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Well those exact reasons are why Baseball will be the least popular sport out of the big 3 in America for a long time to come..
This is exactly why the MLB should of implemented a salary cap way earlier. All I'm trying to make a point of is it's not fair. The Yankees have fans worldwide. Not only because they are a classic team but the fact that they can compete 9/10 years whereas a team like the Rays may not even compete next year because they will lose their players to FA. The Rays will once again go back into that rebuilding state which will obviously lose them money. A salary cap would give every team the same chance to compete because everyone could spend up to the same amount of money. How good would the Yankees really be if there was a salary cap? Baseball would be much more entertaining for fans like you and me too. Imagine the playoffs races if all teams were even.You are aware that the Yankees will only go spend so much at the risk of paying out a ridiculous luxury tax? The Yankees paid a luxury tax in 2008 that was was about $140K less than the Marlins entire payroll. Yes, you couldn't just implement a salary cap today and strip away what has already been given out. You could grandfather contracts that came before such a cap was imposed...however teams who are over wouldn't be able to sustain a full roster until those big deals are up. Alot of owners complain about no salary cap but most will also admit that teams like the Yankees and Red Sox keep the money machine alive for all. Shared revenue is taken in by small market teams every year, freaking free money, and rather than spend it on players, they pay bills and/or take it in as profit. Implement a salary cap and the shared revenue system goes away...and teams like the Kansas City Royals fall even further into the red. Do you also think the Player's Association would go for a salary cap? When Gil Meche can land a $55 million contract...what would lead anyone to believe that baseball players are willing to make less money?
Playing the "what if" card doesn't help anyone's argument here. The system is fair and its effective. Basically a trade-off, the little guys are getting shared revenue to keep the afloat...in exchange for the big guys being allowed to spend on players.This is exactly why the MLB should of implemented a salary cap way earlier. All I'm trying to make a point of is it's not fair.
What are the Rays really losing? They were able to re-sign Crawford once and they've had him during his prime. Crawford's hitting the open market at an age where OF's start to lose their mojo. Crawford will be about as good as he is for a couple more seasons and then he's another overpaid outfielder on a big market team. Teams like the Rays and A's find ways to win with younger players. All teams can win but smaller market teams have to find ways to win w/o high profile FA's. Would signing a 33-year old Cliff Lee to a 5-year deal guarantee the Pirates are in the postseason? Hell no, it wouldn't and after Lee's skills diminish, his salary would tear down the roster. Even worse, what if that small market team signs Lee to a big deal and then he's doesn't pan out? Big market teams can afford an expensive mistake like that.The Yankees have fans worldwide. Not only because they are a classic team but the fact that they can compete 9/10 years whereas a team like the Rays may not even compete next year because they will lose their players to FA. The Rays will once again go back into that rebuilding state which will obviously lose them money.
A salary cap doesn't mean every team is going to spend the same amount of money. Do the Hornets spend as much money as the Lakers or Celtics on players each season? Are the Carolina Panthers spending as much money as the Minnesota Vikings right now?A salary cap would give every team the same chance to compete because everyone could spend up to the same amount of money.
Who knows how good the Yankees would be with a cap? I am lead to believe that they wouldn't suck. New York is still a huge market and high profile players in every major sport want to play in the big markets. The Yankees would still land a ton of high profile FA's.How good would the Yankees really be if there was a salary cap? Baseball would be much more entertaining for fans like you and me too.
A salary cap isn't going to suddenly make all teams even.Imagine the playoffs races if all teams were even.
That doesn't it fair. Just because the "little guys" are making money off shared revenue, it doesn't bring fans to the stadium. If the Jays could win 100+ games a year, I'm sure the Rogers Centre would be packed. I'm saying it's not a fair system because the Jays would love to be in the Yankees place. I'm saying it's not a fair system because just because money is being made, the same teams are always going to make the playoffs consistently.Playing the "what if" card doesn't help anyone's argument here. The system is fair and its effective. Basically a trade-off, the little guys are getting shared revenue to keep the afloat...in exchange for the big guys being allowed to spend on players.
