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Baseball Capsules: Average MLB salary falls just short of $3 million

NEW YORK — The average baseball salary fell just short of $3 million this year, with the percentage increase slowing to its lowest level since 2004.

The 926 players in the major leagues before rosters expanded in September averaged $2,996,000, according to the annual report of the players' association, which was obtained Monday by The Associated Press.

That is up just 2.4 percent from last year's average of $2.93 million. The increase had not been that small since a 2.5 percent drop in 2004.

The World Series champion Yankees had by far the highest average at $7.66 million, topping the major leagues for the 11th consecutive season.

Six teams among the top eight by average salary made the postseason, joined by Colorado (15th at $2.93 million) and Minnesota (17th at $2.66 million). The Rockies and Twins were both eliminated in the first round.

The Chicago Cubs remained second overall at $4.63 million despite finishing second in the NL Central and missing the playoffs.

Boston moved from sixth to third at $4.58 million. Detroit, which missed the playoffs, went up from seventh to fourth at $4.43 million, followed by St. Louis, ($4.42 million), the Los Angeles Dodgers ($4.33 million), the Los Angeles Angels ($4.22 million), NL champion Philadelphia ($4.06 million) and the New York Mets ($3.76 million), who were deciminated by injuries and plummeted to a 70-92 record, their worst in six years.

Pittsburgh was last at $790,000, the lowest average in the major leagues since 2006. San Diego, at $959,000, was the only other team whose players averaged less than $1 million.

Among regulars at positions, first basemen took over with the highest average at $7.39 million, passing designated hitters ($7.34 million). Third basemen were next at $6.46 million, followed by starting pitchers ($4.66 million), outfielders ($4.58 million), shortstops ($4.44 million), second basemen ($4.32 million), catchers ($4.07 million) and relief pitchers ($1.78 million).

The commissioner's office will not determine its final figures for a few weeks. Management's numbers usually differ slightly because of different methods of calculation.

Management's opening-day average was $3.23 million, but the average usually drops during the season as veterans are released and replaced by younger players with lower salaries.

American League

Derek Jeter named SI's sportsman of the year

NEW YORK — Derek Jeter posed in his crisp pinstripe uniform, resting a shiny black bat on his shoulder, while a photographer lying on the ground near the entrance to a Bronx subway station snapped pictures of the New York Yankees shortstop from a low angle.

Photographing the Yankees captain from below to make him look more regal seemed beside the point. Jeter already has an image that is larger than life.

Jeter was back at Yankee Stadium a couple of weeks after winning his fifth World Series title, capping a stellar season with a photo shoot for his latest achievement: Sports Illustrated's sportsman of the year.

The magazine made the announcement Monday.

"It's unbelievable. It was completely unexpected. It came out of the blue," Jeter told The Associated Press during a break in the photo shoot. "When I heard it, what can you say? It's one of the greatest honors you can achieve in sports."

The 35-year-old Jeter is the first Bronx Bomber to be tapped for the award that has been given out since 1954. Swimmer Michael Phelps was last year's recipient.

"That's even harder considering all the great Yankee players that have played for this organization," said Jeter, standing under the banners depicting Yankees greats that hang in the Great Hall of the new stadium. "So I hope I've done them proud."

Sports Illustrated Group editor Terry McDonell certainly thinks he has.

"This verifies my idea that he is on the level of Ruth and Gehrig," McDonell said. "He's the greatest shortstop in the history of the game."

Some other baseball players to win the award are Sandy Koufax (1965), Tom Seaver (1969), Cal Ripken Jr. (1995); and the recent nemeses of Jeter's teams, Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling (2001), and the Boston Red Sox (2004).

All business between the lines, Jeter has become one of the untarnished ambassadors in the steroids era of baseball through steady play and quiet leadership on and off the field.

"He's so classy," McDonell said. "He brings a dignity and elegance to the game."

Jeter's 2009 season was remarkable.

He batted .334 with 18 homers and 66 RBIs with 30 steals to help lead the Yankees to their first World Series title in nine years — a frustrating drought for the player who won four championships in his first five seasons.

And as calls swelled for Jeter to switch positions after his contract expires in 2010, the 10-time All-Star went out and had one of his best defensive seasons: He made a career-low eight errors in winning his fourth Gold Glove.

