PHOENIX (AP) -Washington pitcher Shawn Hill became the first player in the major leagues to go to a salary arbitration hearing this year, asking a panel Friday to award him $775,000 rather than the team’s $500,000 offer.
Arbitrators Elizabeth Neumeier, James Oldham and Steven Wolf were expected to issue a decision during the weekend.
Hill was 1-5 with a 5.83 ERA in 12 starts last year, when he went on the disabled list June 25 because of a sore elbow. He had bone spurs and calcium deposits scraped from his right elbow on Sept. 5 when Dr. James Andrews performed arthroscopic surgery.
Hill earned $402,000 in 2008.
The 27-year-old right-hander missed the 2005 season after elbow-ligament replacement surgery, missed time in 2006 with soreness in his right elbow and was limited to 16 starts in 2007 because of a shoulder injury and a compressed radial nerve in his right forearm.
Still, intrigued by his sinker, the Nationals long have said they consider Hill a potential front-line starter – if he could stay healthy.
and left-hander Scott Olsen.
Owners won six of eight cases that went to hearings last year and hold a 279-205 advantage since salary arbitration began in 1974. The 110 players who filed for arbitration last year averaged a 120 percent increase, according to a study by The Associated Press.
Philadelphia first baseman Ryan Howard is among those scheduled for hearings. Howard was awarded a raise from $900,000 to $10 million last year rather than the Phillies’ $7 million offer. This year, he asked for $18 million and the team offered $14 million.
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