Charlie Kerfeld, Houston Astros<\/strong><\/h4>\nAfter a spectacular rookie season in 1986, the rotund reliever who always pitched in his lucky Jetsons<\/em> t-shirt needed a new contract. Kerfeld asked for $110,037.37, matching his number 37 jersey, to pitch in 1987. On top of that, he received 37 boxes of orange Jell-O in the deal. The Astros would soon regret this delicious bonus, though; Kerfeld, who was famously caught eating ribs in the dugout that season, would battle weight and injury problems and get sent down to the minors.<\/p>\n2. Rollie Fingers, Oakland Athletics<\/strong><\/h4>\nFormer A?s owner Charlie Finley never thought of a gimmick he wouldn?t try, including a mechanical rabbit that delivered fresh balls to the umpire and hiring a 13-year-old MC Hammer as his ?Executive V.P.? In 1972, Finley offered his players cash for growing a mustache by Father?s Day, thereby giving birth to reliever Fingers? trademark handlebar ?stache. The A?s went on to win the World Series that season, and Fingers? contract for 1973 contained a $300 bonus for growing the mustache as well as $100 for the purchase of mustache wax.<\/p>\n
3. Roy Oswalt, Houston Astros<\/strong><\/h4>\nBefore Oswalt made a start in the 2005 National League Championship Series, Astros owner Drayton McLane promised to make the ace?s dreams come true if he won, specifically his life goal of bulldozer ownership. After Oswalt dominated the Cardinals to send Houston to its first-ever World Series, McLane came through with a Caterpillar D6N XL. Since Major League Baseball requires high-dollar gifts be disclosed, Oswalt signed an addendum to his contract, a ?bulldozer clause,? authorizing the club to give him his new toy.<\/p>\n
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4. Troy Glaus, Arizona Diamondbacks<\/strong><\/h4>\nArizona inked the slugging third baseman signed for four years and $45 million in December 2004. As part of the deal, Glaus receives $250,000 annually for ?personal business expenses,? namely the cost of his wife Ann?s equestrian training and equipment. Although Glaus bashed 37 homers for the Snakes in 2005, he also tied for the major-league lead in errors by a third baseman with 24, and despite Mrs. Glaus? surely improving performance in the steeplechase, Glaus had to hoof it to Toronto when he was traded barely a year after signing.<\/p>\n
5. Randy Johnson, Arizona Diamondbacks<\/strong><\/h4>\nWhen the Big Unit signed with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 1998, team owner Jerry Colangelo also threw in a pair of partial season tickets for the Phoenix Suns to lure in the lanky lefty. Seems like Johnson could have afforded his own tickets, but to be fair, when you?re making $52 million over four years, it?s hard to get scalpers to fall for ?Can you take twenty for the pair? I swear it?s all I?ve got, dude.?<\/p>\n
6. Carlos Beltran, New York Mets<\/strong><\/h4>\nBeltran?s mammoth seven-year, $119 million deal from January 2005 showed that he had all of baseball?s five tools but lacked a conditioned ocular enhancer, a gadget that throws numbered, colored tennis balls over 150 mph to help players pick up the speed of a pitched ball. So he got a contract clause requiring the Mets lease the machine and retain an operator for it. However, Beltran only hit .266 in his first year with the club, so maybe a used copy of Tony Gwynn?s tome The Art of Hitting would have been more cost-effective.<\/p>\n