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Conference hbahba::cam_sports

Title:Sports 93-96 Archive. No new notes allowed
Notice:Chainsaw's last standSPORTS_97
Moderator:HBAHBA::HAAS
Created:Mon Jan 11 1993
Last Modified:Tue Apr 15 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:302
Total number of notes:117855

178.0. "1994 Baseball Strike" by OPTION::LAZARUS (David Lazarus @KYO,323-4353) Mon Aug 15 1994 18:05

    I think there should be a separate note to discuss the strike instead
    of hopping between AL and NL notes.
    
    Mr. Moderators,if you disagree,remove this.
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178.1AKOCOA::BREENMon Aug 15 1994 18:138
    Gammons dealt with this subject at length in globe sunday and is
    pessimistic because of importance of low market clubs who most need the
    cap.
    
    But I doubt this will last more than two weeks as players are obviously
    prepared to go till next year and owners simply cannot do that.  So if
    they have to do a deal by end of the month then why not now (someone
    hopefully will realize).
178.2Owners are losingOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Mon Aug 15 1994 18:185
    I still think this will be short,because too many owners are losing too
    much revenue. The players are set with most of their salaries banked
    and another 180,000 per player in the strike fund.
    
    The minimum guys(109,000) are making out like bandits.
178.3How long can it still mean something?OPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Aug 17 1994 17:4115
    I was way off in my strike prediction. I thought the sides wuld come to
    their senses and find some compromise. 
    
    Meanwhile,football is dominating the sports headlines in the NY area.
    US Open Tennis and  Nebraska-WVU are just around the corner and I have
    heard many "The season is ruined" comments.
    
    What do you guys think the date of no return is for this season?
    I would think-Labor Day. You must have some September games to regain
    some continuity.
    
    If the strike is settled in late September,do they pick up the
    schedule,finish the regular season and go on with the playoffs?
    
    Will anyone still care by then?
178.4MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Wed Aug 17 1994 17:565
    September 15 or so might be point of no return. 2 weeks still
    allows for a number of playoff races.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.5we can only hope they don't agreeFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Aug 17 1994 17:581
    
178.6MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 17 1994 18:006
>>    Will anyone still care by then?

	Not I!


	billl
178.7Bag it until nexted season...CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Wed Aug 17 1994 18:065
If they start up in mid/late Sept. it would amount to a faux season, 
and faux playoffs, put on because neither side could let all that revenue
from the 'offs slip away.

=Bob=
178.9WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MWhat a terrible year 1918 Wed Aug 17 1994 18:258
    
    
    
    I'll kiss ya Karen!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    
    
    
    Chap
178.10any option has to be better than .9MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Wed Aug 17 1994 18:266
    re: .8
    
    I'm sure we could find volunteers.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.11CAMONE::WAYHueys are way cool...SirWed Aug 17 1994 18:5315
I've no sympathy for either side actually.   Screw them all.

I got a really good idea of what sports owners were like by watching
former Whalers owner Richard Gordon.   They're all scum, out for themselves,
and to put it bluntly, Robbie Bob Palmer would fit right in with them.

The players are almost as bad.  


Screw them.  Football and hockey are coming, and much as I love and revere
baseball, this season is spoiled for me.   It's a tainted season now and
whoever wins the World Series will have a tainted championship.....


'Saw
178.12Flutie as an example to any baseball "scabs" - CafardoAKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meWed Aug 17 1994 20:2617
    Nick Cafardo of the globe was talking about the strike and substitute
    players and mentioned the last football strike and doug flutie playing
    in the sub game at foxboro.  And he said something which I have felt
    was true but never stated so boldly and in a major outlet like the
    globe and I'll paraphrase
    
    	"Flutie was blackballed from the nfl for his [scab] role in the
    strike"
    
    It was my personal observation that the majority of patriot players
    jacked it in the flutie games trying to make him look as bad as
    possible but having no real evidence had to be happy with doug's
    success in cfl.
    
    I wonder where Cafardo is getting that information.  He certainly
    wasn't pulling in any punches with the "blackball" remark.
    in
178.13PTOVAX::JACOBWed Aug 17 1994 20:2810
    
    >>	"Flutie was blackballed from the nfl for his [scab] role in the
    >>strike"
    
    I don't know how true this could be.  There's a lot of players who
    locked onto teams after the strike ended.  Steve Bono, fer one, was the
    STEELERS starting QB during the strike. 
    
    JaKe
    
178.14CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Wed Aug 17 1994 20:3110
|    I don't know how true this could be.  There's a lot of players who
|    locked onto teams after the strike ended.  Steve Bono, fer one, was the
|    STEELERS starting QB during the strike. 
 
Yabut, unless I'm mistaken, Bono was not on an NFL roster when the strike 
started.  I think the problem Flutie had was that he was an established NFL
player, albiet a bench warmer, when the strike started, and he crossed the 
picket line.

=Bob=
178.16Day 6OPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Aug 17 1994 20:385
    Bobby Bonilla has now lost $186,000.
    And the meter keeps running.
    
    But no matter how bad things are screwed up,when this ends the fans
    will be back and probably paying higher prices.
178.17PTOVAX::JACOBWed Aug 17 1994 20:4612
    RE Bono and FLutie, Ok, din't catch that angle.
    
    Re Bonilla, breaks my FREAKIN' heart!!!
    
