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Tigers Pitcher Sounds Alarm on MLB Salary Cap
30 May
Summary
- Pitcher Tarik Skubal critiques MLB's proposed hard salary cap.
- A hard cap could limit player salary growth and arbitration.
- Players fear the cap would tighten the system over time.

Detroit Tigers pitcher Tarik Skubal has publicly criticized Major League Baseball's proposal for a hard salary cap, stating it would be detrimental to players. Skubal argues that players in other major sports would prefer baseball's current collective bargaining agreement structure precisely because it avoids a fixed ceiling on player earnings.
His stance gains significance as he recently secured a record-setting arbitration award for 2026, earning $32 million. Skubal's success exemplifies the benefits of the current system, which a hard cap could undermine by restricting future salary escalation. Owners have proposed a 2027 cap of $245.3 million and a floor of $171.2 million as part of broader economic restructuring.
While a payroll floor aims to boost spending by lower-spending teams, players are concerned that the cap will ultimately limit bidding wars for top talent. This proposal echoes past owner pushes for a cap that preceded the damaging 1994-95 strike. Players fear that accepting a cap now will lead to further restrictions on their earning potential in the future.