
Baseball's biggest spenders are stumbling, with the dodgers, mets and yankees beset by injuries
'It is in a lot of ways a game of survival,' New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. While all three are in playoffs positions, they have not had the seasons they hoped for. All three teams were considered winners of the offseason. The Mets lured Juan Soto from the Yankees for a record 765 million 15-year contract. The Dodgers added prized pitcher Roki Sasaki and left-hander Blake Snell, along with reliever Tanner Scott, outfielder Michael Conforto, and second baseman Hyeseong Kim. The Yankees brought in Max Fried, Cody Bellinger, Paul Goldschmidt, and Devin Williams.
Projected lineups and the ones in box scores have been markedly different. The Mets have used 13 starting pitchers, losing Kodai Senga, Sean Manaea, Frankie Montas, Tylor Megill, and Griffin Canning for significant stretches. 'We're not going to sit here and feel sorry for ourselves. Nobody will,' manager Carlos Mendoza said. 'We're facing a lot of adversity, but every team goes through it.' Los Angeles had 14 pitchers on the injured list in early June and has used 16 different starters. 'It was very important to have the depth. We went through a lot last year and I didn't think that we would kind of match what we did last year, but sure enough, we have,' Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. 'To kind of manage it hasn't been easy, but we're doing it.' The Yankees lost ace Gerrit Cole and Clarke Schmidt to torn UCLs and Luis Gil to a lat strain. They are now without two-time AL MVP Aaron Judge for at least 10 days because of a flexor injury.
Los Angeles leads the major leagues with 1,495 player days on the IL, the Mets are fifth at 1,095, and the Yankees sixth at 1,022. Philadelphia, 1 1/2 games back of the Mets in the NL East, has the fewest IL days at 214. In addition to relievers, the Mets could use a center fielder and an upgrade at third. The Yankees added infielders Ryan McMahon and Amed Rosario, boosting payroll and tax by 11.56 million.
Modern MLB is a sport for the wealthy. Just two of the current division leaders were not among the top seven spenders as of opening day: Detroit (19th at 148 million) and the Chicago Cubs (14th at 195 million). And the spending doesn't include luxury tax, with seven teams projected to pay. The Dodgers were on track at the seasons start to owe a record 151 million—more than the payrolls of seven teams. The were were projected at 73 million, and the Yankees 52 million, with Philadelphia, Toronto, San Diego, and Boston at lesser amounts.
'I'm a piker now compared to the Dodgers,' Mets owner Steve Cohen said during spring training. All seven teams set to owe tax would be in the 12-club playoffs if the season ended now, along with Houston currently just below the tax threshold. In the past decade, three teams outside the top 10 spenders have won titles: Atlanta in 2021 (14th), Houston in 2017 (18th), and Kansas City in 2015 (13th). While the biggest spender has won twice—the Dodgers in 2020 and Boston in 2018—a top six payroll has won six titles of the past 10 titles.
Some owners say MLB should push for a salary cap in negotiations to replace the collective bargaining agreement that expires in December 2026, a proposal the players association would fight. 'Payroll disparity is such a fact of life among the ownership group that there's not a lot of need for talking about whether we have it or not,' baseball commissioner Rob Manfred said. 'We understand that it has become a bigger problem for us.' Last year the top three spenders reached the League Championship Series, along with Cleveland which finished at No. 25. Ten of 20 LCS teams in the last five years paid tax. 'I have the ability to spend if I have to,' Cohen said. 'I want to win, and I want to I can on the field.' ___ AP freelance writer Ken Powtak contributed to this report. ___ AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB

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