The Rays have a bunch of important guys expiring. Crawford is the most important in my opinion. He brings speed, power, contact, and defense. Yes, he wont be in his prime much longer, but this free agency will most likely put the Rays out of contention for a playoff spot from my view and it's all because a big market team with a lot of money is most likely going to sign him. Same goes for when a team like the Indians, like when they have to trade their star players for prospects because that's the only way they'll ever compete again and bring fans to the stadium. Obviously big market teams can afford to make mistakes with contracts because they HAVE money, small market teams can't. That's another advantage big market teams have. Look at the Jays with the Vernon Wells contract. If the Yankees took on that contract, it wouldn't be a problem, they'll continue to sign guys to their team, which will let them compete faster than the Jays can.What are the Rays really losing? They were able to re-sign Crawford once and they've had him during his prime. Crawford's hitting the open market at an age where OF's start to lose their mojo. Crawford will be about as good as he is for a couple more seasons and then he's another overpaid outfielder on a big market team. Teams like the Rays and A's find ways to win with younger players. All teams can win but smaller market teams have to find ways to win w/o high profile FA's. Would signing a 33-year old Cliff Lee to a 5-year deal guarantee the Pirates are in the postseason? Hell no, it wouldn't and after Lee's skills diminish, his salary would tear down the roster. Even worse, what if that small market team signs Lee to a big deal and then he's doesn't pan out? Big market teams can afford an expensive mistake like that.
If the Rays had money, they wouldn't have to rebuild. Florida is obviously known to suck in terms sports attendance, but a team like the Jays, the attendance depends on how good the team is doing.The Rays are going back into a rebuilding stage b/c they want to, not because they have to. The Rays attendance has been so bad (despite how good they've been) that the franchise is forced to cut a ton of payroll in order to survive.
I understand that. The point I was trying to make is that those teams could only spend UP to a certain amount. So they can't overspend and bring in a Miami Heat with Kobe, and CP3 on top of that. If the Miami Heat could of signed more stars, they probably would of.A salary cap doesn't mean every team is going to spend the same amount of money. Do the Hornets spend as much money as the Lakers or Celtics on players each season? Are the Carolina Panthers spending as much money as the Minnesota Vikings right now?
Good point. I agree, but the Knicks sucked for too long now lol.Who knows how good the Yankees would be with a cap? I am lead to believe that they wouldn't suck. New York is still a huge market and high profile players in every major sport want to play in the big markets. The Yankees would still land a ton of high profile FA's.
I'm just saying the Yankees shouldn't be able to compete every year like they have.The Yankees actually completely owned baseball long before their payroll ever came close to $200M. They were better with homegrown players like Jeter, Pettitte, Posada,and roleplayers like Brosius and Leyritz. The massive FA spending and prospect dumping was after Steinbrenner became obsessed with maintaining that dynasty. Unfortunately, the organization lost sight on what gave us 4 championships in 5 years.
No but every team could have a chance at signing guys. Teams wont always have to build off of prospects strictly.A salary cap isn't going to suddenly make all teams even.
Shared revenue may not bring fans to the stadium but it pays the bills when the box office sales don't. So I think you're missing the whole point behind the shared revenue system and economics behind it. And no, I don't think the Jays would pack the Rogers Centre in the regular season, regardless of wins. The Rays won 90 games and they couldn't give away enough free sh*t to get people into the stands. Again, economics...each team is a business and like it or not, they're top priority is money.That doesn't it fair. Just because the "little guys" are making money off shared revenue, it doesn't bring fans to the stadium. If the Jays could win 100+ games a year, I'm sure the Rogers Centre would be packed. I'm saying it's not a fair system because the Jays would love to be in the Yankees place. I'm saying it's not a fair system because just because money is being made, the same teams are always going to make the playoffs consistently.
