Quote:
The San Francisco Giants acquired outfielder Steve Finley from the Los Angeles Angels for third baseman Edgardo Alfonzo on Wednesday in a swap of former All-Stars who dropped off dramatically last season.
very nice, i'm a happy boy!
in other news
Quote:
The New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox got extra bills Wednesday.
The Yankees owe $34,053,787 following tax payments of $25,964,060 last year and $3,148,962 in 2003.
Boston must pay $4,156,476, up from $3,148,962 last year.
Using 40-man rosters, the average annual values of contracts and including benefits, the Yankees' payroll finished at $213.1 million, followed by Boston at $141.9 million, the New York Mets at $119.2 million, the Los Angeles Angels at $115.9 million and Seattle at $111.9 million.
Also Wednesday, the Major League Baseball Players Association said salaries resumed their climb this year after a rare one-season drop.
The average salary rose 7.2 percent to $2,479,125, according to the union's annual study. The increase was the steepest since a 7.3 percent rise in 2002 and followed a 2.5 percent decrease last year — only the third drop since the union began tracking salaries in 1967.
The Yankees had the highest average salary for the seventh straight season, setting a record at $7,391,168. For the second year in a row, Pittsburgh was the only team with an average below $1 million, finishing at $963,674.
In its first season in Washington, the Nationals averaged $1.91 million, up from $1.23 million in the team's final season as the Montreal Expos. The Florida Marlins dropped their average from $2.12 million to $1.87 million and are likely to have the lowest average next year after shedding nearly all of their veteran players since the end of the season.
The union study was based on the 904 players on Aug. 31 rosters and disabled lists.
Third basemen were the highest-paid players at an average of $5.7 million, followed by outfielders ($4.7 million), first basemen ($4.3 million), designated hitter ($3.9 million), starting pitchers ($3.8 million), catchers ($4.1 million), shortstops ($3.5 million), second basemen ($2.9 million) and relief pitchers ($1.3 million).