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The Average Baseball Salary Tops $1 Million : Trends: Increase among 772 players is 21%. The Blue Jays have the highest average; the Dodgers find a way to lead the league.

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From Associated Press

The average baseball salary topped $1 million for the first time this season at $1,028,667, the Major League Baseball Players Assn. said Tuesday.

The average rose 21% from last year’s figure of $851,492 and is up 72% from the 1990 average of $597,537. The $153,955 increase was the second highest in baseball history behind the $177,175 rise between the 1990 and 1991 seasons.

The World Series champion Toronto Blue Jays were the highest-paid team, averaging a record $1,719,694, according to figures distributed by the association during its annual board meeting at Boca Raton, Fla.

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Oakland, which had the top average last year at $1,394,119, was second at $1,446,650. The Dodgers were third at $1,431,760, followed by the Boston Red Sox at $1,430,586 and the New York Mets at $1,381,298.

The National League champion Atlanta Braves were sixth at $1,280,689, up from $686,340 in 1991, when they were 19th. The Angels had the most dramatic drop, going from third in 1991 at $1,136,798 to 19th at $874,056. Other teams to drop were the San Francisco Giants, Kansas City Royals, Philadelphia Phillies, Montreal Expos and Cleveland Indians.

Cleveland had the lowest average at $326,537, less than one-fifth of Toronto’s average. The Houston Astros were next-to-last at $556,921.

There were 14 teams averaging $1 million or more last season, up from eight in 1991, the first year any team topped the $1-million figure.

The study found designated hitters were the highest-paid players at an average of $2,415,591, followed by first basemen at $2,270,011. Starting pitchers were next at $1,658,702, followed by catchers ($1,584,654), outfielders ($1,517,606), second basemen ($1,455,143), shortstops ($1,142,552), third basemen ($1,056,778) and relief pitchers ($853,096).

The study was based on the 772 players who were on active rosters or disabled lists on Aug. 31. The overall average was $1,084,408 on opening day, according a study by the Associated Press. The average goes down during the season because older players are released and replaced by younger players with lower salaries.

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Management’s Player Relations Committee computed the average at $1,012,424 because it treats signing bonuses differently than the union does.

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