Monday, Mar. 01, 2004
The Top-Salary Curse
By Sean Gregory
Amid their gloom, Boston Red Sox fans can find a ray of hope in the New York Yankees' big trade for Alex Rodriguez, baseball's highest-paid player. Over the past 15 years, having the richest player on your team has not been a ticket to success (see below). One problem: because of his restructured salary deal, A-Rod's pay won't be No. 1 in 2004. That honor now goes to Manny Ramirez--of the Red Sox. Talk about cursed.
--By Sean Gregory
DARRYL STRAWBERRY SALARY: $3.8 MILLION 1991 Los Angeles Dodgers A big free-agent pickup--but the team blew a division lead to the Atlanta Braves and missed the play-offs.
BOBBY BONILLA SALARY: $6.1 MILLION 1992 New York Mets After wooing him from the Pirates, the Mets lost 90 games; fans booed him so loudly he wore earplugs at the plate.
ALBERT BELLE SALARY: $10 MILLION 1997 Chicago White Sox The Sox dumped others to trim the payroll and finished under .500.
CECIL FIELDER SALARY: $9.2 MILLION 1995 Detroit Tigers The slugger got a big raise and hit 31 homers, but Detroit finished 26 games out of first.
ALEX RODRIGUEZ SALARY: $22 MILLION 2001 Texas Rangers They paid huge bucks for Seattle's star, but it was the first of three cellar seasons in Arlington.
KEVIN BROWN SALARY: $15.7 MILLION 2000 Los Angeles Dodgers Baseball's first $15 million man had a league-low 2.58 ERA, but L.A. finished 11 games behind archrival San Francisco in the National League West.