angeles Dodgers: Tony Gonsolin, SP

Los Angeles Dodgers: Tony Gonsolin, SP
Mark Hoffman / USA Today Sports Images

The Dodgers have been synonymous with big spending recently, but their outstanding farm system has enabled some big bargains. Gonsolin is one example of their farm system production as a former ninth-round pick who has become an ace. He went 16-1 with a 2.14 ERA over 24 starts last year, his first as an All-Star. The right-hander is in the first year of a two-year contract and will make only $3.25 million this season.

 
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Miami Marlins: Sandy Alcantara, SP

Miami Marlins: Sandy Alcantara, SP
Jim Rassol / USA Today Sports Images

Miami had a quiet offseason after several free-agent additions floundered last year. The best player on the roster is clearly defending NL Cy Young winner Sandy Alcantara, and the team has him at a bargain rate after he signed a five-year contract last year. Alcantara made $3.8 million last season, and even his raise to $6.3 million in 2023 is a tremendous value.

 
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Milwaukee Brewers: William Contreras, C

Milwaukee Brewers: William Contreras, C
Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today Sports Images

Milwaukee has exercised a modest payroll for most of its existence but has found success on that model in recent years by making excellent trades and signings. Contreras could be the next example, acquired from Atlanta in the offseason after hitting .278-20-45 in 97 games last season. The 2022 All-Star will make the league minimum this season and isn't arbitration eligible until 2025.

 
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Minnesota Twins: Joe Ryan, SP

Minnesota Twins: Joe Ryan, SP
Rick Osentoski / USA Today Sports Images

Ryan is a rare example of a prospect the Tampa Bay Rays would probably like to have back after trading him for Nelson Cruz in 2021. On the strength of his outstanding control and deceptive fastball, Ryan had a breakout 2022 season going 13-8 with a 3.55 ERA and more than one strikeout per inning over 147 innings. The 26-year-old draws the league minimum salary in 2023, and has been a Cy Young candidate through the first wo months of the season.

 
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New York Mets: Francisco Alvarez, C

New York Mets: Francisco Alvarez, C
Gregory Fisher / USA Today Sports Images

Considered by some to be the top prospect in baseball last year, Alvarez has looked the part for the Mets since he was promoted this season. He's run away with the starting catcher job, showing good power and defense. Alvarez draws the league minimum in his official rookie season.

 
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New York Yankees: Clay Holmes, RP

New York Yankees: Clay Holmes, RP
Ken Blaze / USA Today Sports Images

Holmes emerged as strong high-leverage reliever for the Yanks last season since last season. He was an All-Star in 2022, finishing the year with a 2.54 ERA and 20 saves despite missing time with injury. Holmes isn't a free agent for two more years and will make only $3.3 million this season.

 
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Oakland Athletics: Seth Brown, OF/1B

Oakland Athletics: Seth Brown, OF/1B
Tim Heitman / USA Today Sports Images

Oakland has gutted its roster as the team rebuilds and figures out its torturous stadium situation. Brown is one of the only significant power hitters on the roster, hitting 45 home runs over the last two years. The 30-year-old will still earn the league minimum salary in 2023.

 
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Philadelphia Phillies: Alec Bohm, 3B

Philadelphia Phillies: Alec Bohm, 3B
Bill Streicher / USA Today Sports Images

Philadelphia spent big in the offseason as they try to exceed last year's World Series appearance, but bargains can still be found on the roster. Former first-round pick Alec Bohm has overcome his defensive issues to be a quality player at the hot corner, hitting .280-13-72 last season with a positive WAR. Bohm still makes the league minimum, with his first crack at arbitration next year.

 
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Pittsburgh Pirates: Mitch Keller, SP

Pittsburgh Pirates: Mitch Keller, SP
Charles LeClaire / USA Today Sports Images

A former top prospect, Keller is finally coming into his own this season as Pittsburgh's ace. The right-hander led the NL with seven wins and a 5.47 K/BB ratio through early June. He's making only $2.44 million in 2023.

