After a series of extensions of his administrative leave last season, his year officially ended on Sept. 21, when his administrative leave was extended through the end of the season. He was paid for the entirety of 2021 — his contract called for $28 million — but under the terms of his suspension he will not be paid in 2022 or 2023, the final two years of his contract with Los Angeles. If an appeal is not granted, Bauer stands to lose $64 million in salary, according to Spotrac.
Bauer’s prospects as a free agent upon his return are unknown. He will be 33 at the start of the 2024 season — still young enough to be an effective pitcher for several years — but would need a team to look past the allegations in hopes of strengthening its starting rotation. In the N.F.L., where Deshaun Watson was accused of sexual assault by numerous women — he has denied all allegations — the young quarterback was given a contract by the Cleveland Browns that guaranteed him $230 million.
The Dodgers, for whom Bauer appeared in only 17 games, issued a statement after the announcement in which the team said it supports the league’s policy but that it would not comment further because of Bauer’s right to appeal.
“The Dodgers organization takes all allegations of this nature very seriously and does not condone or excuse any acts of domestic violence or sexual assault,” the statement said. “We’ve cooperated fully with MLB’s investigation since it began, and we fully support MLB’s Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Child Abuse Policy, and the Commissioner’s enforcement of the Policy.”
Bauer is the 16th player to be suspended as part of the league’s policy on domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse. His suspension is twice as long as any other player has received under the policy and he is the first of the players to say he would appeal the decision, making this uncharted territory for both player and league.