    
    NOT!!!!!
    
    Let em sit in a bread line and beg fer his food, ANY of the ballplayers
    fer that matter.
    
    jaKe
    
178.18MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 17 1994 20:486
>>  jaKe
  
	Is this the new and improved version?


	billl
178.19PTOVAX::JACOBWed Aug 17 1994 20:504
    Nah, just a fingergraphical error.
    
    JaKe
    
178.20FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Aug 17 1994 20:591
    Meanwhile, some NBA players are taking pay cuts to play for winning teams.
178.21AKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meWed Aug 17 1994 22:1411
    It agrees with my personal observation but I don't know why Flutie was
    signalled out.  I'd like to know what information Cafardo has.
    
    And if he is talking about coaches blackballing him or his teamates
    freezing him out and if the latter what was the role of Berry.
    
    Could he seriously be accussing a pro coach of knowingly allow a team
    to put forth less than a complete effort.
    
    I wouldn't put to much credit on Berry; he was a disgrace as a coach
    here.
178.22I knew Tommy wouldn't have missed itAKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meWed Aug 17 1994 22:258
    got note jambled there.  So Tommy you noticed that line.
    
    I'll go along with reasoning pro/con about Flutie talent level being a
    very moot question.
    
    I am just curious where nc is getting grist for his statement. 
    Andleman??/
    A flutie fan bigtime so means nada.
178.23The little ones continue to sufferOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Aug 18 1994 14:029
178.24Fans Union, what a concept!MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeThu Aug 18 1994 15:0727
fresh off the wire...

If you have had it with the spoiled brats and the spoiled fat cats, hit 'em
where it hurts. Join the Fans Union and strike against the greedy players
and owners.

This is not their game; it belongs to all of us.

FED UP FANS pledge that they will not attend, or watch, the playoff games.
This way the players and owners will lose millions.

This is the way it works: Every week that there is a strike, there will be
one playoff game boycotted. If it goes on for more than seven weeks, the
world series games will be boycotted, one for each week until the strike is
settled.

Show them you are serious. They are counting on that post-season money, and
counting on us to just go along with whatever crumbs they throw us.

No more!
 
Join the fans union FED UP FANS by sending $10 and your name to:
FUF  P.O. Box 69  Winchester MA  01890.  You'll receive a bumper sticker to
display and a membership card. Your money will be used to print and
broadcast this message all over the USA. They will get the message and get
to playing baseball and stop playing this stupid game of pouting.
 
178.25These thangs never workCTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Thu Aug 18 1994 15:304
re: FUF

I applaude thaeir effort, but every time a group does something like this, there
are always enough fans to take their seats at the ballpark...
178.26Doesn't workOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Aug 18 1994 15:335
178.28Watch Football insteadMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSThu Aug 18 1994 17:3017
    I'll Have no Problem Banning Baseball (Boycot)
    
    Of course I may have only watched a few games and then the WS but not
    this year, I can easily not watch or attend one minute of baseball.
    
    I wish just once the Fans would all get together in a united front and
    Hit them where it hurts... WE CONTROL SPORTS, if they could get all 
    Sportfans to start a union they could control salaries, tickets costs
    and Food/Gift cost as well... BUT it will never happen...
    
    The only thing more ridiculous then the high salaries, Ticket and
    conncesion cost is Women's Clothing, every time I shop with my wife
    and see a 100-300 piece of clothe thown together I ask myself who buys
    this (Then I see 2 of them in the checkout line).
    
    Good luck on your boycott, but it will never happen
    								mab
178.29Ripken's Record?ODIXIE::ZOGRANThu Aug 18 1994 21:257
    What impact, other than delaying it, does the stike have on Cal Ripken's
    pursuit of the consectutive games played record?
    
    How close is he?
    
    UMDan
     
178.30will take him longer and he ain't getting youngerFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Thu Aug 18 1994 21:263
    He's ~200 games away.  Since the streak involves several seasons
    anyway, I doubt the strike has an impact.  He probably has already
    survived a few strikes anyway with that streak.
178.31MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Fri Aug 19 1994 01:324
    Ripken is just under 130 games away. Less than a full seasobn.
    
    The Crazy met
    
178.32Strike FrustrationCSLALL::TMACDONALDFri Aug 19 1994 16:218

	Why are these people waiting until Tuesday to meet again? They
	agree on Thursday to resume meetings then wait 5 days! Why? Isn't
	resolving this strike *supposed* to be the #1 concern of both
	sides here? .... maybe not?

	Tom
178.33CAMONE::WAYTell my friend boy, Willie BrownFri Aug 19 1994 17:1717
Tom, I think you guessed it.

I'm wondering if perhaps both sides are milking it in the hopes that the
public uproar will force the other side to make concessions.

To be honest, right now, I don't give a shit.  If they play a World Series
this year, it'll be tainted, tainted, tainted.  It's already tainted as
the first world series with a stupid playoff scheme, and now it'll be
strike tainted.

That, plus that fact that the Red Sox are long out of it, has made my
appetite for one of my favorite sports, very small.  Exceedlingly small.

It's time for football, and before you know it, HOCKEY!!!!! (yes!)


'Saw
178.34who's got the list?HBAHBA::HAASSorry, wrong species.Fri Aug 19 1994 17:207
Who's got the list of guesses/predictions for the end of the strike?

