by Structured Settlement Watchdog
Chronovo, which is based in a suburb of Boston Massachusetts continues to promote annuities using "Bobby Bonilla Day", a “holiday” of sorts celebrated by baseball fans, who use memes and jokes to talk about how the New York Mets pay someone who hasn’t been on the field since 2001 over a million dollars every year until 2035 when there are far better and more relevant choices to illustrate the value of deferred payment plans using other baseball players and other sports figures as examples.
The Key Decificiency in Chronovo's Marketing with Bobby Bonilla Day
- There was no annuity purchase to fund the Mets obligation.
- The story relies on the notoriety of dead crook Bernie Madoff to work, but it still doesn't work
- The dead crook would not be necessary if there was an actual annuity purchased.
Let's dive a little deeper.
The Gratuitous Trivialization of Madoff to Promote Annuities
Why would a rerun of "Creepend at Bernies" be deemed essential to Chronovo to promote the value of annuities, specifically structured settlement annuities? Bernie Madoff's fraud was the 2nd biggest in US History. Having a value proposition that is NOT gratuitously intertwined with a Bernie Madoff victim would be more approriate. For back story see Madoff Investment Scandal and how it hit former Mets Principal Owner Fred Wilpon
Unfortunately, but not unsurprisingly, this seems to have been lost on Chronovo, which highlighted the Madoff connection in its most recent Chronovo Chronicle celebrating Bobby Bonilla Day. At least the lack of depth perception stopped short of trivializing Joey Gargan, another convicted felon, a former structured settlement broker and company owner and "Kennedy connection", who was incarcerated at FMC Butner, where Bernie drew his last breath in April 2021, until Gargan's being granted compassionate rwlease in October 2022.
There's Nothing Unusual About Deferred Payment Plans to Athletes But There Are Much Better Examples
Hey, there's nothing unusual about a team paying athletes deferred payments, but Bobby Bonilla is no Ken Griffey, Jr. or Manny Ramirez, both of whom have bigger annuities and arguably had greater career accomplishments, by quite some distance. In my opinion Griffey Jr and Manny Ramirez in particular are better examples to promote annuities for any company, let alone, a company from Boston.
I'm a lifelong New York Yankees fan, but in this case, since we're discussing annuities, I'm waxing lyrical about a Red Sox legend in an effort to change the narrative of certain annuity promoters' (at least structured settlement annuity promoters) narrative from Bobby Bonilla to other athletes who had better careers and more significant deferred payment plans.
Manny Ramirez was a Boston Red Sox and Major League baseball legend and 12 Time All Star. Manny was a complete hitter, who hit for both power and average, and recognized as one of the best right-handed hitters of his generation, Ramirez finished his career with a lifetime .312 batting average, 555 home runs (15th all-time), and 1,831 RBI (18th all-time). In 111 postseason games, Ramirez posted a .285 batting average with 29 home runs and 78 RBI in being on 2 World Series winning teams.
Ken Griffey Jr.
Griffey Jr. 630 HR, .284 BA, 1836 RBI, 184 SB, .538 SLG Griffey, Jr. is a Hall of Famer, a thirteen-time All-Star and one of the most prolific home run hitters in baseball history, 7th in MLB history. Griffey won ten Gold Gloves as a center fielder and tied for the record of most consecutive games with a home run (eight, with Don Mattingly and Dale Long. He's been on the cover of the box of more than one variety of Wheaties "for goodness flakes"!
The Manny Ramirez Deferred Payments
Manny Ramirez signed a $160M contract with the Boston Red Sox in 2008, with deferred $1.968MM/year increasing at 0.25% from 2011-2026 (16 payments) Total payout $30,077,936. Here is the schedule:
2017 — $1,998,393 2018 — $2,003,389 2019 — $2,008,397 2020 — $2,013,418 2021 — $2,018,452 2022 — $2,023,498
The Ken Griffey Jr. Deferred Payment Plan
Ken Griffey, Jr. $112M contract deferred $3.59MM/year from 2009-2024. Despite being retired and not playing for the Reds since 2008, the 13 Time All Star Hall of Fame slugger Ken Griffey Jr. is the 6th highest-paid players on the Cincinnati Reds. Total Deferred Payout $57,440,000
Just to remind you in case you were wondering, the total payout to Bobby Bonilla at the end of this road in 2035 will be $29,831,205.00. Ouch!
Better Career Stats than Bonilla, Better Deferred Payment Plan than Bonilla
Ken Griffey, Jr. $112M contract deferred $3.59MM/year from 2009-2024. Despite being retired and not playing for the Reds since 2008, Hall of Fame slugger Ken Griffey Jr. is the 6th highest-paid players on the Cincinnati Reds.
Bonilla 287 HR .287 BA 1173 RBI 48 SB .472 SLG 6 Time All Star, One time time World Series winner (with the 1997 Florida Marlins)
While a quality player, Bonilla's career stats performed well below Manny Ramirez and Ken Griffey Jr, his peers with deferred payments
Bobby Bonilla himself was quoted in the New York Post on July 1, 2022 as saying "“I’m probably more famous for that deal than the career I had”
But for the fact the Mets and its owner were scammed by the late crooked Bernie Madoff, there would be no Bobby Bonilla Day. Instead of "celebrating" Bonilla, perhaps Chronovo should reconsider their post given Bonilla's deferred compensation peers as a better role model for annuities. Madoff was a crook who destroyed lives and died a miserable death.
One of the more significant and impactful parts of the July 1, 2022 New York Post article was the statement that Bonilla has never approached the Mets about receiving the funds all at once, instead opting to keep the yearly tradition going. “I’ve never even thought about it,” Bonilla said.
This statement IS something to get in front of young people of color with structured settlements who are targeted by structured settlement factoring companies when they reach 18 and throughout their 20s.
Think "Just Say No. Like Bobby Bo" and Manny Ramirez and Ken Griffrey, Jr.
Related Reading
Annuity.org Revives Tired "Bobby Bonilla Day" for the Ides of March. Why?
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