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Originally published Wednesday, April 2, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Between the Seams | A-Rod is top earner for 8th straight year

Alex Rodriguez makes more this year than his hometown Florida Marlins. Boosted by his new deal with the New York Yankees, A-Rod tops the...

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Alex Rodriguez makes more this year than his hometown Florida Marlins.

Boosted by his new deal with the New York Yankees, A-Rod tops the major-league-baseball salary list at $28 million, according to a study of contract terms by The Associated Press. The 33 players on the Marlins' opening-day roster and disabled list total $21.8 million.

"The Marlins? It's amazing," Rodriguez said. "And they still seem to find a way to be very competitive. They have a great pool of talent; they made some unbelievable trades, so they have great personnel people. To win two championships in 11 years, that's really admirable, and I'm very proud of that organization, being from Miami."

For the first time in baseball history, the average salary topped the $3 million mark. The 855 players on opening-day rosters and the DL averaged $3.15 million, up 7.1 percent from last year's starting average of $2.94 million.

Florida's highest earner doesn't even make the average. Pitcher Kevin Gregg tops the Marlins at $2.5 million.

"My best friend came into town, and he mentioned something about Johan Santana making $15 million more than our five starters combined," Marlins catcher Matt Treanor said. "It's something to laugh at, but at the same time, it is what it is. Those guys put on the uniform like us. When it comes time to start the game, it doesn't matter how much money the Yankees or whoever make."

Treanor's friend was exaggerating a bit — Santana makes $12 million more than Florida's rotation. Still, the Marlins' payroll was less than half that of the No. 29 team, Tampa Bay ($43.8 million).

"They've won a championship more recently than we have as an organization. So there's many different ways to skin a cat," said Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, whose team lost to Florida in the 2003 World Series. "Alex earned that contract in the negotiation. Right now, the Marlins are in a different place. But they've got a stadium coming on board and they're going in the right direction, and I think they've already proven they know how to build something."

The Yankees, not surprisingly, topped the payroll list at $209.1 million, and A-Rod was No. 1 in the majors for the eighth straight year. New York first baseman Jason Giambi was second at $23.4 million, followed by Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter ($21.6 million) and Boston left fielder Manny Ramirez ($18.9 million).

Boosted by the acquisition of Miguel Cabrera and Dontrelle Willis, Detroit shot up to second in the major leagues at $138.7 million. The Tigers' payroll at the end of last season was 12th at $98.5 million.

"This isn't one of those teams, 'I can't believe we didn't pick up this player, or this guy.' We've got no excuses," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. "It's all about us, because the main man has done everything and more that you could ask."

The New York Mets were third at $138.3 million, up from $121 million at the end of 2007, and the World Series champion Boston Red Sox were fourth at $133.4 million.

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After that were the Chicago White Sox ($121.2 million), Los Angeles Angels ($119.2 million), Chicago Cubs ($118.6 million), Los Angeles Dodgers ($118.5 million) and Mariners ($118 million).

Although the average increased, the median salary — the point at which an equal amount of players fall above and below — remained at a record $1 million for the third straight opening day.

There were a record 434 making $1 million or more, breaking the record set in 2001 and matched last year. And there was a big boost at the top with 85 players reaching $10 million — up from 66 last year.

Payroll figures don't include cash transactions between clubs. Figures included salaries and prorated shares of signing bonuses and other guaranteed income, and for some players, deferred money was discounted to present-day value.

The average salary usually declines during the season as veterans get released and are replaced by young players. The final 2007 average, as calculated by the players' association, was $2.82 million.

Mariners salaries in 2008
Figures were obtained by The Associated Press from management and player sources and include salaries and prorated shares of signing bonuses and other guaranteed income. For some players, parts of deferred signing bonuses and salaries are discounted to reflect present-day values (dl-disabled list):
Player Salary
Ichiro $17,102,149
Richie Sexson 15,500,000
Adrian Beltre 13,400,000
Jarrod Washburn 9,850,000
Miguel Batista 9,500,000
Jose Vidro 8,500,000
Carlos Silva 8,250,000
Erik Bedard 7,000,000
Kenji Johjima 6,383,333
Raul Ibanez 5,500,000
J.J. Putz 4,400,000
Brad Wilkerson 3,000,000
Yuniesky Betancourt 1,877,500
Jose Lopez 1,750,000
Willie Bloomquist 1,000,000
Miguel Cairo 850,000
Felix Hernandez 540,000
Jamie Burke 435,000
Sean Green 405,000
Eric O'Flaherty 400,000
Ryan Rowland-Smith 395,000
Michael Morse 393,500
Cha Seung Baek 392,500
dl-Anderson Garcia 390,000
Charlton Jimerson 390,000
Mark Lowe 390,000
Source: AP
Team payrolls
Payrolls and average salaries for the opening-day rosters of the 30 major-league teams:
Team Payroll Average
N.Y. Yankees $209,081,579 $6,744,567
Detroit 138,685,197 4,622,840
N.Y. Mets 138,293,378 4,609,779
Boston 133,440,037 4,765,716
Chi. White Sox 121,152,667 4,487,136
L.A. Angels 119,216,333 4,110,908
Chicago Cubs 118,595,833 4,392,438
L.A. Dodgers 118,536,038 4,233,430
Seattle 117,993,982 4,538,230
Atlanta 102,424,018 3,414,134
St. Louis 100,624,450 3,049,226
Toronto 98,641,957 3,522,927
Philadelphia 98,269,881 3,388,617
Houston 88,930,415 3,293,719
Milwaukee 81,004,167 2,793,247
Cleveland 78,970,067 3,037,310
San Francisco 76,904,500 2,651,879
Cincinnati 74,277,695 2,971,108
San Diego 73,677,617 2,376,697
Colorado 68,655,500 2,640,596
Texas 68,239,551 2,353,088
Baltimore 67,196,248 2,099,883
Arizona 66,202,713 2,364,383
Minnesota 62,182,767 2,487,311
Kansas City 58,245,500 2,240,212
Washington 54,961,000 1,895,207
Pittsburgh 49,365,283 1,898,665
Oakland 47,967,126 1,713,112
Tampa Bay 43,820,598 1,460,687
Florida 21,836,500 661,712
Source: AP

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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