USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Dodgers’ big offseason skyrockets MLB payrolls

- Bob Nightengal­e

LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers were paraded Thursday onto the lush green grass at Dodger Stadium, listening to the roar of the sellout crowd, hoping to show the baseball world that money indeed can go a long way toward buying a World Series championsh­ip.

They opened the season with a $249.8 million player payroll, which soars past $300 million when factoring in Major League Baseball’s collective bargaining tax calculatio­ns.

The guaranteed contracts for their top four hitters in the lineup – Mookie Betts, Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman and Will Smith – is $1.367 billion.

Including the salaries for their top two starters, Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow, who earn $461.56 million, they’ll have six players with larger guaranteed contracts ($1.82 billion) than the sales price of the entire Baltimore Orioles franchise ($1.725 billion).

The Dodgers’ payroll is almost three times more than four franchises in baseball and nearly $200 more than that of the Oakland Athletics.

But apologize?

Uh-huh.

“You know, people can get mad or say what they want, and say, ‘They spent all the money,’ ” Dodgers three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw recently told USA TODAY. “Well, why don’t you guys do it too. Being an owner is a lucrative business, I don’t care what people say. Go do it, too.”

The payroll disparity has never been greater in the sport of baseball with the New York Mets actually paying more money to players no longer on their roster ($70.3 million) than the entire total the Athletics are paying for players on their team ($60.5 million).

The Mets, New York Yankees and Dodgers are expected to exceed the $237 million luxury tax this season, with all having CBT payrolls above $300 million this season. Yet there are five teams that had opening-day payrolls under $100 million and 20 teams lower than $200 million, according to salaries obtained by USA TODAY Sports in its annual survey of opening-day payrolls.

While more teams are willing to cross the luxury tax threshold than ever before, 10 teams opened the season with a lower payroll than a year ago.

The San Diego Padres, who had the highest payroll in franchiee history last year, slashed their payroll by $86 million from $248.9 million to $161.9 million.

There’s no greater payroll disparity than in the American League East and the National League East divisions, but as was proved last year, money doesn’t guarantee tickets to the October dance.

The Yankees’ $303.3 million payroll is more than three times the size of the Orioles’ $94.5 million, but while the Yankees missed the playoffs, the Orioles won the AL East Division with 101 victories.

The Mets’ $305.6 million payroll dwarfs the Marlins’ $97.2 million, but guess which team earned an NL wildcard berth last season and which stayed home for the playoffs.

The most parity in baseball resides in the AL and NL Central divisions, where there’s not a single team projected to exceed the luxury tax. The Chicago Cubs ($213 million) are the only team among the 10 NL and AL Central teams with a payroll above $200 million.

“I think what it says is that it’s really just a reflection of market size,” Cardinals president John Mozeliak said. “I supposed you could always think about Chicago as the sleeping giant. If they decide to flex they can, but for the most part the other four markets have a lot more similariti­es.”

Just $49 million separates the largest salaried team (Chicago White Sox, $142.4 million) and smallest (Cleveland Guardians, $93.3 million) in the AL Central.

The other four divisions, well, there’s never been a larger payroll difference in baseball history.

“It’s tough, we experience­d it a little bit in 2015-2016-2017 with the Cubs,” Mozeliak

said, “but having these coastal teams that have much more flexibility or power with their payroll, it can be one of the unfortunat­e parts of our business.

“Some teams can spend. Some can’t. People get upset with teams when they’re not spending, but unfortunat­ely when you look at how our salary structures are put together in this league, we’re not all created equal.”

The game still is played on the field, but, hey, the Dodgers won’t lie.

It’s nice to be rich.

“There’s no better organizati­on that’s more committed to winning a World Series,” said Dodgers catcher Will Smith, who signed a 10-year, $140 million contract extension Wednesday, “and that’s the most important thing to me when it comes to baseball.”

The Dodgers have the checkbook to prove it.

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts are two of the highestpai­d players on the Dodgers.
MARK J. REBILAS/ USA TODAY SPORTS Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts are two of the highestpai­d players on the Dodgers.
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