I like my 9/6 date, still. That gives 'em time to bullsh*t around a
little more, take a week more to make a decision and bingo, just in time
to complete some games to have the playoffs and the series.

TTom
178.35MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Fri Aug 19 1994 17:273
    
    
       The season is over. See you in the spring of '95.
178.36FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Aug 19 1994 17:5211
    do you really think they would skip the playoffs and World Series?  If
    they did, they'd really lose a lot of what's left of their fan base.
    
    Interesting survey done by USA Today shows the current degradation of
    baseball.  It's no longer America's favorite sport.  The survey was
    done on Little League-aged kids and asked them what their favorites
    were:
    
    Football   40%
    Basketball 28%
    Baseball    8%
178.37Although the numbers seem pretty beleivableMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Aug 19 1994 17:597
    Hockey didnt even make the list ?  I wonder how the survey would have
    worked out 2 years ago when the Airmaster was ruling the courts :-)
    
    Was the survey done on little league aged kids or actually little
    leauge's, I ask becuase thats a real small set of children.
    
    								mab
178.38When owners are done "punishing" playersAKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meFri Aug 19 1994 18:2112
    I think the meetings are geared around the coming weekends.  So they
    need to have an agrrement before the end of the wednesday meeting in
    order to field teams by saturday or maybe friday night.
    
    My choice just expired, I would now pick next Thursday (Fri or sat.
    games) as the window is at an end.  Despite the posturing by
    Ravelitch(sic) the whole point of the strike is the owners hitting
    players with a little financial kick in the pants before signing
    something which could easily have been signed a month ago.
    
    It is that simple: players won't sign a cap agreement and owners HAVE
    to play the playoffs = > an agreement within a week or two.
178.39It takes 20-8 voteOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Fri Aug 19 1994 18:4530
    Any owners' vote needs to be at least 20-8 to end the strike.
    
    There at least 8 franchises that fit into small market:
    San Diego
    Kansas City
    Milwaukee
    Minnesota
    Montreal
    Cincinnati
    St Louis
    Pittsburgh
    
    and maybe...
    Texas
    Cleveland
    Seattle
    
    and others
    
    It takes just 8 of these guys,many of whom desperately want revenue
    sharing,to vote down new proposals.
    
    I really don't think the serious negotiating starts until there is a
    news blackout. Until then...the clock ticks and the season is really 
    starting to look badly tainted.
    
    As of today,117 players have lost over $100,000. Bobby Bo is up to
    248,000 and Jimmy Key has surpassed $200,000.
    
    I'm more worried about Yankee's beer vendor Cousin Brewski
178.40MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Fri Aug 19 1994 19:0314
    
  >> do you really think they would skip the playoffs and World Series?  If
  >> they did, they'd really lose a lot of what's left of their fan base.
    
     It's never been about the fan base. All along it has been about
     money and as long as neither side will give up any of it then 
     this won't be resolved for months. For it to end this season
     the owners will have to cave in with those self same 'small market' 
     owners caving in first because they have the more shallow pockets. 
     Look for the owners to neuter Ravitch in the next two weeks or so and 
     guys like Bud Selig and John Harrington to take the lead in the 
     negotiations with the players. Barring that, the owners will stick 
     to their guns and write off the season and next year we *will* 
     see a salary cap in baseball.
178.41but say the word "cap" and you are outAKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meFri Aug 19 1994 19:116
    Ironically 5 of those 11 are conending for playoffs with houston a 6 of
    12.
    
    Also ironically the players might be better with a solid cap and owners
    be better off in the direction they've been going - better budgeting ,
    more value for dollar, no lougormanizing
178.42Tommy you are wrong, settlement by 9/5 - no capAKOCOA::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meFri Aug 19 1994 19:181
    
178.43FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Aug 19 1994 19:212
    The cap works well in the NBA.  There are a few things that make it
    difficult for trading, but in general it's positive.
178.44MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Fri Aug 19 1994 19:5610
    I'll stick by my Spring of '95 prediction.
    
    Cap in the NBA: it has worked reasonable well for the last 10 years but
    its time has passed. The teams are in good shape, revenue is reasonable
    for everyone and I just don't see the big market teams buying
    championships. It hasn't happened in baseball, doubt it will happen in
    basketball.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.45FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Aug 19 1994 19:594
>    for everyone and I just don't see the big market teams buying
>    championships. It hasn't happened in baseball, doubt it will happen in
    
    happened in NY quite often.
178.46Once you go cap, you can never go backCTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Fri Aug 19 1994 20:2214
|    Cap in the NBA: it has worked reasonable well for the last 10 years but
|    its time has passed. The teams are in good shape, revenue is reasonable
|    for everyone and I just don't see the big market teams buying
|    championships. It hasn't happened in baseball, doubt it will happen in
|    basketball.
 
Yabut good point TCM.  

Problem is that all sport's popularity is cyclical.  Basketball is up right now, 
down a few years ago.  A salary cap means great adjustment in the way the teams
do things (note the changes in the NFL th past two years).  You can't expect
a sport to put on a cap when times are bad, take it off when times are good.

=Bob= 
178.47A cap and NO GUARENTEED CONTRACTs would be greate for the gameMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Aug 19 1994 20:2420
    -2, I must have misunderstood, but are you saying a big market team
    hasnt attempted to buy a championship... HELLO... A TEAM BOUGHT 2
    if I remember correctly.  Didnt the BLUE JAYS go out and BUY a bunch
    of players for BIG BUCKS and win it all twice with one of the HIGHEST
    PAYROLLS IN BASEBALL !!!!!!!! YES!!!!!!!
    
