.-') _ .-') _ | |
( OO ) ) ( OO ) ) | |
.-----. ,--./ ,--,' ,--./ ,--,' | |
' .--./ | \ | |\ | \ | |\ | |
| |('-. | \| | )| \| | ) | |
/_) |OO )| . |/ | . |/ | |
|| |`-'| | |\ | | |\ | | |
(_' '--'\ | | \ | | | \ | | |
`-----' `--' `--' `--' `--' | |
lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial | |
ARTICLE VIEW: | |
He hasn’t played in MLB for more than two decades. One team is paying | |
him $1.2 million a year until 2035 | |
By Allen Kim and Ben Morse, CNN | |
Updated: | |
8:33 AM EDT, Tue July 1, 2025 | |
Source: CNN | |
He hasn’t picked up a professional glove in 24 years, but he’s | |
still picking up a paycheck – and a hefty one at that. | |
It’s July 1, which for fans means it’s Bobby Bonilla Day. | |
The former slugger retired in 2001 with the St. Louis Cardinals, but he | |
has been collecting a check of nearly $1.2 million from the Mets every | |
year on July 1 for more than a decade. | |
The deal is part of a contract negotiated by Bonilla’s agent Dennis | |
Gilbert, which will pay Bonilla $1,193,248.20 every year until 2035. | |
Bonilla, a former All-Star who last played with the Mets in 1999, will | |
be 72 when his contract with the team expires. | |
How was Gilbert able to secure such a sweet deal for his client? They | |
can both thank and former Mets owner Fred Wilpon. | |
The Mets wanted to part ways with Bonilla after the 1999 season, but he | |
had $6 million left on his contract. Wilpon believed he was getting a | |
huge return on his investments through Madoff but the Mets owner turned | |
out to be a victim of Madoff’s infamous Ponzi scheme. | |
Instead of paying Bonilla outright, Wilpon opted to defer payments so | |
that the money could be unwittingly invested into Madoff’s Ponzi | |
scheme. | |
Bonilla’s agent Gilbert negotiated with the team to defer payments | |
until 2011, with an 8% annual interest rate. | |
Madoff was the mastermind of the most notorious Ponzi scheme in | |
history. A Ponzi scheme is a form of fraud that uses funds from more | |
recent investors to pay profits to earlier investors, leading them to | |
believe that their investments are part of a successful enterprise. | |
Madoff, who died in 2021, was serving 150 years in prison for the | |
multibillion-dollar scheme that he ran for decades. | |
In total, Bonilla will walk away with a $29.8 million payday because of | |
Wilpon’s blunder. | |
Other deferred payment schemes in MLB | |
Players being paid over a long period of time isn’t uncommon in MLB, | |
with contracts often deferring money down the line. | |
Most notably recently, after the Los Angeles Dodgers signed Japanese | |
two-way star to , Ohtani . | |
That means Ohtani will be paid $2 million a year over the contract and | |
the deferrals – totaling $680 million – will begin in 2034. | |
Starting then, Ohtani will receive $68 million per year from the | |
Dodgers until 2043. | |
The Dodgers have made deferring payments in recent times, also doing so | |
when signing Blake Snell and Tommy Edman. | |
But this idea has been around for a long time now, after it was by | |
“The Dolgoff Plan” in the 1960s when an accountant, Ralph Dolgoff, | |
helped the American Basketball Association (ABA) compete with the NBA | |
by allowing teams to offer payments spread over multiple years in an | |
attempt to attract players with the appeal of long-term security. | |
So while Mr. Bonilla is likely one of the most famous beneficiaries of | |
deferred payment schemes, he is not the first and will most certainly | |
not be the last. | |
<- back to index |