Las Vegas Review-Journal

Internatio­nal spending soars above $200 million

- By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A record $203 million was spent on internatio­nal amateur free agents in the just-ended signing period, nearly $50 million more than the previous high and a figure that will plummet when a hard cap on spending starts July 2.

Four Cubans were given contracts that included signing bonuses above $5 million. Chicago White Sox outfielder Luis Robert led the way at

$26 million, followed by San Diego pitcher Adrian Morejon at $11 million, and Cincinnati shortstop Alfredo Rodriguez and Padres outfielder Jorge

Ona at $7 million each.

Baseball’s new labor contract imposes a cap on bonuses for internatio­nal amateurs, with 16 teams limited in 2017-18 to $4.75 million, six to $5.25 million and eight to $5.75 million — all not counting bonuses of up to $10,000. That limits the 2017-18 bonus pool to $153.5 million.

“The party’s over for all big signing bonuses for internatio­nal amateurs. It’s no doubt,” agent Andy Mota said Monday. “It’s a reality that’s setting in, especially with Cuban players.”

And under the new rules, internatio­nal amateurs were redefined as under 25 years old and with less than six years of profession­al experience, up from 23 years old and less than five years of experience. That means less money will be chasing more players.

“That’s going to really drive a lot of these players to Japanese and Korean baseball,” agent Scott Boras predicted.

Restraints were introduced in the 2012-16 labor contract on spending on draft picks, players who reside in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Bonuses for those players totaled $234 million in 2011, dropped to $223 million in the first year of the new rules and didn’t reach their prior level until 2015’s $249 million, according to Major League Baseball. Draft spending rose to $269 million for 2016 selections.

At the same time, spending on internatio­nal amateurs increased from $74 million in 2012-13 to $156 million in 2015-16 before the latest hike. And that was despite a tax on teams who exceeded their assigned bonus pools.

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