    The NBA Cap works ok, but I think the new NFL Cap will work the best,
    no slotting, no guarenteed contracts, no resigning yourown players
    to 80million doller contracts and oly 250K counting against the cap
    crap...
    
    You need revenue sharring and a salary cap or teams will always be able
    to BUY CHAMPIONSHIPS, the 49ers proved that in Football and the
    BlueJays proved it in Baseball, and it sounds like it happend in
    basketball as well (before the cap) and if you look at what a few
    teasm are trying to do (1 yr contracts in small slots with Unofficial
    guarenteed raised) there's some teams trying to do it again (In the
    nba).
    
    								mab
178.48re: .45 look at the facts for a changeMSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Fri Aug 19 1994 21:1015
    Yankees sort of bought championships in 1977 and 1978; much as I loatht
    the Yankees the key "buys" were Jackson and Hunter. ALl the other key
    players came from the farm system or via trades.
    
    Mets in 1986 were a team that was either homegrown or built via trades.
    
    Blue Jays - sort of "boguht" championships. But again they were in
    position to win because of who they already had supplemented by good
    free agent signings. Twins have also won 2 titles since 1987.
    
    Point is that the big markets have not dominated winning the WS since
    free agency came on the scene.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.4949ers did NOT buy championship!!!BSS::MENDEZFri Aug 19 1994 21:124
    Being a 49er fan...How did the 49ers buy their championships.
    I think you are confusing them with the Bulls???
    
    
178.50Don't forget GossageOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Fri Aug 19 1994 21:467
    Nit on Yankees:
    
    Goose Gossage was another key free agent on 1978 team. Don Gullett was
    also a key player in 1977.
    
    But Gabe Paul's trades were a big key,a fact Steinbrenner forgot about
    as he failed to buy titles for Yanks in 1980's.
178.51MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Fri Aug 19 1994 22:149
    re: .50
    
    right on those.
    
    Munson, Nettles, Chambliss, Guidry, White, Rivers, Randolph came via
    the farm system or trades.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.52Could have already been endedMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Aug 22 1994 10:2710
Peter Gammons writes in the latest issue of Baseball America that the
players would return to the field if the owners would agree not to
institute a salary cap unilaterally.  The owners, who intend to do
precisely that, will not agree.  Gammons says this is now unequivocally
"the owners' strike".

I've felt that way all along.  What the owners are trying to do is
bust the union.  In the process they may bust the game.

Steve
178.53Doesnt take a rocket scientist, but the cap can fix itMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSMon Aug 22 1994 13:0413
    -3 during the 49er's run they had one of the Highest Salaries in
    Football (Like 1-3 the whole time), as comparision to the Cowboys
    who won 2 in a row did it with a middle to low payroll (In comparison
    to the other teams in the league).
    
    Doesnt matter how big the market, its how much money the owner has and
    what they think they can make off a championship.  If they have enough
    money they can buy up the best free agents available, buy/trade talant
    away from other teams and buy a championship.  The teams I listed all
    did it and proved that it works, some true championship teams did it
    thru the draft with a modest payroll.  (Cowboys, Bulls, Lakers).
    
    								Mike
178.54SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Mon Aug 22 1994 13:2715
    
    	What was interesting about the Gammons column is what percentage of
    the teams payrolls. Came from Free Agency, arbitration, normal
    increases. The owners claim that arbitration raises salarys. Well the
    total was 67% from Free Agency, 21% from Arbitration, and 12% from
    normal increases/others.
    	Gammons then looked specifically at the Red Sox. How they managed
    to pay at 25 million dollar team 40 million. By offering players like
    Viola and Dawson big money. When nobody else was offering them
    contracts. Giving Danny Darwin a 4 year contract, while nobody else
    would. The owners are losing money because of there own stupidity. 
           They also estimate that if there isn't a new agreement or
    serious talks by Labor day. That the whole season will be lost.
    
    Ron<
178.55MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Aug 22 1994 13:4117
    
      RE .54
    
      Yup. The jist of yesterday's Gammons column in  the Globe was
      that the most of the owners problems have been caused by mis-
      management. When the Sox payroll was published the other day,
      I was shocked that Dawson is pulling down 4.25 mil and Joe
      Hesketh 1.7. There's been a lot of hue and cry from the public
      about "overpaid ballplayers" but if I'm a gimpy legged Andre
      Dawson and some idiotic GM throws 4.25 million dollars at me,
      I'm supposed to say no? Of course not. And here the Red Sox are
      pulling bonehead moves like that and still are quite profitable.
      No wonder the players don't want to give up anything. The problem 
      in the league isn't that Barry Bonds is making $6 million per year, 
      it's that mediocre players are getting two, three and four million per
      year and it's largely managements fault. It seems like they need
      a cap just to discipline themselves.
178.56CAM3::WAYTell my friend boy, Willie BrownMon Aug 22 1994 14:0627
mab,

There's a large flaw in your logic.  Having the highest salary base doesn't
equate with buying a championship.  You could have developed every
player on your team through your farm system, and still have the
highest salary base to keep them.


