Advertisement

Melky Cabrera gets full postseason share ($377,003) from Giants

Melky Cabrera circles the bases after hitting a home run July 21.
(Hunter Martin / Getty Images)
Share

San Francisco Giants outfielder Melky Cabrera, suspended for 50 games (the final 45 games of the regular season and the five-game division series) last season because he tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs during the season, is almost $400,000 richer today.

Cabrera received a full postseason share, which amounted to $377,003.

Under baseball’s joint drug agreement, Cabrera was eligible for his share because his suspension ended in time for him to be on the active roster for a majority of the Giants’ postseason games, even though San Francisco decided not to use him. Under Major League Rule 45, he gets a full share because he was with the team from June 1 on.

Cabrera agreed to a $16-million, two-year contract with Toronto soon after the World Series ended.

Advertisement

The full postseason share of $377,003 was a record, breaking the mark that had stood since the 2006 St. Louis Cardinals.

In the first year of the expansion of the playoffs from eight teams to 10, the players’ pool was a record $65.36 million, Major League Baseball said Monday. The previous mark of $59.1 million came in 2009.

The Giants split $23.5 million, voting 50 full shares, partial shares equivalent to 11.1 and 12 cash awards.

San Francisco’s full share was up from $323,170 for the 2011 champion Cardinals and $317,631 on the 2010 Giants.

A full share on the AL champion Tigers was worth $284,275, up from $251,516 for last year’s Texas Rangers.

The players’ pool included 50 of the gate receipts from the two wild-card games, and 60% from the first three games of each division series and the first four games of each league championship series and the World Series.

Advertisement

Full shares were worth $122,558 for the Cardinals, $115,065 for the New York Yankees, $37,865 for the Cincinnati Reds, $37,045 for the Washington Nationals, $34,826 for the Baltimore Orioles, $34,325 for the Oakland Athletics, $19,609 for the Atlanta Braves and $16,999 for the Rangers.

Shares are split among the 10 postseason teams. In the past, they were divided among the eight playoff teams and the four second-place teams that failed to reach the postseason.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

ALSO:

UCLA is upset by Cal Poly SLO, 70-68

Houston Rockets Coach Kevin McHale’s daughter dies

Colts cheerleaders shave hair to support Chuck Pagano

Advertisement

Advertisement