Tarik Skubal won his arbitration case against the Detroit Tigers on Feb. 5, earning a record salary of $32 million after the Tigers requested a 2026 salary of $19 million.
Skubal’s victory after a hearing before a three-person panel the day before sets him up for a final year in Detroit before the two-time reigning Cy Young Award winner is expected to receive a record haul in free agency.
Before hitting the market, though, he earned a landmark victory over his team.
The $13 million gap between team and player was a record in salary arbitration, and Skubal’s victory was a record for a player who went to a hearing, topping Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s $19.9 million award in 2024. It’s also the single highest one-year salary for an arbitration-eligible player, edging Juan Soto’s $31 million one-year pact with the Yankees in 2024.
1 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$765,000,000: Juan Soto, New York Mets (2025-39)
1 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$765,000,000: Juan Soto, New York Mets (2025-39)
2 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$700,000,000: Shohei Ohtani, Los Angeles Dodgers (2024-33)
3 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$500,000,000: Vladimir Guerrero, Jr., Toronto Blue Jays (2026-39)
4 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$426.5 million: Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels (2019-2030)* includes extension
5 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$365 million: Mookie Betts, Los Angeles Dodgers (2020-32)
6 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$360 million: Aaron Judge, New York Yankees (2023-2031)
7 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$350 million: Manny Machado, San Diego Padres (2023-33)
8 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$341 million: Francisco Lindor, New York Mets (2022-31)
9 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$340 million: Fernando Tatis Jr., San Diego Padres (2021-34)
10 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$330,000,000: Bryce Harper, Philadelphia Phillies (2019-31)
11 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$325 million: Giancarlo Stanton, Miami Marlins (2015-2027) – traded to New York Yankees in 2017
$210 million: Max Scherzer, Washington Nationals (2015-2021)
36 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$209.3 million: Julio Rodriguez, Seattle Mariners (2023-34)
37 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$206.5 million: Zack Greinke, Arizona Diamondbacks (2016-2021) – traded to Houston Astros in 2019
38 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$202,000,000: CC Sabathia, New York Yankees (2009-17)
39 / 39
MLB’s $200+ million contracts
$200 million: Carlos Correa, Minnesota Twins (2023-28) – traded to Houston Astros in 2025
Skubal is certainly worth it: Over the past two seasons, he’s struck out 469 batters in 387 1/3 innings, going 31-10 with a 2.30 ERA and winning the AL’s pitching triple crown this year. He also led the majors with a 7.30 strikeout-walk ratio and a 0.89 WHIP.
For one year, Skubal will join forces with top free agent pitcher Framber Valdez, who on the same day Skubal and the Tigers went to trial was agreeing to a three-year, $115 million deal with the Tigers. Valdez’s $38.3 million average annual salary is a record for a left-handed pitcher, and will earn more this season than his Cy Young-winning mate.
That will change next year when Skubal hits the market. For now, he’s already got a fairly big win in his column.
The three-person arbitration panel is tasked not with determining which salary to award, but rather whether to go higher or lower than the midpoint of the two sides’ offers – in this case, $25.5 million. Skubal’s body of work clearly moved the panel to favor a salary north of that – and Skubal will be compensated in record fashion for what’s likely his final year in Detroit.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tarik Skubal contract: Tigers ace wins historic arbitration hearing