Further, lest anyone be too naive, every championship ever won has been
bought.   Whether a baseball team goes out and signs a promising rookie that
they hope will develop into a star, or whether they include incentives into
a contract to keep a star on the team, the bottom line is that the BUSINESS
of sport is buying a championship.   Some teams try to do it all at once
in a single stroke of spending, and others doing it over the long term.


As to the 49ers, I cannot remember them going out and pulling in a whole
bunch of folks to win them the championship.  Over the 80s they were
clearly and consistently front runners, having a sound player base.  At least
that's the impression that I have.   Frank Mendez can probably elaborate
on that.....


It's back to logic school for you, mab,


'Saw
178.57Get a real job...MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSMon Aug 22 1994 14:4126
    Yes but without a cap teams could sign there players to any amount they
    wanted to (TO Keep them) and pickup any free agents for any amount.
    
    You cant do that in basketball (Well Your not suppose to) with the cap.
    The cap rules are somewhat tricky, you have slots etc and have to sign
    people into those slots with max of 30% raise's etc, but I like the NEW
    NFL Cap. $X is your cap, you cant go out and steal/buy other teams top
    talant without losing some of your own.
    
    And even if you did develope all your talant thru a farm league, you
    cant keep them all if you dont have the money, so the smaller markets
    who make less would lose more top talant to free agency then the teams
    in the larger markets who can pay the key/top talant Big $$$ to keep
    them around.
    
    I will agree with one thing, the cap could make the owner's richer, who
    wnats that :-) but its there buisness theyve devoted there time/money
    effort to building that buisness, the players are employees there for
    a short stint, so should the employee's of a complany making alot of
    money all make higher salaries just becuase the owner/major
    stockholders are ????
    
    I hope they all lose Millions of Dollers and hope it damage's fan
    support and decrese's there profits for the next 20 years :-)
    
    								mab
178.58DOCTP::TESSIERMon Aug 22 1994 15:2518
I think that Peter Gammons was engaging in a bit of revisionist
history yesterday.  In hindsight, of course the Dawson and Darwin
deals look like mistakes.  But at time, Gammons openly gushed about
how great it was that Dawson was coming to the Red Sox, how he was
such a great leader, and how this would pave the way for more blacks
to come to Boston in the future.  He said that Dawson was by far the
best person he had ever met in baseball.  At the time, he never said
that the signing was a mistake.  On the contrary, he even lobbied for
the signing months before it happened.

Re. Darwin, it's simply not true that no other teams were pursuing him.
Darwin was coming off a season where he won the ERA title in the N.L.
He was described as a pitcher with a rubber arm.  It was considered
a very good signing at the time.  

Of course there's no defense for throwing money at Matt Young.

Ken
178.59MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Aug 22 1994 15:295
    
      Gammons never said that signing Dawson was a mistake. The 
     mistake was in paying him $9 million over two years when no
     one else appeared interested. It would seem that they could
     have gotten him much cheaper. 
178.60Play moneyOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Mon Aug 22 1994 15:404
    Sometimes I think teams throw big money at questionable talent just to
    create artifical excitement in the off-season and say to the fans"Look
    what we're doing to improve ourselves,now pay $3 more for a
    ticket,because that is the price top stay competitive"
178.6149ers used the DRAFTBSS::MENDEZMon Aug 22 1994 15:5818
    .53,56.57
    
    While the 49ers have spent money on their players they did not buy
    any free agents that allowed then to win any superbowls.  Now you
    can talk about Jim burt but he was retired when the 49ers brought him
    back.  They picked up Fred Smerlas but he did not produce any champion-
    ships at all. Here is partial list of players that the 49ers have
    drafted that produced a bevy of superbowl championships.  Montana,
    Rice, Craig, Jones, Taylor, Lott, Clark, Paris, Wallace, Sapolu,
    Barton, McIntyre, Wright, Rathman...were all obtained through the
    draft.  I missed a bunch of players but the vast majority were obtained
    via the draft.  MAB what do you mean that the 49ers bought all of their
    championships?  If you mean that they bought a bunch of free agents
    that won a bunch of superbowls then you are wrong.  If you mean that
    they drafted quality people and then paid them well and they produced
    championships then you are correct.  But remember they used the same
    rules that EVERY other team abided by in that time frame.
    
178.62My Main ThoughtsLUDWIG::BARBIERIMon Aug 22 1994 16:4947
      The salary cap thing seems kind of crazy.  To me, its an ommission
      on the part of the owners that they are not mature enough to control
      their own money.  Well, let them grow up and be as truly thrifty
      with their own money as they want to be.  And if another owner
      wants to spend more money, let him!  And if all the owners happen
      to want a cap...what's the problem?  Just grow up and pay according
      to your own imaginary cap, i.e. the amount of money you personally
      want to dole out for your players.
    
      Another thing I have always found intersting is the irony of many
      of the fans that rant and rave about players salaries.  Take your
      stereotypical redneck.  (And please...I am not suggesting that most
      fans are rednecks, I just want to exemplify one.)  Most rednecks 
      would probably hate the idea of 'communism' or 'socialism'.  What
      they would espouse is rugged individualism and free market.  And
      here I have seen so many people support in sport things that are
      anti-free market!   Completely in violation of their own ideology!
    
