11-30-2017, 12:43 PM
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T0m C@rf@gn0
Member
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Join Date: May 2010
Location: Central New Jersey
Posts: 3,252
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Huysmans
While I agree with most things you write on the forum, with all due respect, I think you're wrong on this one Tom... for starters, can you name ONE player who chose another career because baseball didn't pay enough? ONE?
Fifty years ago in 1967, the year before Marvin Miller became executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Assn. the AVERAGE salary in baseball was $19,000.00 - which equates to roughly $139,428.81 in 2017 dollars - while the MINIMUM salary was $6000.00 - which equates to roughly $44,030.15 in 2017 dollars. Baseball salaries in the past 50 years have increased 20,000%... but that's not ridiculous?
So are we really to assume that pre-Miller players would sooner take a year-round job not playing the sport they love because almost $50,000 wasn't enough to live on a year? And that was just the MINIMUM, not the AVERAGE. I'm sorry, but pro athletes have ALWAYS been paid well and have made more than the average worker/citizen, while it's true it's only within the modern era that we see considerably inflated sums.
http://www.latimes.com/sports/mlb/la...329-story.html
https://www.dollartimes.com/calculators/inflation.htm
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Bill Lange? There are others certainly. That one off the top of my head.
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