CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Shortstop Francisco Lindor has played like an All-Star for the last three years. Now he’ll get paid like one.

All-Star right-hander Trevor Bauer, meanwhile, could be making his way to the arbitration table for the second straight season.

Lindor, in his first year of arbitration eligibility, avoided the process before Friday’s deadline by a signing a one-year, $10.55 million deal with the Indians. MLBtraderumors projected that he’d make $10.22 million.

Bauer was the only other Indians player still eligible for arbitration. He beat them last year in a hearing, receiving a salary of $6.525 million. It was the first time the Indians have lost a hearing since Greg Swindell beat them in 1991.

On Friday, Bauer’s agents filed for $13 million, while the Indians countered at $11 million. MLBtraderumors speculated that Bauer could make $11.6 million in arbitration.

When the Indians and Bauer didn’t reach a deal last year at the deadline for exchanging salary figures, the Indians took a file-and-trial approach and went straight to a hearing with no further negotiations. It’s unclear if they’ll take that approach this year.

Arbitration hearings start Feb. 1. If Bauer does go to a hearing where a panel of three arbitrators select the player or team’s salary figure after arguments from both sides, he’ll receive the highest arbitration award in club history whether he wins or loses.

The Indians went into the offseason with seven players eligible for arbitration. Catcher Kevin Plawecki made it eight.

They reached deals with everyone expect Bauer. Lindor signed for $10.55 million along with Danny Salazar at $4.5 million, Leonys Martin at $3 million, Neil Ramirez at $1 million, Plawecki at $1,137,500, Cody Anderson at $641,250 and Nick Goody at $675,000.