2011 World Series

The St. Louis Cardinals earned a bonus of $323,170 for winning the 2011 World Series. In all, players from 10 different teams received post season bonuses, including four teams that didn’t make the playoffs.

Who gets what is determined by the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Each playoff series has a separate pool: the Division Series, the League Championship Series, and the World Series. The bonus pool is funded by 60 percent of the gate receipts for the first three games of the Division Series, the first four games of the League Championship Series, and the first four games of the World Series.

During the season, the players determine who will get a full share, partial share, or no share. Usually, players that have been with the team the entire year receive full shares. There have been cases where players join the team just prior to the trade deadline to be voted a full share. Athletic Trainers, equipment managers and clubhouse managers usually receive a partial, or no share.

Get Paid by Both World Series Teams

2011 was a good year for Arthur Rhodes. He will get a World Series and League Championship ring. Since he played for both the Texas Rangers and the St. Louis Cardinals he will get shares from both teams. It’s the seventh time in World Series history that has happened. Last year, Bengie Molina played for the Rangers and Giants.

The pool is intentionally limited to the minimum number of games required to win the series so as to discourage any artificial extension of the series by greedy individuals (the 1919 Chicago White Sox).

The amount of the gate is determined by stadium size, number of premium seats, luxury boxes, and attendance. Since most stadiums seat about the same number of fans and ticket prices are determined by MLB, the pool money is about the same no matter who plays.

The World Series champion earns 35 percent, the World Series loser earns 24 percent, and the four Division Series losers get three percent. If you were starting to feel sorry the four runner-up teams, the four second-place teams that don’t qualify for the playoffs get one percent.

This year’s total players’ pool was $57,299,244.23, with the Cardinals taking $20,627,727.92 and Texas taking $13,751,818.61.

Here’s the breakdown of the other teams:

Championship Series runners-up

• Tigers – Total: $6,875,909.30, Individual full share amount: $126,901.50

• Brewers – Total: $6,875,909.30, Full share: $133,511.33

Division Series runners-up

• D-backs – Total: $1,718,977.33, Full share: $26,674.74

• Yankees – Total: $1,718,977.33, Full share: $26,238.86

• Phillies – Total: $1,718,977.33, Full share: $30,400.62

• Rays – Total: 1,718,977.33, Full share: $30,758.08

Second-place finishers (non-Wild Card winners)

• Braves – Total: $572,992.44, Full share: $11,088.51

• Indians – Total: $572,992.44, Full share: 10,366.06

• Angels – Total: $572,992.44, Full share: $10,862.42

• Giants – Total: $572,992.44, Full share: $10,689.58

Get Rewarded for NOT Making the Playoffs

The players on the Angels, Braves, Indians and Giants are rewarded for NOT making the playoffs.

A full World Series share for the 2010 champion San Francisco Giants was worth $317,631.29. The figure is less than the $365,000 earned by members of the2009 New York Yankees.

1903 World Series Boston Pilgrims

In the Beginning

The winners of the first World Series actually got smaller shares than the losers.

The 1903 Boston Pilgrims earned $1,182 per man for defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates, whose losing share was $1,361.25. The reason was that Pittsburgh players were given the owners share of the gate.

I don’t know if it was ever proven to be true; that during the 1913 World Series the Philadelphia Athletics players were told to lose game five of the 1913 Series to the New York Giants. The Athletics were up three games to one and the team had already sold tickets for game six. So if they clinched in five they would have to refund the money. Since player’s pool only splits game receipts from the first four games only the owners would get the receipts from game six. Athletics owner Connie Mack told his team that if they won game five he would give them the game receipts from it. As it turned out, Philadelphia won game five, so we’ll never know if the rumors were true. Each player on the A’s earned $3,246.36.

The Cincinnati Reds won the infamous 1919 World Series beating the Chicago

The eight "Black Sox" players

White Sox who conspired to fix the Series. Ironically, the Reds winning share ($5,207.08) was greater than what the eight “Black Sox” players were offered to fix the series.

The 1918 Red Sox winning Series shares of $1,102.51 are the lowest in baseball history.

In 1923 the first World Series to gross over $1,000,000 was the first played at Yankee Stadium. The New York Yankees winning share was $6,143.49 per man.