      I tend to believe free market ought to be the way to go, but the
      one thing that causes me to maybe think otherwise is when civic
      pride is incorporated.  If it ever got to be that the New York's 
      and the LA's generally won because of their size, free market could
      imply sort of a Darwinism.  The Pittsburghs and Milwaukees, if they
      aren't fit, don't survive.  I'm not sure about this.
    
      The one other thing I think of is the logical cause of the player's
      salaries.  Its the fans.  Its us people who are satisfied with 
      purchasing the product.  We pay the cable and the tickets.  We make
      it profitable for the advertizers to pay the networks which in turn
      makes it profitable for the networks to pay the leagues which makes it
      viable for the players to make their salaries.
    
      Lets nip the rose at the bud.  If we don't like how much they make,
      fight back!  Go on strike!  Don't go to the game and don't watch
      the game.  Let the Nielson ratings take a dive.  Let people see
      games where no one is in the stands.  Once the advertizers realize
      no one is watching and thus their commercials are not positively
      impacting sales, they will give the networks less money for their
      commercials.  The networks will then give the leagues less money
      for TV rights.  The owners will then get less money.  You watch
      how fast the salaries will go down!!
    
      I think the owners ought to grow up.  And to the extent that we
      the fan complain about salaries...well, if we continue to watch
      the game, we need to grow up too.
    
                                                  Tony
178.63DELNI::CRITZScott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3Mon Aug 22 1994 16:517
    	Poor Barry Bonds. He can't make the $15K a month payments
    	to his wife. Had to have them lowered to $7.5K. Then the
    	judge asks him for his autograph.
    
    	Barf!
    
    	Scott
178.64PTOVAX::SCHRAMMMon Aug 22 1994 17:0510
    
 >>  The salary cap thing seems kind of crazy.  To me, its an ommission
>>      on the part of the  owners that they are not mature enough to control
>>      their own money.  Well, let them grow up and be as truly thrifty
    
    
     Bingo! That's the reason they need the cap. The owners can't control.
    It only takes ONE owner to make a horrible signing that causes other 
    problems - especially in arbritration.  This is why we have utility
    type players making MILLIONS..... 
178.65As usaul the fans get screwed...MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSMon Aug 22 1994 17:2130
    Last time on the 49ers.. Had there been a cap they would not have won
    the SB's they did, the would not have been able to keep/pay there own
    players to keep them happy and in free agency many may have left (Yes
    they played within the rules that were set at the time) and therefore
    brought in a need for a cap.  Owner's can control there own money,
    thats just it some owner's will PAY ANYTHING to win a championship
    weather thats signing all there own KEY players to HUGE salaries or
    going out and stealing other teams key players they may have more money
    to lose(spend) then teams in smaller markets owned by less capable
    owners (Less Money to Spend/lose).
    
    The Rookie Cap (Which doenst seem to be working very well) in football 
    is another thing, guys always want more then what the guy drafted last
    year makes, they cant make less then the guys drafted behind them, etc
    etc etc.. Are what we making pubic knowledge, should it be, if you knew
    the guy in the corner doing nothing made more then you (Because he's
    the 2nd cousin to the boss) wouldnt you want a raise.
    
    Team Salary Caps in all sports, NO GUARENTEED CONTRACTs and Full
    Discloser between teams/players on what the individual salary
    breakdowns are.
    
    I dont watch/attend any baseball (Havnt seen a redsox's game in about
    3 years), no celtics games last year (Or Pats) and never been to a
    Hockey game.  I think the ticket/parking/food+drink/prizes etc are
    way too expensive.  If my kid's want to go/watch I'll try and steer
    them towards a local team (Shamrocks in marlboro, farm team etc) where
    you get to see the entertainment at a reasoable cost.
    
    								mab
178.66METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Mon Aug 22 1994 17:269
mab,

you still haven't explained a very basic point:

why should the players have to agree to something that protects the
owners from thmselves??

The Crazy Met

178.67SOLANA::MAY_BRQUIET--case study in progressMon Aug 22 1994 17:308
   >  Poor Barry Bonds. He can't make the $15K a month payments        to
   > his wife. Had to have them lowered to $7.5K. Then the        judge asks
   > him for his autograph.          
    
    Poor wife, she's got a $1500/month car phone bill.  How's she gonna get
    by?
    
    brews
178.68Cap itMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSMon Aug 22 1994 17:3615
    Too keep one owner from BUYING A CHAMPIONSHIP !!!!
    
    If you dont have a cap (a resonable one) it gives 2 different teams
    an unfair edge.  The teams owned by Billionaire's that dont care how
    much money they spend/lose/make can pay all there own players and
    anyone else's as much as they want to bring home a championship team.
    Second the teams in a larger market make more money and therefore the
    owner can afford to pay there own talant and anyone else's more money
    to bring home a championship.  Its not a guarentee, you can be rich and
    be in one of the top 3 markets buy the best free agents each year and
    still not win it all, a team from a smaller market, lower salaries can
    always play with more heart and determination to bring home the Rings.
    
    You can only buy talant..
    								mab
178.69not to worryHBAHBA::HAASSorry, wrong species.Mon Aug 22 1994 17:426
>    Too keep one owner from BUYING A CHAMPIONSHIP !!!!

George Steinbrenner seems to be able to prevent himself from doing this
fine, without a cap.

