Corporate Thug
Lifer
- Apr 17, 2003
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Originally posted by: RabidMongoose
Originally posted by: Argo
Originally posted by: tagej
Baseball is broken. When one team can afford to pay $189 million in payroll per year while others make do with a $40 or $50 million payroll, there's obviously going to be a great disparity in talent across the league. I can't blame the Yankees for doing what they do (just spend more money and get the best players), but the bottom line is that the sport as it is now is broken and I for one have lost all interest.
Perhaps at some point the league will realize that (like the NFL and NBA), they can make the league much stronger by creating a level playing field and forcing all teams to field competitive teams.
That said, the Yankees would be stupid to get Shef, I think he's just trouble in the locker room and will not help them win it all.
Teams like Brewers, Expos would never be successful, simply because their owners are not interested in being successful. Unlike NFL a lot of owners see their baseball teams as a source of income, and could care less how well they do. Until this changes, there will be no parity in baseball.
It's more than just that. If they even became successful for three seasons, they would never be able to retain their own players. Even if they put in a $100 million payroll for 5 straight years - at incredible loss for the owner - do you really think that would significantly increase their base market for their team enough to even sustain a big budget? The only reason teams like the Yankees, Mets, etc. have large payrolls is b/c of they make tons off of their local media contracts. I don't think a small market team will be able to magically turn their city/area into a large market area.
Originally posted by: TheAudit
Originally posted by: konichiwa
Originally posted by: minendo
The problem with making a level playing field is determining the cutoff. Some teams would be able to make the cutoff while others could not make the payment level depending on what payment cutoff is set.Originally posted by: tagej
Baseball is broken. When one team can afford to pay $189 million in payroll per year while others make do with a $40 or $50 million payroll, there's obviously going to be a great disparity in talent across the league. I can't blame the Yankees for doing what they do (just spend more money and get the best players), but the bottom line is that the sport as it is now is broken and I for one have lost all interest.
Perhaps at some point the league will realize that (like the NFL and NBA), they can make the league much stronger by creating a level playing field and forcing all teams to field competitive teams.
That said, the Yankees would be stupid to get Shef, I think he's just trouble in the locker room and will not help them win it all.
Not to mention some of the best teams have the smallest payrolls (A's, Marlins jump to mind). The salary cap idea is a good one but the hypothesis that teams with more $$ will always do better is just wrong.
True.
The last two World Series winners had low payrolls.
But money does make it easier to compete. It's easier to plug guys in with a flexible payroll.
BUT
a lot of teams spend money and have nothing to show for it. The NY Mets started the season with the 2nd highest payroll in baseball and for the second straight season finished in last place. They couldn't have done worse if they tried, they have no farm system and next year is going to be just as barren.
Spending money is always good but how you spend, on whom you spend it, making the right decisions is more important.
Originally posted by: Argo
Originally posted by: RabidMongoose
Originally posted by: Argo
Originally posted by: tagej
Baseball is broken. When one team can afford to pay $189 million in payroll per year while others make do with a $40 or $50 million payroll, there's obviously going to be a great disparity in talent across the league. I can't blame the Yankees for doing what they do (just spend more money and get the best players), but the bottom line is that the sport as it is now is broken and I for one have lost all interest.
Perhaps at some point the league will realize that (like the NFL and NBA), they can make the league much stronger by creating a level playing field and forcing all teams to field competitive teams.
That said, the Yankees would be stupid to get Shef, I think he's just trouble in the locker room and will not help them win it all.
Teams like Brewers, Expos would never be successful, simply because their owners are not interested in being successful. Unlike NFL a lot of owners see their baseball teams as a source of income, and could care less how well they do. Until this changes, there will be no parity in baseball.
It's more than just that. If they even became successful for three seasons, they would never be able to retain their own players. Even if they put in a $100 million payroll for 5 straight years - at incredible loss for the owner - do you really think that would significantly increase their base market for their team enough to even sustain a big budget? The only reason teams like the Yankees, Mets, etc. have large payrolls is b/c of they make tons off of their local media contracts. I don't think a small market team will be able to magically turn their city/area into a large market area.
Yes, you're correct. However, I'm not asking them to go in the red, but at least try to spend most of the money you make on baseball. I don't know the numbers, but I'm sure the afore mentioned Brewers receive around 20-30 million dolloars in revenue sharing and luxury tax. Add ticket sales and media contract, however small it is, and I'm almost 100% sure they'll have way more than 30 million dollars to spend on the team.
