The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rodriguez, Recker go with 1-year contracts

Reliever, catcher re-sign rather than seek arbitratio­n.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

The Braves signed catcher Anthony Recker and lefthanded reliever Paco Rodriguez to one-year contracts Friday, avoiding arbitratio­n with each, while reliever Chris Withrow became a non-tendered free agent when he wasn’t offered arbitratio­n.

Recker got an $800,000 contract, and Rodriguez signed for $637,500, each taking less than their projected arbitratio­n salaries.

In the case of Rodriguez, who missed the 2016 season recovering from elbow surgery, he was projected to get $900,000 through arbitratio­n, and it seemed likely the Braves would’ve non-tendered him rather than go through the arbitratio­n process and potentiall­y pay that much.

The team tendered contracts to its three other remaining arbitratio­n-eligible players — center fielder Ender Inciarte and relievers Arodys Vizcaino and lefty Ian Krol — and will swap arbitratio­n figures with them next month unless the sides reach a deal before then.

Withrow had a 3.58 ERA in 46 appearance­s for the Braves in 2016 and was solid for much of the season, but he pitched in only seven games after Aug. 4 and missed the final two weeks with soreness in his surgically repaired elbow. He was projected to make $1 million in arbitratio­n according to MLB Trade Rumors.com.

Rodriguez, 25, underwent Tommy John surgery in September 2015 and last pitched May 29, 2015, two months before he was traded by the Dodgers to the Braves. He was impressive before elbow problems, posting a 2.53 ERA in 124 appearance­s over parts of four seasons with the Dodgers and limited left-handed batters to a .174 batting average. He had a 2.32 ERA in 76 appearance­s in 2013.

The other significan­t developmen­t for the Braves was the Recker signing. The Braves have looked for a left-handed hitting catcher this offseason to pair with Tyler Flowers, but general manager John Coppolella said entering the offseason the team would be comfortabl­e bringing back right-hand hitter Recker to team with Flowers if they didn’t find a catcher with a reasonable price tag via trade or free agency.

The Recker deal might signal the Braves plan to go with Flowers and him, but they likely will keep all options open.

Among other catchers they considered this offseason, defensive specialist Jason Castro signed a three-year, $24.5 million deal with Minnesota, and Brian McCann was traded to the Astros, who will pay more of McCann’s remaining $34 million salary over two years than the Braves were comfortabl­e paying.

The Braves earlier signed arbitratio­n-eligible former Diamondbac­ks backup catcher Tuffy Gosewisch to a split major/minor league contract that will pay $635,000 at the big-league level. He’s expected to begin the season at Triple-A Gwinnett and give the Braves a major league-ready backup option if needed.

Recker got a major league deal, not a split contract. His $800,000 salary is 20 percent below what MLB Trade Rumors projected he’d get in arbitratio­n ($1 million).

Recker, 33, surpassed expectatio­ns in 2016 when the former Mets backup hit a career-best .278 with 10 extra-base hits (two home runs) in 33 games for the Braves after getting called up from Triple-A at the AllStar break when Flowers went on the disabled list for a broken thumb. The Braves had purchased Recker in May from the Indians, for whom he toiled in Triple-A to start the season.

He had a .394 OBP and .828 OPS in 112 plate appearance­s for the Braves and wound up sharing the catching duties with Flowers late in the season, after A.J. Pierzynski struggled mightily and eventually went on the DL twice, fading from the picture late in the season.

Recker has just a .200 average with 18 homers and .635 OPS in 200 games (623 plate appearance­s) over parts of six major league seasons with the Athletics, Mets and Braves, but he made strides on offense and defense last season, and the Braves liked how he worked with pitchers.

‘I’m telling our staff that if all we do up there (at the winter meetings) is watch John Schuerholz get named to the Hall of Fame, that’ll be fine.’

 ??  ?? Paco Rodriguez is coming off Tommy John surgery.
Paco Rodriguez is coming off Tommy John surgery.

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