KANSAS CITY, MO. – Now that the regular season has begun, Twins players can look forward to receiving their first paychecks, from the $171,123 that Carlos Correa earns every day of the 187-day major league season to the $3,957 per day that Austin Martin makes.
That latter figure, comparatively paltry next to a superstar’s wages, represents a raise for the Twins’ least experienced players. Major League Baseball’s minimum salary, which most players earn during their rookie season (and usually just marginally more until they accumulate three full seasons in the majors), rose by $20,000 this year to $740,000 per season.
But as a half-dozen young Twins can attest, there’s an opportunity to make significantly more.
“The bonus pool is a great program for those of us just starting out,” pitcher Bailey Ober said of a new feature in the players’ collective bargaining agreement that is aimed at better compensating players who don’t yet have seniority in the game. “It was a great Christmas gift.”
For Ober, that “gift” was a check for $432,752, minus taxes, which was deposited in his bank account a few days before the holiday. It was his share of a $50 million fund that MLB agreed to distribute each year to the top 100 players who haven’t yet earned salary-arbitration rights.
The fund is divided using a complicated formula that measures each player’s contribution to his team. Seattle’s Julio Rodriguez received the largest share last season, more than $1.8 million, but six Twins — Ober, Edouard Julien, Joe Ryan, Royce Lewis, Ryan Jeffers and Jhoan Duran — also received bonuses averaging about $350,000 each. Ober’s bonus was the largest on his team but just 34th in MLB.
“The game has gone so young, it’s good to get younger guys paid a little more,” said Jeffers, who received an extra $300,304.