The Jewish Home | FEBRUARY 20, 2020 The Jewish Home | OCTOBER 29, 2015
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By Allan Rolnick, CPA
THE BALTIMORE JEWISH HOME
Would You Take This Betts?
JUNE 18, 2020
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one worries about the Mets doing it.) The process isnât quite as hard as filling out your 1040 â but itâs not far off. Start with the average annual value of each playerâs contract. If that amount tops a specified maximum ($208 million for 2020), the team pays 20% of the excess. If they top it a second year in a row, they pay 30%.
and a World Series trophy. It also meant $12 million in tax. For 2019, they were highest again at $243.7 million. That cost them $13 million. Mookie Betts was scheduled to make $27 million this year, his last before free agency. His teammate Price was scheduled to make $32 million. Now, Bostonâs owner, John Hen-
Baseball may be âjust a game,â but those are real dollars the Sox are paying in tax.
Three or more times and itâs 50%. Clubs that go over by more than $20 million pay a 12% surtax. If they go over by more than $40 million, they pay an extra 42.5% the first year and 45% for future years. Violators can also lose draft picks. Where does that leave Boston? In 2018, their payroll was the highest in the league at $239 million. It bought them 108 regular-season victories
ry, ranks 33rd on Forbes magazineâs list of the richest sports team owners. His net worth stands at $2.7 billion. But he must be feeling the same pinch Frazee did a century ago. Take his Florida mansion, for example. Back in 2018, he listed it for sale at $25 million. Now heâs marked it down 40% to $15 million, which would cover a dozen or so gamesâ worth of player salaries. (Property
taxes are $138,907/year, and it canât be cheap hiring staff to clean the 19 bathrooms.) So, sending Betts and Price packing drops the roster down to $190 million and solves the luxury tax problem. Of course, solving that tax problem creates a new one. Betts was arguably the teamâs best fielder in 50 years. Look up âfranchise playerâ in the dictionary, andâŚwell, you know the rest. Price was the teamâs #3 pitcher; last year he went 7-5 with a 4.37 ERA. (Sadly, thatâs what you get for $32 million today.) Baseball writers are crying foul, accusing Henry of putting profits over winning. Where will the Sox stand at the All-Star Break? Bang the Astrosâ trash can if you know! Baseball may be âjust a game,â but those are real dollars the Sox are paying in tax. Just goes to show, nobody likes paying more than they have to, and you shouldnât either. Thatâs why you need a Golden Glover like us on your team! Allan J Rolnick is a CPA who has been in practice for over 30 years in Queens, NY. He welcomes your comments and can be reached at 718-896-8715 or at allanjrcpa@aol.com.
B A LT I M O R E J E W I S H H O M E . C O M
portsball fans who already miss NFL action are now grappling with the reality of a delayed and probably drastically modified baseball season. The opportunity of sitting in a stadium, munching on peanuts while watching your favorite pastime is not looking so promising at the moment. 100 years ago, the Boston Red Sox sold their best player, a pitcher named Babe Ruth who wanted to bat every day. Owner Harry Frazee had run out of patience for Ruthâs drinking and gambling, and Ruthâs hitting prowess made him too expensive to keep. The Sox spent the next 86 years regretting that deal. Now theyâre doing it again, sending outfielder Mookie Betts and pitcher Mike Price to the Dodgers. And itâs all to keep their billionaire owner from paying the leagueâs Competitive Balance Tax to keep him. When you hear the phrase âluxury tax,â you might think of politicians stumping against income inequality. Baseballâs âluxury taxâ fights inequality, too. The goal is to keep big-market teams like the New York Yankees or Los Angeles Dodgers from bidding up salaries to corner the market on talent. (Funny how no