Brock Stewart 2026 salary arbitration preview

The exchange date for salary arbitration is this Thursday, and we’ve already looked at comparable players to pitcher Brusdar Graterol, outfielder Alex Call, and left-hander Anthony Banda. The other Dodgers player eligible for arbitration this year is right-hander Brock Stewart.

Stewart has four years, 93 days of major league service time, and is eligible for arbitration for a second time. You’ll recognize the comparable pitchers listed below from Banda’s arbitration preview from Tuesday, as both have similar service time.

Stewart was originally drafted by the Dodgers in 2014 and was reacquired at the trade deadline last season, but in between bounced around to various teams and was interrupted by several injuries, such that his 37 2/3 innings in 2025 between the Twins and Dodgers represent his major league career high. The 34-year-old Stewart had shoulder surgery in October will sideline him for a big chunk of 2026 as well, which adds another layer to his arbitration case.

Pitcher Year Service time IP Saves BB rate K rate ERA ERA+ FIP Salary Previous $ Increase
Anthony Banda 2026 4.135 233.3 3 9.9% 21.5% 4.44 96 4.25 TBD $1,000,000
Brock Stewart 2026 4.093 186.7 2 9.7% 23.1% 4.48 95 4.83 TBD $870,000
Erik Swanson 2024 4.096 221.3 10 6.2% 27.0% 3.78 110 3.96 $2,750,000 $1,250,000 120.0%
Kevin Ginkel 2025 4.033 233.3 13 8.7% 26.1% 3.47 124 3.44 $2,425,000 $1,225,000 98.0%
Colin Poche 2024 4.114 171.0 10 9.3% 28.2% 3.58 114 3.98 $2,375,000 $1,250,000 90.0%
Hoby Milner 2024 4.068 206.3 0 6.7% 22.7% 3.53 120 4.13 $2,050,000 $1,025,000 100.0%
Adrián Morejón 2025 4.140 138.7 2 7.4% 24.1% 4.15 99 3.86 $2,000,000 $850,000 135.3%
Zack Littell 2024 4.043 259.7 3 6.6% 20.5% 4.09 103 4.44 $1,850,000 MiLB deal
Matt Bush 2023 4.132 200.7 14 7.7% 25.5% 3.45 131 3.93 $1,850,000 MiLB deal
Tim Hill 2023 4.112 211.0 4 7.8% 20.4% 3.88 107 3.98 $1,850,000 $1,325,000 39.6%
Joe Mantiply 2025 4.029 206.3 4 6.7% 21.5% 4.01 106 3.15 $1,700,000 $925,000 83.8%
Nick Anderson 2024 4.153 122.7 9 6.6% 35.5% 2.93 148 2.72 $1,575,000 $875,000 80.0%
Lucas Luetge 2023 4.015 218.7 5 8.4% 22.5% 3.38 119 3.47 $1,550,000 $950,000 63.2%
Génesis Cabrera 2024 4.011 213.0 3 11.6% 23.6% 3.97 104 4.35 $1,512,500 $950,000 59.2%
Tanner Rainey 2024 4.127 138.3 15 15.5% 31.1% 5.40 80 5.00 $1,500,000 $1,500,000 0.0%
Dillon Tate 2024 4.048 179.0 8 7.2% 19.4% 3.97 108 4.03 $1,500,000 $1,500,000 0.0%
Trevor Richards 2023 4.084 422.0 1 9.8% 24.5% 4.41 93 4.29 $1,500,000 $1,000,000 50.0%
Keegan Akin 2025 4.083 304.7 3 7.4% 24.5% 4.70 89 3.83 $1,475,000 $825,000 78.8%
Dennis Santana 2025 4.126 221.3 4 10.5% 22.0% 4.76 88 3.86 $1,400,000 MiLB deal
Jalen Beeks 2023 4.070 235.3 4 8.8% 22.3% 4.09 101 4.01 $1,375,000 $750,000 83.3%
Nate Pearson 2025 4.005 142.0 3 10.3% 24.7% 4.75 90 4.90 $1,350,000 $800,000 68.8%
Drew Smith 2023 4.034 122.3 0 7.8% 23.8% 3.24 122 4.38 $1,300,000 $750,000 73.3%
JT Chargois 2024 4.101 195.0 1 9.4% 23.8% 3.55 118 3.85 $1,285,000 $850,000 51.2%
Lucas Sims 2023 4.014 195.7 8 10.7% 27.7% 4.97 93 4.36 $1,267,500 $1,200,000 5.6%
José Ruiz 2025 4.148 270.3 1 10.4% 22.5% 4.36 99 4.73 $1,225,000 MiLB deal
Brock Burke 2025 4.045 202.7 0 7.0% 23.1% 4.04 105 4.29 $1,150,000 $1,035,000 11.1%
Josh Sborz 2025 4.055 163.3 1 9.9% 27.7% 4.96 86 3.94 $1,100,000 $1,025,000 7.3%
Josh Taylor 2024 4.118 120.0 1 10.2% 29.7% 4.35 110 3.50 $1,100,000 $1,025,000 7.3%
Caleb Ferguson 2023 4.088 147.0 2 9.5% 28.4% 3.43 119 3.96 $1,100,000 $762,000 44.4%
Michael Tonkin 2025 4.074 305.7 3 8.2% 23.6% 4.18 101 4.24 $1,000,000 $1,000,000 0.0%
Cole Sulser 2025 4.031 149.0 15 11.4% 25.3% 3.74 118 3.87 $900,000 MiLB deal
career statistics