TTom
178.70does talant = talent?CNTROL::CHILDSMember of the Sloan Peterson FanClubMon Aug 22 1994 18:0513
 Does anyone know what kind of strike insurance the owners have? If they're
 not loosing every single dollar from games not played what motivation do 
 they have to end the strike, other than more moola? I would suspect that
 teams not in the playoff picture if they have good insurance have no 
 motivation at all. Players have a rumored 200 million to play with but
 that won't last forever especailly with 1500 dollar a month phone bills...

 ;^)

 next year

 mike
178.71METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Mon Aug 22 1994 18:2912
owners have no strike insurance this time. after 1981 I suspect no company
would insure them.

re: .68

except you really have yet to prove that the richer owners and/or richer
markets have dominated; that just has not happened since free agency.
The richer markets did dominate in the 1950's and in the 1960's but not
in the 1970's, 1980's or so far the 1990's.

The Crazy Met

178.72The cap is not the answerMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Aug 22 1994 18:2910
The answer, mab, is revenue sharing.  The owners talk about a partnership
with the players, but can't put together one among themselves.  They could
institute revenue sharing without consulting the players, which would
level the playing field and encourage rationality in spending, but they
won't, without the artificial tie-in to the salary cap.

I've said it before, I'll say it again: these are peripheral issues.  What
the owners are doing is trying to bust the union.

Steve
178.73sorry bunch for sureCNTROL::CHILDSMember of the Sloan Peterson FanClubMon Aug 22 1994 18:344
 
 Not even Lloyd's of London would take them? 

 mike
178.74Once burned, twice shyMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Aug 22 1994 18:374
Lloyd's took a major beating on the 1981 strike.  They wouldn't touch
the owners again with a fork.

Steve
178.75METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Mon Aug 22 1994 18:585
besides Lloyds has had some serious troubles the last few years; no
way they would touch that risky a proposition.

The Crazy Met

178.76CNTROL::CHILDSMember of the Sloan Peterson FanClubMon Aug 22 1994 19:004
didn't realize lloyd's had them in 81........

 good then imo.......
178.77So what happens if owners don't cave in25022::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meMon Aug 22 1994 20:3317
    It isn't going to happen but I'd be curious about the scenario of
    owners calling the players out and blowing the season (since players
    need certain concessions and no cap to come back).
    
    Do the owners lock the players out?
    
    Do they institute their program unilaterally and allow whatever players
    to play who want to and fill with minor leaguers?
    
    	If so at what point are players free agents vis a vis any type of
    	ball playing they can dig up (exhibitions, international play)
    
    	Is reserve clause (to prohibit the above) enforceable?
    
    re. the globe.  I pretty much agree with the letter writer - if
    milwaukee and san diego can't compete let them become minor league
    franchises.
178.78O8SIS::TIMMONSA waist is a terrible thing to mindTue Aug 23 1994 16:234
    Anyone know in which state the City of Earnest is in?  Heard that's
    where the meeting was to be.
    
    Lee
178.79Are the owners serious?OPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Tue Aug 23 1994 17:0627
    The meeting is in NYC. I am really starting to believe that getting the
    21 votes is going to be very difficult. There are many big differences
    from 1981 that hurt chances of a settlement.
    
    1) No commissioner.
    2) The owners' terrible track record.
    3) The small TV package.
    
    
    I never thought there would be a strike because I thought that both
    sides would realize how much money they were making and not want to
    ruin that...but now that it did happen and the damage has been done,the
    owners must think that they have to see this through no matter how 
    much damage is done.
    
    I don't see any sort of seriousness on owners' side. The players are
    completely confident that they will win another game of chicken with
    the owners. They should be able to survive thru the 1995 season
    
    Won't owners write off baseball losses against other businesses.
    
    The ONE thing that may save baseball is heavy political intervention.
    
    Will anyone still care?
    
    
    
178.80Owners: Who Needs 'Em!STRATA::BARBIERITue Aug 23 1994 17:161
      If I were the players, I'd start my own league!
178.81MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeTue Aug 23 1994 17:436
>> Owners: Who Needs 'Em!
           
	Ha ha!  Anyone expecting to draw them 7 figure paychecks is my guess.


	billl
178.82Baseball??..Whats that??BSS::MENDEZTue Aug 23 1994 18:0316
    What day is this of the baseball strike???  I honestly do not miss
    baseball one bit.  I have changed somewhat in how I view the strike.
    I lay the bulk of the blame at the owners feet.  They have know for
    a year about this problem and they chose to do nothing about it.  Yes
    the players want more money but who doesn't?  I never thought this
    would happen but I kind of agree with "figure skating" George.  The
    owners make alot of money and want to share it with very few people.
    
    This was the worst possible time for a strike.  College football is
    just around the corner, Pro-football has just started,  and not too
    many people care what happens with baseball.  USA Today did a poll
    of baseball fans concerning the strike and 84% of the fans of baseball
    are not real concerned with a strike.  They plain and simple do not
    care!!!  I think baseball is in trouble.
    
    
178.83MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Tue Aug 23 1994 18:044
    Day 12.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.84MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Aug 23 1994 19:1917
  >> This was the worst possible time for a strike.  College football is
  >> just around the corner, Pro-football has just started,  and not too
  >> many people care what happens with baseball.  USA Today did a poll
  >> of baseball fans concerning the strike and 84% of the fans of baseball
  >> are not real concerned with a strike.  They plain and simple do not
  >> care!!!  I think baseball is in trouble.
    