The Rays are losing Crawford who's speed, power, contact, and defense is only going to head South with age. Soriano is actually their biggest pending loss b/c finding lights out closers is a real biotch...but I will say that they landed Soriano w/o having to spend a ton of money to get him & they could very well take a chance on another reliever that can turn out to be the same guy. Cleveland did the smart thing and traded Cliff Lee b/c they knew Cliff Lee alone wasn't going to get them a championship any time soon. Cleveland could of very well held onto to him but for what? Shapiro decided to cut payroll and play the prospects game b/c it was just time to turn over the roster. No, the Yankees would never do that but that's just b/c a city like New York doesn't have the patience and the year to year expectations are too high. A long time ago people started packing Yankee stadium b/c the Yankees win and the organization continues to use every means necessary to keep a winning product on the field, hence the stadium stays packed. The Pittsburgh Pirates had a championship caliber team, full house, popularity...but new ownership decided to drastically reduce payroll, they stopped winning, fans stopped showing up & they haven't rebounded. Pittsburgh also cut payroll b/c new ownership wanted to pocket more money, not b/c they couldn't afford it. Kansas City...same story. Can't say the Jays can't afford it either. This is a team that gave Frank Thomas, Rios, Ryan, and Vernon Wells a sh*tload of money. None panned out but the point is, the Jays are able to spend. Whether or not they choose to is their call...but it hasn't nothing to do with the word "can't".The Rays have a bunch of important guys expiring. Crawford is the most important in my opinion. He brings speed, power, contact, and defense. Yes, he wont be in his prime much longer, but this free agency will most likely put the Rays out of contention for a playoff spot from my view and it's all because a big market team with a lot of money is most likely going to sign him. Same goes for when a team like the Indians, like when they have to trade their star players for prospects because that's the only way they'll ever compete again and bring fans to the stadium. Obviously big market teams can afford to make mistakes with contracts because they HAVE money, small market teams can't. That's another advantage big market teams have. Look at the Jays with the Vernon Wells contract. If the Yankees took on that contract, it wouldn't be a problem, they'll continue to sign guys to their team, which will let them compete faster than the Jays can.
If the Rays had money coming in from ticket sales and vending, then they wouldn't have to drastically cut player costs. Again, look at the economics of the small markets, the fan support they don't have, and how its even possible to stay financially competitive when nobody shows up for games. Would telling the Yankees they can only carry a payroll of $100M suddenly get the city of Tampa interested in watching baseball? If 90 wins and a division title isn't enough, then I don't know what the f*ck is.If the Rays had money, they wouldn't have to rebuild. Florida is obviously known to suck in terms sports attendance, but a team like the Jays, the attendance depends on how good the team is doing.
You're only helping to make my point here. Even in a league where the is a salary cap...the bigger market teams manage to stack their rosters with All-Stars.I understand that. The point I was trying to make is that those teams could only spend UP to a certain amount. So they can't overspend and bring in a Miami Heat with Kobe, and CP3 on top of that. If the Miami Heat could of signed more stars, they probably would of.
The Knicks sucked for too long b/c they mismanaged their money, not because they didn't have any.Good point. I agree, but the Knicks sucked for too long now lol.
Why the f*ck not...b/c you're not a Yankee fan? The organization earns the money they spend, a lot of it comes straight out of our (fans) pockets, and I can't be unhappy with how they use a lot of that money to constantly put a top product onto the field. They aren't breaking rules, they aren't robbing banks, and they are the biggest draw in baseball. Television ratings are proof that nobody watches once the Yankees are done.I'm just saying the Yankees shouldn't be able to compete every year like they have.
My f*cking eyes are starting to bleed Rios. You need to get this through your head...a salary cap WILL NOT make every single team fair and square on paper, on the field. The Pirates won't be out competing in the FA market with the likes of New York and Boston, the Marlins won't suddenly be making mass profit and the playoffs, and people in Kansas City certainly won't start flocking to the stadium most nights.No but every team could have a chance at signing guys. Teams wont always have to build off of prospects strictly.
A much different scenario. We were actually expecting not to make the playoffs for quite some time due to injuries to Beckett, Pedroia, Youkilis and Ellsbury, but yet we were still able to compete with the Rays and Yankees. The thing with Yankee fans are assuming the have Lee in the bag, which pisses me off, and makes me hope they wake up disappointed. Trust me, my friends who support them, all assume Lee is going to sign with them. One of my friends even jokingly said he has his Cliff Lee Yankees jersey on order.Kinda like the Red Sox were this year when they missed the playoffs right?
This is also why I have never been seriously interested in this league. The whole basis of the Yankees picking up anything, and everything they want is a joke..And this is exactly why the MLB is terrible..
Probably cause the Dodgers consistently can afford a large payroll and spend 5 million dollars on late first round picks..im completely with AE on this
good posts
+1Don't sell your soul Cliff. You're a good guy. Don't go for the money
<rant>And this is exactly why the MLB is terrible..
Yeah we were just a bad team. That's why the Sox contended somewhat til the end, even without a former MVP, and other top player for the second half the season. I'll admit that Beckett isn't what he was a couple of years ago, but still having him out hurts.It's not like the Yankees didn't have injuries to key players last year...
The Red Sox were not a good team last year, it's just that simple.
Beckett is trash
Pedroia is massively overrated
Youkilis was a key loss
Ellsbury is made of glass (I don't know why he was such a key loss).