![For the love of the game: Life as a minor leaguer on $8,000 a year](https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/91fb188de3a281da2e5e45f252937ae235f9a6fd/185_0_5548_3329/master/5548.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=648f467655bac3c96d82f93d5f9ea26b)
Players in the big leagues make millions of dollars but it can be a financial struggle for players further down the ladder. And that was before Covid-19
By the end of January, John O’Reilly was chomping at the bit to get to spring training. Like most minor leaguers, the 24-year-old pitcher, newly assigned to the Pittsburgh Pirates organization, viewed baseball’s preseason as a mecca of opportunity. Sure, O’Reilly who played last season in Double-A, minor league baseball’s second-highest level, wasn’t expecting to make it to the majors and become the Pirates’ opening day starter. But with a decent showing perhaps he could inch his way up minor league baseball’s arduous, low-salaried ladder.
And, when it started, O’Reilly was having what he considered to be a highly successful spring training. He had been called upon to finish innings for major league pitchers. In one game, he pitched against the New York Yankees, a big deal for a kid from New Jersey.
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