JC-
Some of these younger readers may not realize how little ballplayers made, back in the day.
"In February 1966, Dodgers pitchers Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale staged a historic 32-day joint holdout, demanding a three-year, $1 million contract ($167,000 annually). They ended the holdout on March 30, 1966, by signing one-year deals: Koufax for $130,000 and Drysdale for $105,000, making them the first $100,000-per-year pitchers."
Those were probably the two best pitchers the Dodgers ever had, btw.
The $100k salary was considered outlandish at the time.
"Johnny Roseboro's salary with the Los Angeles Dodgers grew from $8,500 in 1957 to roughly $48,000 by 1967. As a four-time All-Star catcher, he was a key player in the 1960s, with his pay rising to $40,000+ by 1964 and peaking near $60,000 before his trade to the Minnesota Twins in 1968"
True, you have to multiply all those 1960s salaries roughly by 10. Still, the better ballplayers of the 1960s were only well-off (remember they had short careers), and most average players worked off-season, especially as car salesmen, or even played in the Mexico leagues.
What players make today boggles the mind. $700 million for Ohtani.
I barely watch sports anymore.