These pitchers, after Banda and Stewart, are sorted by salary in the arbitration year in question, with the top three on the list all having double-digit career saves to this point. Banda is coming off two solid seasons in a row, and starting from a higher spot, having earned $1 million in 2025 compared to $870,000 for Stewart.

Platform year

Stewart has been effective for the last three seasons, with 2.44 ERA and 2.83 xERA, but totaled just 81 innings since the start of 2023 thanks to various injuries. And he’s only totaled 186 2/3 career major league innings, with his comparable pitchers coming from lower in the above list than Banda.

Let’s look at a few pitchers from the list above, with their season directly preceding their four-year arbitration case:

  • Brock Stewart (2025): 43 G, 37 2/3 IP, 2.63 ERA, 2.66 xERA, 0 saves, 19.5-percent K-BB
  • Keegan Akin (2024): 66 G, 78 2/3 IP, 3.32 ERA, 2.45 xERA, 1 save, 24.9-percent K-BB
  • Drew Smith (2022): 44 G, 46 IP, 3.33 ERA, 3.78 xERA, 0 saves, 20.3-percent K-BB
  • JT Chargois (2023): 46 G, 42 1/3 IP, 3.61 ERA, 3.63 xERA, 1 save, 9.8-percent K-BB
  • José Ruiz (2024): 52 G, 51 IP, 3.71 ERA, 4.22 xERA, 1 save, 16.1-percent K-BB
  • Josh Sborz (2024): 17 G, 16 1/3 IP, 3.86 ERA, 4.01 xERA, 2 saves, 18.8-percent K-BB

Keegan Akin made the most of this group during this year of arbitration, earning $1.475 million in 2025 after making $825,000 the year before. But he more than doubled Stewart’s innings in the season immediately preceding this arbitration year, and due to starting for two previous years had 63 percent more career innings than Stewart to this point. To me that makes Akin’s $1.475 million beyond what Stewart might make in 2026.

Drew Smith had a more comparable launch year to Stewart, who had 53 percent more innings than Smith in their careers to this point. Smith earned $1.3 million in 2023, a 73.3-percent raise over his previous-year salary of $750,000.

How Stewart’s shoulder surgery factors into his potential arbitration case remains to be seen, with him expected to miss time at the start of the season while rehabbing. Josh Sborz, like Stewart another former Dodgers draft pick, was in a similar situation last offseason, coming off shoulder surgery that November. Sborz was expected to miss the beginning of 2025 but ended up not pitching at all last season. Sborz, who had similar career numbers to Stewart — worse ERA and ERA+, better strikeout rate and FIP — made $1.1 million, though that was after pitching only 17 games in 2024.

MLB Trade Rumors projected a $1.4 million salary in 2026 for Stewart, while Cot’s Baseball Contracts predicted of $1.25 million. I’m inclined to pick in the middle, slightly more than Smith’s number, at $1.35 million for Stewart.

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