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Jackie Autry: Angels May Lose $8.5 Million : Baseball: They will borrow more than ever, says co-owner, who has complete authority in running club operations.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

The Angels face unprecedented financial losses that could exceed $8.5 million this year and force the club to borrow throughout the season, co-owner Jackie Autry said Friday.

Autry said escalating salaries were outrunning revenues, and that the situation might force a sale of the franchise her husband, Gene, purchased during American League expansion in 1961. She added, however, that there were no immediate plans to do so.

“Can we stay in there forever? The answer is no,” Autry told reporters.

“How long can Gene Autry borrow money to keep his options going? I can’t answer that. Are we borrowing money to keep going? Yes. Historically, we’ve gone into our credit line for two or three months, usually in October. This is the first time we’ve been in constant debt. . . .”

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Autry, 50, publicly acknowledged for the first time that she had been been given complete authority in running club operations by her 84-year-old husband, whose day-to-day involvement had dwindled to “very little.” She said she was optimistic about the team the Angels will field this season, but added that the cost is becoming prohibitive.

Autry, a banker before their marriage 10 1/2 years ago, said an audit showed that the Angels lost $3.6 million last year. She predicted serious consequences unless “players realize owners are not a money pit and realize owners have to see a return on their investment.”

“Players still perceive there is a great deal of money to be spent. (But) if it’s out there, it’s not with the California Angels,” she said. “We’re not one of the New York clubs and we’re not the L.A. Dodgers. We don’t have the financial resources.

“I see this from a banker’s standpoint. I foresee owners having difficulty meeting their payroll. . . . My greatest fear is seeing a club fold, and I think that’s a very strong possibility.”

Jackie Autry, who holds the title of executive vice president, said of her husband’s day-to-day involvement: “Gene has had major eye problems the last five years,” she said, “and it’s become increasingly more difficult for him to read things and deal with what comes up. I’ve become his eyes. If something comes up, do we talk about it? You bet we do. From the standpoint of ownership, Gene and I talk about everything of consequence. Do we talk about minute details? No.

“This man is going to outlive all of us.”

While saying baseball owners must accept responsibility for escalating salaries and the resulting difficulties they face, she said players must share the blame because they refuse to abolish salary arbitration.

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Including a final payment required of all clubs to settle a collusion case, Autry said the Angels could lose more than $8.5 million if there is an unbudgeted expense, such as replacing an injured player if the team is in contention for the division title. And that deficit would not be made up if the Angels made the playoffs and advanced to the World Series.

“In 1993, we have (five) ballplayers who will consume better than 50% of the budgeted salaries we had for 1992. Those five (pitchers Bryan Harvey, Chuck Finley, Mark Langston and Chuck Crimm and third baseman Gary Gaetti) will get $16 million, 50% of the entire budget. We go into that knowing we have to field another 20 people on the field and have to deal with arbitration and re-signing some of our own free agents.”

In reviewing the team’s progress this spring and its prospects for the season, she said she is pleased with the work of Whitey Herzog, the club’s senior vice president for player personnel, and Manager Buck Rodgers.

“Between Whitey and Buck, they’ve done an outstanding job of bringing together a good team,” she said. “We’re going to have an outstanding organization on and off the field. . . . Buck had expressed interest in getting some blue-collar players. The sense we got from Buck in the five, six weeks he spent on the field (after he was hired Aug. 26) was that there was a country-club attitude. He wanted a down-in-the-dirt attitude.”

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