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Yankees only team projected to pay luxury tax

Posted: Monday July 21, 2003 9:16 PM

 
Upon Further Review
Baseball payrolls by average annual value as compiled by the commissioner's office for luxury tax purposes:
Team    Payroll 
New York Yankees  $180,322,403 
New York Mets  $116,253,927 
Los Angeles Dodgers  $109,248,680 
Texas Rangers  $106,277,880 
Boston Red Sox  $104,873,607 
Atlanta Braves  $103,912,011 
St. Louis Cardinals  $101,825,848 
San Francisco Giants  $100,061,211 
Philadelphia Phillies  $95,338,704 
Arizona Diamondbacks  $92,665,040 
Seattle Mariners  $92,268,063 
Chicago Cubs  $86,576,763 
Anaheim Angels  $83,235,098 
Houston Astros  $79,946,964 
Colorado Rockies  $78,738,492 
Baltimore Orioles  $75,502,154 
Chicago White Sox  $71,336,029 
Minnesota Twins  $65,318,977 
Cincinnati Reds  $65,083,196 
Florida Marlins  $63,281,152 
Pittsburgh Pirates  $62,314,723 
Toronto Blue Jays  $61,175,638 
Detroit Tigers  $59,006,941 
Cleveland Indians  $58,108,824 
San Diego Padres  $57,871,722 
Oakland Athletics  $56,596,691 
Kansas City Royals  $48,475,322 
Milwaukee Brewers  $47,294,226 
Montreal Expos  $45,853,889 
Tampa Bay Devil Rays  $31,660,602 
 

NEW YORK (AP) -- There's only one team in baseball projected to pay the new luxury tax.

You guessed it -- the New York Yankees.

Following last week's acquisition of reliever Armando Benitez from the crosstown Mets, the Yankees' payroll comes to $180.3 million for their 40-man roster, including benefits. The updated figure compiled by the commissioner's office translates to a projected tax bill of $10.8 million that will come due Jan. 31.

No other team is above the threshold of $117 million established by baseball's new labor contract.

"Winning is the priority here," Yankees manager Joe Torre said before Monday night's game against Toronto. "They generate a lot of revenue here, and there's a lot of pressure. I know George Steinbrenner made a commitment to this city that we've won and we're going to continue to try to keep winning. If that means he needs to spend more money than he planned, then he's willing to do it to plug a hole."

The Mets had the No. 2 luxury tax payroll at $116.3 million, followed by Los Angeles ($109.2 million), Texas ($106.3 million) and Boston ($104.9 million), according to the calculations, which were distributed to teams last week and obtained Monday by The Associated Press. The actual tax will be determined based on final figures as of Dec. 20.

Payrolls are based on the average annual values of contracts, $7.6 million per team in benefits, money paid or received in trades and salary owed to released players. The payrolls are based on roster moves through July 15, with the following day's acquisition of Benitez also included in Yankees' total.

The Yankees' payroll for luxury tax purposes has gone down from February, when the commissioner's office projected it at $182 million. Back then, the Mets' payroll also was second, estimated at $122 million, followed by Texas ($113 million), Los Angeles ($109 million) and Boston ($105 million).

The Mets' payroll has gone down only slightly because the team is paying most of the salaries of two traded stars, Roberto Alomar and Jeromy Burnitz. The Yankees are paying all of Benitez's salary in the second half.

Using the conventional method of counting payrolls -- salaries plus prorated shares of signing bonuses for players on the 25-man roster and disabled list -- the Yankees' payroll has increased to $154.7 million from $149.7 million on Opening Day.

 
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