He also passed Yankees icon Lou Gehrig's club record for hits, won the Hank Aaron Award as the AL's top hitter, and was given the Roberto Clemente Award for excellence on and off the field.

The World Series victory might have been Jeter's most cherished accomplishment this year, but what clinched the sportsman award for him was his philanthropic work. Jeter's Turn 2 Foundation has doled out over $10 million in grants since 1996 to organizations that help keep young people away from alcohol and drugs.

"It's about the manner of the striving and the quality of the effort, too," McDonell said. "Off the field he has grown so much as a member of the community."

Coming 15 seasons into a career full of honors, the award could be seen as a lifetime achievement, but both McDonell and Jeter dismissed the idea.

McDonell was impressed by Jeter's leadership, how he "stepped in and molded a team" this spring with the arrival of three expensive free agents, and Alex Rodriguez's admission to using steroids from 2001-03 and then having hip surgery that kept him out until May.

For Jeter, who only looks as far ahead as the next game, he's nowhere near the end of an illustrious career that could culminate with 4,000 hits.

"I'll take it one hit at a time. That's a long way in the future," said Jeter, who has 2,747 hits. "I'm going to play as long as I'm having fun. Right now I'm having a blast."

-- Howie Rumberg

Angels vote full playoff share to Adenhart estate

NEW YORK — The Los Angeles Angels voted to give a full postseason share to the estate of Nick Adenhart, the rookie pitcher killed in April in a car accident allegedly caused by a drunken driver.

The Angels' shares were worth $138,039. Los Angeles lost to the New York Yankees in the AL championship series.

The Yankees won the World Series, and their full postseason shares were worth a record $365,053, Major League Baseball said Monday. That was up from $351,504 on the 2008 champion Philadelphia Phillies and the previous mark of $362,173 set by the 2006 St. Louis Cardinals.

With a hike in some ticket prices this year, the players' pool for the postseason was $59.1 million, an increase from $51.16 million last year and the previous record of $55.60 million in 2006.

Yankees players received $21.27 million and split it among 46 full shares, 12¼ partial shares and two cash awards.

A full share on the Phillies, who lost to the Yankees in six games, was worth $265,358, up from $223,390 last year on the AL champion Tampa Bay Rays. The Phillies voted 45 full shares, 8.35 partial shares and three cash awards.

The players' pool includes 60 percent of ticket money from the first four games of the World Series, the first four of each league championship series and the first three of each division series.

Full shares for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who lost in the NLCS, came to $102,620.

Among first-round losers, full shares were worth $37,993 for Minnesota, $32,141 for Colorado, $29,447 for St. Louis and $28,263 for Boston. For second-place teams that didn't make the playoffs, full shares were worth $11,138 for Detroit, $10,424 for Florida, $9,276 for Texas and $8,262 for the Chicago Cubs.

Indians: Racy Sizemore photos stolen from e-mail

CLEVELAND — Major League Baseball officials have asked Internet sites to remove racy photographs of Indians center fielder Grady Sizemore.

Sizemore said the photos — one of them showing him nearly nude — were stolen from his girlfriend's e-mail account and posted online. He contacted baseball officials to stop the spread of the photos, which began appearing Sunday on various Web sites.

It is not known how many sites are complying with MLB's request. At least one site, deadspin.com, is refusing to take the photos down.

"There's no reason to," editor A.J. Daulerio said Monday. "They were up other places already."

Daulerio said the photos originated on a community message board and were forwarded to his site, which is also displaying a letter from an MLB official requesting the photos be removed.

The letter reads: "The photos posted in the article cited below are the property of Grady Sizemore. They were stolen from a personal computer. We've begun an investigation and request that you immediately remove Mr. Sizemore's property from the posting. We also ask that you preserve any records associated with its submission in anticipation of a criminal complaint to be filed with local law enforcement."

MLB investigators are trying to determine how many sites ran the photos of Sizemore standing in front of a bathroom mirror in various stages of undress. Sizemore used a cell phone to take the pictures of himself. He told The Plain Dealer of Cleveland they were intended only for his girlfriend.

The Indians said Sizemore wouldn't make any further comment on the photos.

"We fully support Grady as he deals with this personal matter," the Indians said in a statement Monday. "The posted photos were stolen from his girlfriend's e-mail account and a legal investigation is under way."

