When I asked Twins Chief Executive Officer Jim Pohlad if he still believes the payroll of his baseball team should be 54 percent of the gross revenue, a figure many clubs operate under, he said he doesn't believe that will be the case for the 2014 season.
The Twins payroll has gone from $65.3 million in 2009, their last year in the Metrodome, to $97.6 million in 2010, the first year at Target Field. It grew to $113.2 million in 2011, then dropped to $100.4 million in 2012 and $82 million this year.
I don't know if those figures were around the 54 percent Pohlad talks about, but the Twins have only $46 million on the books for next season. Half of that money goes to Joe Mauer. Starter Mike Pelfrey could leave as a free agent.
So will that 54 percent figure be the same going into next year?
"I don't think so," Pohlad said. "I think we know that that is always going to be a range every year, and we're well below that this year. That will not be a limiting factor, I don't think, this year.
"[Spending] is going to be up to Terry" he added, referring to General Manager Terry Ryan. "He has not asked for a number [of how much he can spend]. He doesn't historically ask for a hard and fast number. He brings to us the opportunities that are available and he's reasonable and we're beyond reasonable [for next season], I think. We want this to be better."
Willing to spend
Pohlad was asked if it troubles him when fans say his family is rich and that the team takes in a lot more money now that it has a new stadium but nothing is done to sign high-salaried free agents to improve the team.
"I'm sure fans are frustrated; people are frustrated as a result of losing, and we're frustrated, too," he said. "But I don't think that's a result of us not spending money. We're willing to do that. We'll do whatever we can in 2014. We're not going to be ridiculous. You're not going to see us doing seven- to 10-year contracts for players later in their career. You're not going to see that happening, but long-term contracts we're open to, within reason."