Luis Arraez Brad Rempel-USA TODAY Sports

Newly acquired infielder Luis Arraez won an arbitration hearing against the Marlins, reports Mark Feinsand of MLB.com. The MVP Sports Group client will be paid $6.1M rather than the $5M figure originally submitted by his now-former team, the Twins.

Miami acquired Arraez, 25, in the trade that sent right-hander Pablo Lopez, top prospect Jose Salas and minor league outfielder Byron Chourio to Minnesota last month. His win in arbitration comes on the heels of a .316/.375/.420 batting line that netted him an American League batting title in 2022. Arraez notched career-highs in games played (144), plate appearances (603), doubles (31) and homers (8) this past season.

All of that surely factored in to his win over his new team, and he’ll now receive a 187% raise over last year’s $2.125M salary. This was the infielder’s second trip through arbitration as a Super Two player, and he’ll be arbitration-eligible two more times before reaching free agency after the 2025 season.

The Marlins acquired Arraez in something of a high-risk gambit, hoping that his improved offense will offset the inherent defensive downgrade of swapping him in at second base and moving Jazz Chisholm Jr. to center field. That’s not to suggest Chisholm is incapable of being a solid center fielder — he certainly has the tools and athleticism to handle the position — but he’s been a plus defender at second base in his career while Arraez has been below-average. Chisholm will now have to learn a new position on the fly. It’s a move that carries risk, but there’s no denying that Miami’s lineup looks deeper with Arraez hitting at or near the top than it did previously.

With Arraez’s salary now set, the Marlins project for a payroll in the roughly $103M range, per Roster Resource. That still has a bit of room to change even without further additions, as the Fish still have two pending arbitration cases. Utilityman Jon Berti and left-hander Jesus Luzardo both exchanged figures with the club. Berti filed a $2.3M figure to the team’s $1.9M submission, while Luzardo came in at $2.45M to the Marlins’ $2.1M. Those are trivial sums to any team in the grand scheme of things, but as we’ve explored at MLBTR in the past, the battle over those sums is more about managing salaries years down the road — even for future classes of players, as arbitration is a precedent-based system — rather than present-day savings.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Ravens think they found a 'shutdown' CB late in first round of 2024 NFL Draft
Winners and losers from Day 1 of the 2024 NFL Draft
Chiefs trade up to No. 28, draft WR with record-setting speed
Cowboys bolster offensive line with Big 12 pick at No. 29
Cardinals shore up defensive line with No. 27 pick
Watch: Falcons TE Kyle Pitts ‘shocked’ by team drafting QB Michael Penix Jr.
Jaguars give Trevor Lawrence another weapon with No. 23 pick
Dolphins shore up defensive side of the ball with No. 21 pick
Joel Embiid's career high keeps 76ers alive in series vs. Knicks
Hurricanes beat Islanders, 3-2, to take a 3-0 series lead
Bengals hope to bolster protection for Joe Burrow with No. 18 pick
Seahawks take disruptive DT with No. 16 pick in 2024 NFL Draft
Broncos make a needed, but surprising, selection with No. 12 pick
Bears are giving Caleb Williams one of NFL's best WR groups
Dodgers get more bad news on pitching depth
Raiders select versatile pass-catcher with No. 13 pick in draft
Falcons make awful draft decision with No. 8 overall pick
Jets draft protection for Aaron Rodgers with No. 11 pick
Vikings trade up to select new franchise QB with No. 10 pick
Giants draft marquee weapon for Daniel Jones with No. 6 pick