The 27-year-old Sizemore is the Indians' most popular player. His fan base includes "Grady's Ladies," and several other women's groups devoted to the three-time All-Star.

With a rare combination of speed and power, Sizemore has developed into one of baseball's best all-around players. He is one of only two players in club history to hit 30 homers and steal 30 bases in one season.

A two-time Gold Glove winner, Sizemore has endeared himself to Cleveland fans with his hustle and durability. In 2006 and 2007, he played in all 162 regular-season games, but he was limited to just 106 games last season.

Sizemore suffered an elbow injury and sports hernia during spring training in 2009 and was never 100 percent. He batted a career-low .248 with 18 homers and 64 RBIs before he deciding to stop playing on Sept. 4. He underwent two offseason surgeries.

-- Tom Withers

Andrews retires as chairman of Red Sox charity

BOSTON — Former Boston Red Sox second baseman Mike Andrews will step down after three decades as chairman of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute's Jimmy Fund.

Andrews announced on Monday that he would retire from the post at the end of the year.

The Jimmy Fund raises money for cancer care and research and has been the official charity of the Red Sox since 1953.

Under Andrews' leadership, the Jimmy Fund's annual fund raising has grown from $1 million to $64 million in fiscal 2009.

The 66-year-old Andrews was a rookie on Boston's "Impossible Dream" team in 1967 when he first became involved with the Jimmy Fund after meeting a young boy with terminal cancer.

A successor to Andrews was not immediately named.

Mark Teahen wins 2009 Hutch Award

SEATTLE — Mark Teahen of the Chicago White Sox has won the 2009 Hutch Award for his efforts on and off the field.

The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle made the announcement Monday. The award goes to a player who best exemplifies the honor, courage and dedication of former major league pitcher and manager Fred Hutchinson, who died from cancer in 1964 at age 45.

Teahen was traded this month from the Kansas City Royals to Chicago. The infielder-outfielder will receive his award Jan. 27 in Seattle.

While in Kansas City, Teahen was a spokesman and fundraiser for a program that gave children with physical or mental challenges the chance to play baseball.

National League

Cora agrees to $2M, 1-yr deal to stay with Mets

NEW YORK — Alex Cora is staying with the New York Mets, agreeing Monday to a $2 million, one-year contract with a vesting option for 2011.

The 34-year-old backup infielder played 82 games this year, batting .251 with one home run, 18 RBIs and eight steals. He made 54 starts at shortstop, becoming the regular after Jose Reyes got hurt. But Cora didn't play after Aug. 12 because of torn ligaments in both thumbs that required surgery.

Cora also started 13 games at second base for a fourth-place team that finished 70-92. He often was praised by manager Jerry Manuel and other Mets decision-makers for his instincts and leadership.

A light hitter with a reliable glove, Cora has a .246 career batting average in 1,116 big league games with the Dodgers, Indians, Red Sox and Mets.

He can earn an additional $1 million in performance bonuses: $250,000 each for 80, 90, 100 and 110 starts. There is a $2 million option for 2011 that becomes guaranteed if he makes about 80 starts next season.

"I am excited about coming back," Cora said in a statement. "We have a lot to prove as a team after what happened last year. As for me personally, there is unfinished business. I was hurt a great deal of the time and I really wasn't able to perform like I know I can. I'm healthy now and I can't wait to get to spring training. We all have something to prove."

-- Ronald Blum

LaRue agrees to $950,000 deal with Cardinals

ST. LOUIS — Catcher Jason LaRue has agreed to a $950,000, one-year contract to remain with the St. Louis Cardinals.

Yadier Molina's backup for two seasons, LaRue hit .240 with two homers and six RBIs in 104 at-bats last season. He started 26 games and appeared in 51 overall.

"Jason is a great fit for our ballclub in his current role," Cardinals general manager John Mozeliak said Monday. "His veteran leadership both on and off the field is something we value highly."

LaRue's deal, the same as his 2009 contract, includes a $50,000 performance bonus if he has 60 starts.

St. Louis also agreed to a minor league contract with infielder Ruben Gotay, who hit .272 with 29 doubles, 11 homers and 57 RBIs last season for Reno, Arizona's Triple-A farm team.

