Neil Walker takes $17.2M qualifying offer; will return to the Mets

ByADAM RUBIN
November 14, 2016, 5:30 PM

— -- NEW YORK -- Second baseman Neil Walker has accepted a $17.2 million qualifying offer and will return to the New York Mets for 2017.

Walker confirmed he will be back with the Mets via Twitter. "Happy to say I'm back in Orange and Blue for 2017!! Let's go Mets! #unfinishedbusiness", Walker posted on Monday.?

Walker underwent season-ending surgery on Sept. 8 to repair a herniated disk. That likely depressed his ability to get a multiyear contract, even though his lower-back woes are now expected to be behind him.

Absent the back surgery, Walker may have been able to land a deal between what Daniel Murphy received with the Nationals (3 years, $37.5M) and Ben Zobrist received with the Cubs (4 years, $56M) last offseason.

Walker, 31, hit .282 with 23 homers and 55 RBIs in 412 at-bats with the Mets in 2016. The long ball total matched his career high and trailed only St. Louis' Jedd Gyorko (30) and Murphy (25) among National League second basemen.

Walker's return for the 2017 season raises the Mets' payroll commitment, including estimates for arbitration-eligible players, to roughly $124 million. It also has a direct impact on Jose Reyes, who may recede to a backup role -- with, potentially, some outfield time -- assuming starting infielders David Wright, Asdrubal Cabrera, Walker and Lucas Duda all are healthy.

A Pittsburgh native, Walker was selected by his hometown club in the first round of the 2004 draft. He remained with the Pirates until getting traded to the Mets last December for left-hander Jonathon Niese.

Despite the lack of a long-term attachment to the Mets, Walker demonstrated his affinity for the team by maintaining a presence in the clubhouse this past season even after undergoing back surgery with nearly a month remaining in the season. His wife had given birth to the couple's first child, daughter Nora Vail, in late August.

Meanwhile, outfielder Yoenis Cespedes will decline his qualifying offer. After vacating the remaining two years and $47.5 million on his previous contract by opting out, returning for one season at $17.2 million would have made no sense. The Mets will recoup a draft pick if Cespedes signs elsewhere, although there still is a chance he returns.

Eight other free agents did not accept the offers from their former teams by Monday's 5 p.m. EST deadline: outfielders Jose Bautista (Toronto), Ian Desmond (Texas), Dexter Fowler ( Chicago Cubs) and Mark Trumbo (Baltimore), designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion (Toronto); closer Kenley Jansen ( Los Angeles Dodgers); and third baseman Justin Turner (Dodgers).

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.