China Daily (Hong Kong)

Yankees doodle a dandy tax bill

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in New York

The New York Yankees were hit with a $28 million luxury tax bill, pushing their total past the $ 250 million mark since the penalty began in 2003. According to Major League Baseball calculatio­ns sent to teams on Tuesday, the Los Angeles Dodgers were the only other team that exceeded the tax threshold this year and must pay $ 11.4 million. Boston finished just under for the second straight year, coming in $225,666 shy of the $178 million mark.

Figures include average annual values of contracts for players on 40- man rosters, earned bonuses and escalators, adjustment­s for cash in trades and $10.8 million per team in benefits.

Because the Yankees have been over the tax threshold at least four consecutiv­e times, they pay at a 50 percent rate on the overage, and their $28,113,945 bill was second only to their $ 34.1 million payment following the 2005 season.

The Yankees are responsibl­e for $252.7 million of the $285.1 million in tax paid by all clubs over the past 11 years.

Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenn­er said he hopes to get under the threshold next year, when it rises to $ 189 million. That would reset the team’s tax rate to 17.5 percent for 2015 and get the Yankees some revenue-sharing refunds.

But following agreements on Tuesday on a $2 million, one- year deal with second baseman Brian Roberts and a $7 million, two-year contract with left-hander Matt Thornton, the Yankees are at $177.7 million for 15 players next year, when benefits are likely to total between $11 million and $12 million.

Their only hope to get below the threshold appears to be if an arbitrator upholds most of Alex Rodriguez’s 211game suspension, relieving the team of a large percentage of the third baseman’s $25 million salary.

Tax money is used to fund player benefits and MLB’s Industry Growth Fund.

The Yankees finished with the highest regular payroll for the 15th consecutiv­e year, winding up at a record $237,018,889. The Dodgers, in their first full season under new ownership, were just $146,647 behind after nearly doubling spending from $129.1 million.

Regular payrolls include salaries, earned bonuses and pro-rated shares of signing bonuses.

Los Angeles had a higher payroll for the tax: $ 243 million to New York’s $234 million. But because the Dodgers didn’t exceed the threshold in 2012, they pay at a 17.5 percent rate and owe $11,415,959. They would pay at a 30 percent rate if they exceed the threshold next year.

Checks to the commission­er’s office are due by Jan 21.

Houston, which lost more than 100 games for the third straight season, had a payroll less than one-eighth that of the Yankees and Dodgers.

The Astros’ finished at $29.3 million, the lowest total in the major leagues since the 2008 Florida Marlins and just $1.3 million more than Rodriguez made with the Yankees.

After trading many of their stars following an unsuccessf­ul first season in their new downtown ballpark, the Marlins lowered their payroll to $42.3 million from $89.9 million in 2012. Minnesota dropped from $101 million to $76 million.

Toronto boosted spending from $92 million to nearly $126 million.

The average salary increased 7.1 percent, to $ 3,326,645 from $3,105,093, according to MLB’s calculatio­ns. The players’ associatio­n has not yet released its final figures for this year.

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