Pirates send 2 pitchers outright to Triple-A

PITTSBURGH — The Pirates have sent right-hander Jeff Karstens and left-hander Justin Thomas outright to Triple-A Indianapolis after both cleared waivers.

Catcher Robinzon Diaz, designated for assignment along with Thomas and Karstens on Nov. 21, has cleared waivers and becomes a minor league free agent.

Karstens, acquired from the Yankees in a 2008 trade, was 4-6 with a 5.42 ERA last season. The Pirates claimed Thomas on waivers from Seattle after the season ended.

The Pirates also agreed to a minor league contract with left-hander Wil Ledezma and invited him to spring training along with Karstens and Thomas. Ledezma is 15-22 with a 5.17 ERA in 160 major league games with five teams.

Minor Leagues

Red Sox name Lovullo to manage Triple-A team

BOSTON — The Boston Red Sox have named Torey Lovullo as manager of the team's Triple-A affiliate in Pawtucket.

The 44-year-old Lovullo has spent the last eight seasons as a minor league manager in the Cleveland Indians' organization, including the last four years at the helm of the team's Triple-A club.

Lovullo was drafted by Detroit in 1987 and played in parts of eight major league seasons with the Tigers and five other teams, primarily as a second baseman.

He succeeds Ron Johnson, who recently joined Boston's major league coaching staff.

The Red Sox on Monday also named Gerald Perry as a hitting coach for Pawtucket. Perry has served as a major league hitting coach for four teams, most recently the Chicago Cubs.

Cleveland Indians name 2 minor league managers

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Indians have named Mike Sarbaugh manager of their Triple-A Columbus affiliate and Joel Skinner manager at Double-A Akron.

Sarbaugh managed at Akron the past two seasons. The 42-year-old has been in the Indians' organization for 20 seasons, six as a manger. He led the Aeros to the Eastern League championship last season.

Skinner spent the past nine seasons on Cleveland's major league staff. He previously managed at Akron from 1992-93. The 2010 season will be the 48-year-old's 21st with the Indians as a player or coach. Skinner was the Indians' interim manager in 2002 after Charlie Manuel was fired.

Elsewhere

Weiner likely to succeed Fehr on Wednesday

NEW YORK — The man poised to become the first new leader of baseball's powerful union in more than a quarter-century is a ballplayer's lawyer.

Michael Weiner speaks plainly, wears jeans and sneakers to work — and after more than 20 years with the Major League Baseball Players Association, knows his stuff.

"Michael has the ability to break things down to the players," pitcher Tom Glavine said. "He speaks English. He doesn't speak lawyer talk."

Weiner is likely to succeed Donald Fehr as executive director of the players' association on Wednesday during the organization's annual board meeting. He will be just the fourth head of the union since 1966.

And while Fehr has a similar sartorial sense, the two men have far different styles otherwise.

Weiner talks in far shorter and simpler sentences and represents a generational shift from his 61-year-old predecessor, who went to work for union head Marvin Miller in 1977 and took over as head six years later after Ken Moffett's brief tenure.

Weiner, who turns 48 on Dec. 21, has been a baseball union lawyer for nearly his entire professional life. After graduation from Williams College and Harvard Law School, Weiner clerked for a federal judge and got hired by Fehr in 1988 as a staff lawyer.

While the union was under constant attack during the first half of Fehr's reign — there was a two-day strike in 1985, a 32-day lockout in 1990 and a 7½-month strike in 1994-95 that wiped out the World Series — Weiner faces different challenges as head of a membership with an average salary of just under $3 million.

Drug testing — and now congressional scrutiny — are a fact of life in the major leagues. Management is likely to want to tinker with complex economic issues such as revenue sharing and the luxury tax, and teams already have said they want to widen the amateur draft to cover international players and institute a slotting system that would eliminate individual negotiations for draft picks.

For Weiner, the 1994-95 strike and the negotiations that finally led to an agreement in March 1997 were the seminal event in baseball's labor-management relations. The sides had fought nearly constantly during two contentious decades that saw players gain free agency and salary arbitration, then win three grievance decisions that owners conspired against free agents.

"I think that helped some people on the owners side to finally accept that the union was a fixture and the union was an entity they were going to have to deal with," he said during a mid-November interview at the union's office overlooking Rockefeller Center. "There was never a chance for anything to settle in until we got through collusion, and really until then we got through the bargaining in '94 and '95."

