Roger Clemens was a professional baseball pitcher who played in Major League Baseball for 24 years, most notably for the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees. He is universally considered one of the greatest and most dominant pitchers in major league history. He was a two-time World Series Champion and eleven-time All-Star, and was also named to the MLB All-Century Team.

Let's dive into Roger Clemens' net worth in 2022.

Roger Clemens’ net worth in 2022 (estimate): $60 million

Roger Clemens' 2022 Net Worth, Roger Clemens, Red Sox

Roger Clemens’ net worth in 2022 is estimated to be $60 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth.

Before we talk about his legendary career, let us know more about Roger Clemens and how he got started in his life and career.

William Roger Clemens was born on August 4th, 1962, in Dayton, Ohio. He is the fifth child of Bill and Bess Clemens. His parents separated when he was still an infant and he grew up with his mother, who eventually married Woody Booher, the person Clemens considers his father.

He lived in Vandalia, Ohio, until 1977 before moving to Houston, Texas, where he spent most of his high school years. Clemens attended Spring Woods High School where he played football, basketball and baseball.

Clemens was scouted by the Philadelphia Phillies and the Minnesota Twins during his senior year but opted to go to college. In 1981, he started his college career pitching for San Jacinto College North. In the same year, he was selected by the New York Mets in the MLB draft but did not sign a contract.

Clemens then transferred to the University of Texas at Austin where he led the Longhorns to an overall record of 25-7 en route to winning the 1983 College World Series. He was a two-time All-American with Texas and years later became the first baseball player to have his jersey number retired by the Longhorns.

Due to his incredible tenure with the Longhorns, the Rotary Smith Award — given to the nation’s best college baseball player — was renamed the Roger Clemens Award to honor the best pitcher.

The Red Sox selected Clemens with the 19th overall pick in the 1983 MLB draft. He quickly rose the ranks of the minor league system,  making his major league debut on May 15th, 1984.

Two years after his first MLB action, Clemens led the league in wins with 24, earning American League MVP honors. He had a 2.48 ERA and 238 strikeouts in that famed 1986 season, also winning the Cy Young award as baseball's best pitcher and MVP of the All-Star Game.

Clemens recorded 192 wins and 38 shutouts for the franchise during his stint with the Red Sox, also tying Cy Young as the franchise's leader in all-time strikeouts with 2,590.

After more than a decade with Boston, Clemens chose not to return to the team during the 1996 offseason, instead signing a four-year, $40 million deal with the Toronto Blue Jays. Clemens played two dominant seasons, posting back-to-back 20 win campaigns with a total of 563 strikeouts and also winning the pitching Triple Crown.

However, Clemens asked to be traded in 1998, of the belief that Toronto wasn't ever going to be competitive enough to win the World Series. He was dealt to the Yankees on Ferbruary 19th, 1999 in exchange for David Wells, Homer Bush and Graeme Lloyd.

Clemens made an immediate impact in New York, helping the pinstripes win back-to-back World Series in 1999 and 2000. as he helped them win back-to-back World Series titles in 1999 and 2000. He announced his retirement a few years later, effective at the conclusion of the 2003 season.

Clemens' final season was marked by a series of public farewells. His last game in each American League stadium was given extra attention, especially at Fenway Park, where Red Sox fans gave him a raucous standing ovation—one repeated even in the heat of the 2003 American League Championship Series.

On January 12th, 2004, Clemens came out of retirement to join the Houston Astros, his adopted hometown team. He finished the 2004 season with an 18-4 record and won his seventh Cy Young Award, becoming the oldest player to ever win it at 42 years old.

The following year, he decided to sign a one-year, $18 million to remain with the Astros, making him the highest-paid pitcher in MLB history.

In the 2007 season, he made his return to New York after he was seen in the owner’s box at Yankees Stadium. It was announced that he would re-join the team shortly thereafter on a prorated, one-year contract worth $28 million.

That season would prove to be Clemens' last in MLB after an incredible 24-year run.

Some of Clemens’ most important career accolades are listed below.

  • MLB record 20 Strikeouts in a nine-inning game (twice)
  • 5x AL Strikeout Leader
  • 7x ERA Leader
  • 4x MLB wins leader
  • 2x Triple Crown
  • 1986 AL MVP
  • 7x Cy Young Award winner
  • 11x MLB All-Star
  • 2x World Series Champion
  • Member of the MLB All-Century Team

In 2014, Clemens was inducted into the Boston Red Sox Hall of Fame. However, he has still not been voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, the only member of the 300-win club to be absent from Cooperstown.

 

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Despite not being in the Hall of Fame, Clemens will undoubtedly go down in history as one of the best pitchers the sport has ever seen.

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