How Barry Bonds, Cecil Fielder and Other MLB Players Lost Their Fortunes
How Barry Bonds, Cecil Fielder and Other MLB Players Lost Their Fortunes · GOBankingRates

Becoming a baseball star usually guarantees a player fame and fortune — but there’s no guarantee that fortune will last. Some of the greatest players ever failed to translate their talent to post-career success. From bad investments to fraud and drug abuse, these people are unfortunate examples.

Last updated: Aug. 15, 2020

Pete Rose

Pete Rose played in more games and had more at-bats than any player in history. And despite winning three World Series on top of that, Rose is not in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Rose was accused of gambling on baseball — including placing bets on his own team, a charge he initially denied but later admitted in a book.

In 1989, after the release of the now-famous Dowd report, “Charlie Hustle” was banned from baseball for life. The Dowd report chronicled years of habitual, high-stakes sports betting by Rose. He owed tens of thousands of dollars to multiple bookies at the same time and reportedly never bet less than $2,000 per game.

Cecil Fielder

A key force in the New York Yankees’ 1996 championship run, Cecil Fielder was a standout slugger with 319 home runs on his resume. “Big Daddy,” as the massive power hitter was known, earned millions during his career, but it didn’t take long for him to spend his fortune.

Shortly after retirement, Fielder racked up debts of more than half-a-million dollars. After losing $588,000 in just two days at Trump Plaza in Atlantic City in 1999, the casino sued him for failure to pay all but a small portion of his debt and won a judgment of $563,359 against Fielder.

Barry Bonds

Barry Bonds toppled slugging and home run records held by Babe Ruth, Mark McGwire and Hank Aaron — to name a few. By the time he reached his miraculous 2001 season, however, Bonds was covered in 40 pounds of muscle that didn’t exist when he was a younger player.

Bonds was soon enveloped in a steroid scandal which resulted in a felony conviction that was eventually overturned. Unlike Rose and Fielder, who gambled away massive chunks of their fortunes, Bonds’ biggest losses came from what he might have earned but never did. In 2007, he earned $19.3 million after tallying 28 home runs in 126 games.

By the following year, he was so unpopular that not one team would give him a job. Like Rose, Bonds remains shut out of the Hall of Fame.

 

Rollie Fingers

As a pitcher, Rollie Fingers won three Rolaids Relief Man awards with the Padres, both the Cy Young and MVP awards with the Brewers and three World Series championships with the A’s — and he also had one of the most famous mustaches in baseball history.