 
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San Diego Padres: Fernando Tatis Jr., OF/SS

San Diego Padres: Fernando Tatis Jr., OF/SS
Rick Scuteri / USA Today Sports Images

Tatis Jr. certainly wasn't a bargain last year, missing the entire year after a motorcycle accident and PEDs suspension. However, he hopes to make up for lost time this year after missing the start of the season to serve the suspension. Tatis Jr. was one of the top players in baseball in 2021, leading the league with 42 home runs. While he has a 14-year, $340 million contract, Tatis is scheduled to make only $7.7 million this season minus time and money missed in March and April for his suspension.

 
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San Francisco Giants: Logan Webb, SP

San Francisco Giants: Logan Webb, SP
Jayne Kamin-Oncea / USA Today Sports Images

Webb has quickly emerged as San Francisco's ace, going 15-9 with a 2.90 ERA in 192.1 innings last season. The groundball specialist will make only $4.6 million while leading a deep rotation in 2023, but signed a five-year, $90 million extension that begins next year.

 
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Seattle Mariners: Logan Gilbert, SP

Seattle Mariners: Logan Gilbert, SP
Peter Aiken / USA Today Sports Images

Seattle's starting rotation has become one of the league's best over the last year, in large part due to Gilbert's emergence. The right-hander went 13-6 with a 3.20 ERA in 32 starts last season, netting 185.2 innings. Gilbert won't be eligible for arbitration until 2025 and will earn the league minimum salary this year.

 
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St. Louis Cardinals: Ryan Helsley, RP

St. Louis Cardinals: Ryan Helsley, RP
D. Ross Cameron / USA Today Sports Images

Showing a sharp increase in velocity, Helsley became one of MLB's best closers in 2022. The right-hander finished the regular season with a 1.25 ERA, 19 saves, and 94 strikeouts over 64.2 innings. Helsley will be a huge bargain if he comes anywhere close to those numbers this year, making only $2.15 million.

 
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Tampa Bay Rays: Shane McClanahan, SP

Tampa Bay Rays: Shane McClanahan, SP
Dan Hamilton / USA Today Sports Images

Tampa Bay has proven to be one of baseball's most productive farm systems and has a long line of stars making the league minimum as a result. McClanahan is the best of the bunch, becoming the team's ace last year by going 12-8 with a 2.54 ERA and 194 strikeouts in 166.1 innings. The third-year pitcher will make the league minimum again this season.

 
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Texas Rangers: Adolis Garcia, CF

Texas Rangers: Adolis Garcia, CF
Tim Heitman / USA Today Sports Images

The Rangers went on a spending spree during the offseason but still have their share of bargains. Garcia qualifies after back-to-back outstanding seasons while making the league minimum. He was a 3.5 WAR player last year while hitting .250-27-101 with 25 stolen bases, and is an early MVP candidate this season.

 
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Toronto Blue Jays: Daulton Varsho, OF

Toronto Blue Jays: Daulton Varsho, OF
Gregory Fisher / USA Today Sports Images

Acquired from Arizona in the offseason, Varsho has become a full-time outfielder with plus range, power, and speed. He hit 27 home runs and 4.9 WAR player last season, and is doing well early in his time with the Jays. Varsho is earning just over $3 million this season.

 
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Washington Nationals: Keibert Ruiz, C

Washington Nationals: Keibert Ruiz, C
Reinhold Matay / USA Today Sports Images

Washington's roster is a far cry from the World Series squad of 2019, now full of veteran retreads and horrific contracts. Ruiz is an exception. One of the biggest pieces of return from the Dodgers for Max Scherzer and Trea Turner in 2021, Ruiz produced a 1.7 WAR last season after hitting .251-7-36 in 112 games and playing quality defense. His minor league track record shows much more potential, and Ruiz is early about $1.4 million after signing a long-term extension this spring.

Seth Trachtman is a fantasy sports expert and diehard Kansas City Chiefs fan. He doesn't often Tweet, but when he does, you can find him on Twitter @sethroto.

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