Fehr was a product of those battles, and distrust of management and commissioner Bud Selig became part of his nature. For many fans, Fehr's image was that of a snarling lawyer at the podium during work stoppages.

Weiner is an unknown, spending his career in the background behind Fehr and his No. 2, Gene Orza. He has a more laid-back style — he even teaches Hebrew school on Sundays to fourth and fifth graders.

"I learned from my dad that you could get your point across and you could stand very firm for what you believe without raising your voice. That was furthered by the experience I saw when I worked for the judge," he said. "I expect that will continue to be my approach."

Yet, he figures to be somewhat like Fehr, too.

"Don and I have somewhat different personalities, but the fundamentals of what it means to do this job I've learned from Don," Weiner said. "How to keep the players together, negotiations, principles of negotiation, all of that I've learned from Don."

Already he is speaking out against comments from unidentified management officials who have predicted a down free-agent market this offseason. Weiner says what he objected to were comments about the likely salaries of specific free agents.

What else is on his agenda?

For one thing, players are unhappy with the increased number of off days during the postseason. "That's not the way the game of baseball is played," Weiner said, and while there's no consensus yet, the union could proposed one startling playoff shift.

"There have been some players who expressed concern about the three out-of-five division series and whether or not having played a 162-game season it's fair for them to have everybody get thrown into that kind of a series," Weiner said.

He became one of the union's two primary negotiators along with Steve Fehr — the union head's brother — in talks that led to the last two collective bargaining agreements, in 2002 and 2006. He developed a good relationship with management's primary negotiators.

"I think that Michael is a really zealous advocate for the interests of the players. At the same time, he has a very practical realization or a practical understanding of the need to make agreements so that both the players and the owners can be successful," said Rob Manfred, MLB's executive vice president of labor relations. "Any good relationship is founded on respect, and I do have a ton of respect for him, I really do. Candidly, I like Mike personally. He's a very engaging individual. So I think the combination of the fact that I have a lot of respect for him and I like him personally gives you a nice bedrock to work from."

Still, being the head of the union will put different pressures on Weiner as he prepares for the next round of bargaining, which will take place ahead of the current agreement's expiration in December 2011. "The executive director is a key figure in maintaining the integrity of the MLBPA," first baseman Tony Clark said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. "He is inevitably responsible for EVERYTHING."

Fehr says there is only so much preparation for the top spot.

"You can know an awful lot about the job, what has to be done, the role of the union, but until you become executive director, with the ultimate responsibility insofar as can be held by staff, it's very difficult to understand what the job is," he said. "That has to be learned after you get there."

-- Ronald Blum

Renowned Cuban umpire defects to United States

MIAMI — A top Cuban umpire has defected to the United States.

The Spanish-language newspaper El Nuevo Herald reports that Nelson Diaz arrived in Miami on Sunday with his wife and two daughters.

Diaz worked in the Olympics and the 2006 World Baseball Classic. His 26-year career supposedly ended after he was picked to work the 2009 WBC in Japan but was told by Cuban baseball officials he couldn't go because they didn't trust him.

Diaz said one of the first things he did in the U.S. was place flowers at the tomb of his mother, who died in Miami before he could see her.

In 1999, Diaz called the exhibition game between the Cubans and Orioles in Baltimore. He helped restore order after a Cuban umpire body-slammed an anti-Castro demonstrator.

Diaz also participated in World Cups and the Pan American Games, among many other international tournaments.

Chip Caray and TBS part ways

ATLANTA — Chip Caray has called his final baseball game for TBS.

Network spokesman Jeff Pomeroy confirmed Monday that TBS and the announcer have decided to part ways.

A son of late Braves broadcaster Skip Caray and a grandson of famed broadcaster Harry Caray, Chip Caray had called first-round playoff games for TBS during the past three seasons. He originally worked with Tony Gwynn and Bob Brenly, then teamed with Ron Darling and Buck Martinez.

Caray also was part of the network's Sunday regular-season package.

Pomeroy said no replacement has been picked.

"Since the end of the 2009 MLB Playoffs, we've had several discussions with Chip Caray regarding 2010 and beyond. Both sides agree that now is the right time to move ahead on different paths," the network said in a statement.


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