Baseball Salaries Take a Big Jump
NEW YORK — The biggest escalation in seven years pushed baseball’s average salary to more than $1.7 million on opening day, according to a study by the Associated Press.
Baltimore outfielder Albert Belle was the highest-paid player on opening day for the third consecutive season, earning $11,949,794. Boston pitcher Pedro Martinez was second at $11 million, followed by Dodger pitcher Kevin Brown ($10,714,286) and Atlanta pitcher Greg Maddux ($10.6 million).
Mark McGwire, last season’s star with a record 70 homers, was 11th at $8,333,333. Sammy Sosa, who chased McGwire all summer long and finished with 66 homers, was tied for ninth at $9 million.
The World Series champion New York Yankees opened with baseball’s highest payroll ever, $85.1 million--an average of $3.04 million per player.
The Dodgers were second at $79.2 million, followed by Baltimore ($78.5 million), Texas ($74.9 million), Atlanta ($73.5 million) and Cleveland ($68.9 million).
Arizona moved up from 21st at $31.6 million at the end of last season to seventh at $65.9 million.
At the other end were three teams below $20 million: Montreal was last at $17.3 million, Florida was 29th at $18.8 million and Minnesota was 28th at $19.1 million.
The average salary of $1,720,050, easily a record, was up 19.3% over last year’s opening-day average of $1,441,406, according to the AP study, which examined the contracts of 830 players on opening-day rosters and the disabled list. It was nearly five times the 4.2% rise before last season and the largest increase since a 21.7% rise prior to the 1992 season.
“We’ve been going through all those over the past few months, but I want to see the final numbers before I make any judgments,” Commissioner Bud Selig said.
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Money Players
Baseball’s top 10 salaries this season:
1. Albert Belle, Baltimore: $11,949,794
2. Pedro Martinez, Boston: $11,000,000
3. Kevin Brown, Dodgers: $10,714,286
4. Greg Maddux, Atlanta: $10,600,000
5. Gary Sheffield, Dodgers: $9,916,667
6. Bernie Williams, Yankees: $9,857,143
7. Barry Bonds, San Francisco: $9,381,057
8. Randy Johnson, Arizona: $9,350,000
9. Raul Mondesi, Dodgers: $9,000,000
(tie) Sammy Sosa, Cubs: $9,000,000
****
Salaries for the Dodgers and Angels (dl-disabled list):
DODGERS
Kevin Brown: $10,714,286
Gary Sheffield: $9,916,667
Raul Mondesi: $9,000,000
Eric Karros: $5,500,000
Todd Hundley: $5,325,000
Mel Rojas: $4,583,333
Eric Young: $4,500,000
Ismael Valdes: $4,275,000
Jeff Shaw: $3,383,333
Jose Vizcaino: $3,000,000
Devon White: $2,500,000
Carlos Perez: $2,333,333
Chan Ho Park: $2,300,000
Dave Mlicki: $2,250,000
Darren Dreifort: $1,900,000
Mark Grudzielanek: $1,900,000
Alan Mills: $1,250,000
dl-Antonio Osuna: $1,050,000
dl-Todd Hollandsworth: $850,000
Dave Hansen: $450,000
Pedro Borbon: $375,000
Tripp Cromer: $285,000
Rick Wilkins: $270,000
Jacob Brumfield: $240,000
Adrian Beltre: $220,000
dl-Alex Cora: $210,000
Paul LoDuca: $200,000
Onan Masaoka: $200,000
dl-Steve Montgomery: $200,000
Payroll: $79,180,952 (2nd overall)
****
ANGELS
Mo Vaughn: $7,166,667
Chuck Finley: $5,800,000
Tim Salmon: $5,500,000
Ken Hill: $5,450,000
Tim Belcher: $4,600,000
dl-Jim Edmonds: $3,550,000
dl-Gary DiSarcina: $3,125,000
Garret Anderson: $2,100,000
Omar Olivares: $1,600,000
Troy Percival: $1,575,000
Steve Sparks: $1,350,000
Matt Walbeck: $825,000
dl-Mike James: $805,000
Darin Erstad: $800,000
Mark Petkovsek: $800,000
Randy Velarde: $800,000
Charlie O’Brien: $700,000
Shigetoshi Hasegawa: $625,000
Mike Magnante: $600,000
dl-Jack McDowell: $500,000
dl-Jason Dickson: $375,000
dl-Pep Harris: $305,000
Mike Holtz: $290,000
Jeff Huson: $280,000
Orlando Palmeiro: $276,000
Andy Sheets: $230,000
Todd Greene: $225,000
dl-Justin Baughman: $215,000
Tim Unroe: $215,000
Troy Glaus: $212,500
dl-Reggie Williams: $210,000
Alan Levine: $208,000
Scott Schoeneweis: $200,000
Payroll: $51,513,167 (13th overall)
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