Friday, June 5, 2026

Bobby Bonilla On Annual $1.2M Payday: ‘It Doesn’t Suck’

Fifteen years into a deferral contract between the Mets and Bobby Bonilla, the influence of that agreement remains as strong as ever. 

Lou Capozzola-Imagn Images

One of baseball’s biggest unofficial holidays—Bobby Bonilla Day—has arrived again, and the 62-year-old former MLB star remains bemused by the attention his salary deferrals still receive and the significant influence they have on current player deals. 

As has been the case since 2011, Bonilla today will receive a $1.19 million annual payment from the Mets, a continuation of a deferral structure created in 2000, and lasting until 2035. Overall, the Mets deal, thanks to the deferrals and compounded interest, has turned an initial $5.9 million contract obligation to Bonilla into nearly $30 million for the six-time All-Star.

“It doesn’t suck. It doesn’t suck. … I just wanted to be able to spend as if I was an active player in retirement,” Bonilla said in a short film, The Big Deal, produced by the newly created Front Office Sports Studios. “People are fascinated by [the contract]. It’s a pretty cool thing. It’s probably bigger than my birthday. … I’d love for this to be an inspiration for people. That guaranteed income is everything.”

To that end, Bonilla is far from alone in former MLB stars getting deferral checks today. Among them:

  • Manny Ramirez will receive $2 million from the Red Sox as part of a 16-year, $32 million deferral pact running through 2026. 
  • Bret Saberhagen will receive $250,000 annually from the Mets in his deal running from 2004–28, with that pact helping inspire Bonilla’s agreement. 
  • Chris Davis will receive $9.16 million from the Orioles as part of $59 million in total deferrals running until 2037. 
  • Bonilla himself also has a second, separate deferral from the Orioles, worth $500,000 annually until 2028, with his agent, Dennis Gilbert, playing a key role in both agreements. 

“It’s a beautiful day!” Bonilla said of the day bearing his name. 

Some of these deferral payments are well in excess of the 2025 salaries of current MLB stars such as the Reds’ Elly De La Cruz ($770,000), Pirates’ Paul Skenes ($875,000), and Yankees’ Anthony Volpe ($879,000).

Modern-Day Moves

Extended deferrals, such as what Bonilla helped popularize, are also a fixture of current MLB contracts. The Dodgers, MLB’s top-spending club, by themselves have more than $1 billion in total deferral commitments. Superstar Shohei Ohtani, who in late 2023 deferred $680 million of his $700 million contract until 2034–43, is particularly notable here—not only because of the size of the future payments, but the fact he agreed to it in the prime of his career, as opposed to later on, as many such as Bonilla did. 

The Dodgers’ offseason activity to prepare for the 2025 season included $135 million worth of deferrals for free-agent acquisitions Blake Snell, Tanner Scott, Tommy Edman, and a contract extension for Teoscar Hernández. 

Soon after those signings, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred reiterated that the Dodgers are compliant with the collective bargaining agreement, but added, “We listen to our fans on topics like this, and I have heard people on this. Believe me, I get a lot of emails about it.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Aaron Judge Injury Deals Major Blow to Yankees—and MLB

The Yankees megastar will miss the heart of the season.

MLB’s Long-Stalled Stadium Plans—Rays and A’s—Show Progress

The A’s and Rays both are drawing closer to getting new ballparks.

MLB Owners Hold Firm On Salary Cap, Cite ‘Failure’ With Luxury Tax

Rising willingness by teams to pay the tax prompts a new approach.

MLBPA Says Owners’ Salary Cap Would Cut Player Pay by $500M

The union again decries management’s push to implement a salary cap.

Featured Today

Ai sports slop

How Sports Became Ground Zero for AI Slop

The category is the perfect breeding ground for AI content churn.
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group A - Germany v Luxembourg - Rhein-Neckar-Arena, Sinsheim, Germany - October 10, 2025 Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann
June 4, 2026

‘Weird Corners of the World’: How to Find a World Cup Coach

National associations look for a winning record—and also hope for serendipity.
June 3, 2026

The Elite High Schools Hosting World Cup Teams

Spain, Morocco, Croatia, and Switzerland chose schools as their tournament base camps.
Frances Cabral-Delaney
May 29, 2026

How Arsenal Fandom Went ‘Manic’

“People do not become Arsenal fans because it’s easy,” says Zohran Mamdani.

Does Market Size Still Matter in the NBA?

This year’s Finals pits the biggest market against one of the smallest.
June 4, 2026

Chwalińska Makes French Open Final, Nearly Triples Career Earnings

Chwalińska was ranked No. 114 before the French Open began.
June 4, 2026

Knicks Get-In Prices for Game 3 at MSG Hit $8,000—and Climbing

Knicks Finals tickets now outprice both the Super Bowl and World Cup.
Sponsored

Landon Donovan: What Soccer in America Still Needs

Landon Donovan discusses the evolution of soccer in America and investing in the NWSL.
Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; NFL commissioner Roger Goodell arrives during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting at the Arizona Biltmore.
June 4, 2026

NFL Defends TV Deals As Goodell Declines to Testify Before Congress

The league continues to tout its commitment to broadcast television.
SEA at VAN - Nov. 21, 20251
June 4, 2026

Will the PWHL’s Aggressive Expansion Succeed?

The league added four teams ahead of the 2026–27 season.
June 3, 2026

Adam Silver: NBA Europe ‘On Track’ to Launch Next Year

The commissioner also commented on the Aspiration investigation.
June 3, 2026

WNBA Player Drops Out of Project B to Play in Turkey

Project B also signed another French player: Leïla Lacan.