NEW YORK (AP) — World Series MVP Hideki Matsui, Vladimir Guerrero and Randy Wolf were among the free agents who weren’t offered salary arbitration, moves that enable new teams to sign them without losing draft picks.

Tuesday night was the first big deadline of baseball’s offseason, with teams having until midnight to make arbitration offers to their former players who became free agents. Players have until Dec. 7 to accept; if they reject, they still can re-sign with their former clubs at any time.

With about two hours left until the deadline, 18 players had received arbitration offers and only seven of them were position players: St. Louis outfielder Matt Holliday and third baseman Mark DeRosa; Boston outfielder Jason Bay; Los Angeles Angels third baseman Chone Figgins; Seattle third baseman Adrian Beltre; Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez and Rangers outfielder Marlon Byrd.

Pitchers offered arbitration included Angels ace John Lackey; Boston reliever Billy Wagner; Detroit’s Brandon Lyon and Fernando Rodney; Oakland’s Justin Duchscherer; Atlanta’s Mike Gonzalez and Rafael Soriano; Colorado’s Rafael Betancourt and Jason Marquis; Houston’s Jose Valverde; and St. Louis’ Joel Pineiro.

In addition to Matsui, the Yankees declined to offer arbitration to left fielder Johnny Damon and pitcher Andy Pettitte. The Angels turned down pitchers Kelvim Escobar and Darren Oliver in addition to Guerrero. Besides Wolf, the Dodgers said no to pitcher Jon Garland and second baseman Orlando Hudson.

Among others declined arbitration were Detroit pitcher Jarrod Washburn, Seattle lefty Erik Bedard, Mets first baseman Carlos Delgado, Milwaukee center fielder Mike Cameron and Kansas City catcher Miguel Olivo.

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Before 2006, players not offered arbitration could not re-sign with their former clubs from Dec. 8-April 30, but that provision was eliminated in the latest collective bargaining agreement.

Teams losing top free agents, as defined by a complicated statistical formula, get draft picks next June as compensation if those free agents were offered arbitration by their former clubs.

Type A free agents are among the top 20 percent of players at their position, as defined by the formula created in the 1981 strike settlement, and Type B are from 21-40 percent. Teams receive two extra draft picks if they lose a Type A player and one if they lose a Type B.

One free agent agreed to a contract Tuesday, with catcher Brian Schneider getting a $2.75 million, two-year deal from Philadelphia to back up Carlos Ruiz.

In the day’s only trade, Cleveland sent catcher Kelly Shoppach to the Tampa Bay Rays for a player to be named. Shoppach hit .214 with 12 homers and 40 RBIs in 89 games this year, striking out 89 times in 271 at-bats.


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