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How Barry Bonds, Cecil Fielder And Other MLB Players Lost Their Fortunes 

Turning into a baseball star generally ensures a player popularity and fortune - yet there's no assurance that fortune will last. Probably the best players at any point neglected to make an interpretation of their ability to post-vocation achievement. 

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Wealth and Fame: Who's Richer: These Sports Stars or Their Significant Others? Follow: How Rich are Michael Jordan, Alex Rodriguez And 13 More Incredibly Wealthy Retired Athletes? 

 

On account of everything from awful ventures to extortion to chronic drug use, these stars won't ever be viewed as the absolute most extravagant competitors on the planet. 

 

Pete Rose played in a larger number of games and had more at-bats than any major part ever. What's more, notwithstanding winning three World Series what's more, Rose isn't in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Rose was blamed for betting on baseball - including putting down wagers on his own group, a charge he at first denied yet later conceded in a book. 

 

In 1989, after the arrival of the now-renowned Dowd report, "Charlie Hustle" was restricted from baseball forever. The Dowd report chronicled long stretches of routine, high-stakes sports wagering by Rose. He owed a huge number of dollars to various bookies simultaneously and supposedly never bet under $2,000 per game. 

 

A critical power in the New York Yankees' 1996 title run, Cecil Fielder was a champion slugger with 319 grand slams on his resume. "Huge Daddy," as the gigantic influence hitter was known, acquired millions during his vocation, yet it didn't take long for him to spend his fortune. 

 

Not long after retirement, Fielder piled up unpaid liabilities of the greater part 1,000,000 dollars. In the wake of losing $588,000 in only two days at Trump Plaza in Atlantic City in 1999, the gambling club sued him for inability to pay everything except a little part of his obligation and won a judgment of $563,359 against Fielder. 

 

Barry Bonds overturned slugging and homer records held by Babe Ruth, Mark McGwire and Hank Aaron - to give some examples. When he arrived at his inexplicable 2001 season, in any case, Bonds was canvassed in 40 pounds of muscle that didn't exist when he was a more youthful player.