In 1933, In the midst of the Great Depression the New York Giants collected $4,256.72 apiece. This was $1,886.77 less than the ’23 Yankees earned. Even by 1943, with World War II raging the Yankees earned $6,139.46 for beating the Cardinals. Twenty years later, they still made a little less than the 1923 Yankees.

The 1954 New York Giants were the first team in baseball history to earn over $10,000 for winning the World Series. They defeated the Cleveland Indians and earned $11,147.90 per man.

What a Sweet Deal!

On top of all that, players also get a championship ring valued at anywhere between $20,000 and $40,000 depending on how generous the owner of the team is. The Yankees 2000 World Series ring weighs more than an ounce, features 22 diamonds and 34.5 grams of gold.

Surprisingly, the most expensive ring to date went to the 2003 World Series champion Florida Marlins.  After essentially buying their title during the previous off-season, the team continued their extravagant ways after team owner Jeff Luria designed the ring himself.  It is huge, with enough room to fit the name, number, and position of each player onto his ring.  It also showed the team`s season record, results of all three post-season series, and a likeness of the World Series trophy on the side.  It was made of 14-karat gold with 16-karat inlay, 13 rubies, 229 diamonds, and the eye of the Marlin`s logo was a rare teal diamond.

No matter how you slice it, Major League Baseball players have a pretty good deal going.

 

Don’t Take Away The Accomplishments of Those Great Ball Players Who Never Played In League Championship Games!

I was watching game 3 of the Yankees – Twins Division Series and Jorge Posada drove in a run. One of the announcers

Image from evesmag.com

said with that RBI Posada passes Mickey Mantle.  I didn’t believe it. Then I see this from Andy McCullough (amccullough@starledger.com) “Jorge Posada’s RBI put him in ninth place on the all-time post season list with 41, passing Yankees legend Mickey Mantle”. So I did some research and the way records are being kept today, Posada has 41 post season RBI, Mantle has 40 World Series RBI. Posada has been in 6 World Series with 96 At Bats producing 11 RBI. Mantle was in 12 World Series with 230 At Bats producing 41 RBI. If you add the 287 At Bats from League Companionship Series games that gives Posada 383, 153 more than Mantle.

World Series Records Should Stand Alone

To make my point even stronger, look at the World Series Hits table. You will see Derek Jeter is ranked 5th all-time. But that is legitimate, there are no League Championship Series numbers added in. He deserves to be there.

In the Runs Batted In table below you’ll notice that Posada isn’t listed at the top with 41, that’s because he only has 11 World Series RBI. However, in the eyes of Major League Baseball he has 41 post season RBI. This isn’t right! It’s unfair to Mickey Mantle and all the great ball players who played in the pre-playoff era.

The World Series is special. I like the playoff system, it keeps more teams and fans involved longer, but the Division and League Championship Series are no comparison to the World Series. Of course there is pressure at all levels of the playoffs, but it builds until you get to where every ball player dreams of getting to…..the World Series.

Taking nothing away from Roy Halladay whose no-hitter was an incredible performance by one of the best pitchers in baseball, it was in the first game of the Division series. The pressure Halladay was pitching under was minimal compared to Don Larsen when he pitched the only perfect game in World Series history. It was game 5, the Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers were tied at 2 games apiece. If the Yankees lose game 5 they go back to Ebbets Field down 3 to 2. Now that is pressure, pressure just to win the game, but to win it with perfection, unbelievable – it was the World Series.

So lets keep separate records for the Division Series, the League Series and the World Series. If you have to combine, then combine the first two and leave the World Series alone.

If there were ever a valid reason for using an asterisk (*) this is it. Better yet, keep World Series statistics as a separate category. What do you think?

Hits Runs Batted In
Rank Player Hits PA Rank Player RBI PA
1 Yogi Berra 71 295 1 Mickey Mantle 40 273
2 Mickey Mantle 59 273 2 Yogi Berra 39 295
3 Frankie Frisch 58 216 3 Lou Gehrig 35 150
4 Joe DiMaggio 54 220 4 Babe Ruth 33 167
5 Derek Jeter 50 173 5 Joe DiMaggio 30 220
6 Hank Bauer 46 199 6 Bill Skowron 29 141
Pee Wee Reese 46 191 7 Duke Snider 26 149
8 Phil Rizzuto 45 219 8 Gil McDougald 24 215
Gil McDougald 45 215 Hank Bauer 24 199
10 Lou Gehrig 43 150 Bill Dickey 24 161
Reggie Jackson 24 116
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