Posts Tagged ‘filed bankruptcy’

Money troubles come to the best of us.

Check out these MLB players who turned to filing bankruptcy when their money troubles caught up to them:

  1. Lenny Dykstra, former star center-fielder for the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this month. He has no more than $50,000 of assets and between $10 million and $50 million of liabilities.
  2. Bill Buckner, a former Red Sox player, went bankrupt in 2008 after his post-athletic career car dealership failed.
  3. Baseball Hall of Famer Gaylord Perry went bankrupt in 1987 after filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Having played for an astounding eight different MLB teams over the course of his 35-year career, Perry’s post-MLB career farming endeavors failed in the mid-eighties.
  4. Pitcher and predicted Hall of Fame nominee Tony Gwynn filed bankruptcy in his sixth season in the league, citing back taxes of slightly over $1 million and poor investments, which he blamed mainly on his agent.
  5. Rollie Fingers, a Hall of Fame pitcher inducted in 1992, filed bankruptcy in 1989 after investments in pistachio farms, Arabian horses and wind turbines went awry. It’s said he owed more than $4 million and his assets were listed as less than $50,000. He was also involved in a tax scandal in 2007.

A new report by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. indicated that the number of people in Tennessee who filed bankruptcy during the first quarter of 2008 was more than twice the national average.

More people in Tennessee are filing bankruptcy than in any other state in the country although the number of people filing bankruptcy is up more than 25 percent nationwide.

Across the country, during the first quarter of 2008, three out of 1,000 people filed bankruptcy. In Tennessee, more than six people per 1,000 filed bankruptcy in the first quarter.

WorldNow News reported that although Tennessee leads the nation in filing bankruptcy, it also leads the nation in Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which allows some debtors to pay creditors back according to a schedule.