Cohen committed to winning, 'wouldn¡¯t be surprised' if Mets reach top CBT tier
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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- Major League Baseball¡¯s richest owner is fond of saying that no one -- not even he -- has unlimited money. To reiterate the idea on Sunday, Steve Cohen jokingly suggested that at some point, he may need to ask a nearby sportswriter for a loan.
But Cohen, whom Forbes estimates to be worth approximately $17.4 billion, probably won¡¯t be calling in that favor anytime soon. To the contrary, during a brief press conference at Clover Park, Cohen said that the Mets ¡°probably will¡± exceed MLB¡¯s new fourth tier of the Competitive Balance Tax, which was just negotiated to a record $290 million.
¡°I wouldn¡¯t be surprised,¡± Cohen added.
Currently, the payroll tracking web site Spotrac calculates the Mets¡¯ expenditures at a shade north of $278 million (including their recent acquisitions of Chris Bassitt and Adam Ottavino), putting them above the first three tiers of MLB¡¯s tax system. If the Mets do nothing else, they will need to pay around $15 million in CBT penalties. If they rise to a $300 million payroll, their tax figure would more than double to around $31 million.
It¡¯s a penalty Cohen is willing to pay, even while acknowledging that he isn¡¯t likely to blow past the fourth tier.
¡°Listen, $290 million is a lot of money to spend overall,¡± Cohen said. ¡°Like I said before, I¡¯m OK with it, and I¡¯m willing to live with it. And we¡¯ll leave it at that.¡±
MLB¡¯s first three CBT thresholds were recently ratified in the new CBA at $230 million, $250 million and $270 million -- all of them increased from the previous agreement between the league¡¯s owners and players. During these negotiations, the sides agreed to a fourth threshold of $290 million with an 80 percent tax on any overages, which was designed to discourage big-market teams from amassing payrolls significantly larger than those of their rivals. Some around the game have taken to calling it the ¡°Cohen Tax,¡± given the Mets owner¡¯s deep pockets.
Asked about the nomenclature, Cohen did not seem particularly perturbed.
¡°The way I¡¯ve described it, it¡¯s better than a bridge being named after you,¡± Cohen said. ¡°It¡¯s still a lot of money to spend on the payroll, so I don¡¯t think it¡¯s something, by any means, that I can¡¯t live with.¡±
It¡¯s spending with a purpose; more than anything, Cohen has expressed a desire to win a World Series. Upon buying the Mets in 2020, the hedge-fund manager said that he hoped to earn a championship within 3-5 years. That¡¯s a goal he still possesses, even while acknowledging the difficulty and luck involved in doing so.
¡°There¡¯s only one team that wins,¡± Cohen said. ¡°There¡¯s a lot of good teams out there. I think we¡¯re going to be really competitive, and who knows? We¡¯ll see what happens.¡±