     Frank, here in the Boston area I'd guess that more than 84% of sports
     fans could care less about the strike. The Patsies are 3-0 in pre-season
     and going back to last year they're riding a seven game winning streak.
     I can't remember folks being so juiced about the Patriots since the mid
     '70s when they might have been the best team in all of football. If base-
     ball's powers that be were expecting a public outcry for a return of the
     game they can forget it. Here in New England where folks used to live
     and die with the Sox, folks are learning that they can live without
     them. Of course the fact that the Red Sox stink might have something
     to do with it.
178.85Who let Hal into Tommy's account?MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeTue Aug 23 1994 19:277
 >>    I can't remember folks being so juiced about the Patriots since the mid
 >>    '70s when they might have been the best team in all of football.

	Surely you jest, kind sir.


	billl
178.86Who cares about indy :-)MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSTue Aug 23 1994 19:4813
    Hmmm... The first part is a definate people are definatly JUICED over
    the pats potential this year, personally I say a 7-9 season would be
    a success but we here in New England are very tough on our sports teams
    and anything less then playoffs will be a dissapointment and of course
    we want them to win it all every year.
    
    I dont think 8-8 will get you in this year so they need 9 Wins to get
    into the playoffs..????... I wouldnt put my money on it, but I'll be
    watching almost every game and will never root against them...
    
    GO PATS (Beat Buffalo Twice, Miami Twice and NYJ twice and Im happy).
    
    								mab
178.87MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Aug 23 1994 20:1110
    
       Nope, billl. No jest at all. Back around '76 (?)or so when the
      Pats had John Hannah and Leon Gray, Steve Nelson, Ray Hamilton, 
      Mike Haynes, Tim Fox and a whole bunch of other excellent players,
      the Pats were as good as anyone including your Steelers. If it 
      weren't for one bad call by Ben Dreith on Sugar Bear Hamilton,
      the Pats would have moved past the Raiders and probably would have
      won their first Super Bowl and who knows what would have happened
      from there. Of course you wouldn't know any of that because you're
      one of them Johnny Comelately, bandwagon jumpers.
178.88MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Tue Aug 23 1994 20:514
    Tommy, what was the call you alluded to??
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.89Tommy's rightFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Tue Aug 23 1994 21:041
    the infamous roughing the passer on Stabler in the AFC wildcard game.
178.90MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeTue Aug 23 1994 21:056
 >> one of them Johnny Comelately, bandwagon jumpers.

	Oooo, now you've gone and riled me up!


	billl
178.91Somebody had to get Madden off the sidelines...CNTROL::CHILDSMember of the Sloan Peterson FanClubWed Aug 24 1994 12:265
 Anyone who thinks Steven Grogan could have won a Superbowl, probably
 thinks John Elway could win one too........

 hahahaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
178.9275% don't miss MLBSNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Wed Aug 24 1994 13:149
    
    	The latest nationwide poll on the following question.
    
    	"Do you miss MLB?"
    
    	Last figure I saw last week had 75% of the people saying
    they didn't miss baseball.
    
    Ron
178.93CAMONE::WAYTell my friend boy, Willie BrownWed Aug 24 1994 14:1627
At this point, who would?

I love baseball.  It's one of my favorite sports to watch and read about
and go to see.  But quite honestly, whether it's my perception instead of
fact, the ballplayers of today are into it more for money than for love
of the game, and I don't have any sympathy.   I mean, to me, if you played
the game for $8000 and had to wear wool uniforms you had to love the 
game.

And I don't have any sympathy for the owners either.  To them it is business 
pure and simple, but they participate in just about the only monopoly 
allowed in the US.  They've manuevered things such that they don't have
a commissioner to worry about, and they just want to get richer.


Couple all that with the fact that the Red Sox were having a shitty season
and add in the fact that the strike will probably PREVENT the firing
of Butch Hobson at season's end, and my feeling towards baseball is
one of disgust at this point.

Bring on football, so I can piss and moan about Dan Reeves and George Young's
ineptitude with the Giants, watch with interest what Parcells does with
the Pats, and bring on hockey so I can see if the Bruins have a decent
goalie this season.....


'Saw
178.94I sorta miss itODIXIE::ZOGRANWed Aug 24 1994 14:189
    Did anyone catch the Braves - Red Sox score from last night?  TBS had
    the game on, but I didn't see the final score (or watch more than one
    inning).  Guess they have to keep the announcers busy during the
    strike.  
    
    Oh, Pawtucket vs Richmond.
    
    UMDan
    
178.95CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Wed Aug 24 1994 14:529
  
|    Oh, Pawtucket vs Richmond.
 
Yes, I'll admit, I watched several innings after the kids went to bed.  The 
Braves won 8-7 I beleive.  It was supposed to be the ultimate Triple A pitcher's
duel, and turned into a slugfest.  Guess that's why the pitchers are still in 
Triple A.

=Bob= 
178.96METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Wed Aug 24 1994 14:558
re: .95

Even in MLB there are times when the top pitchers face one another and
it ends up being an 11-10 game with neither surviving the past the 4th.

The Crazy Met

178.97MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Aug 24 1994 14:5718
  >> Oooo, now you've gone and riled me up!
    
     Gee, I would *never* do that inetentionally. Seriously, billl,
     I could understand how it would be hard for a Pittsburgher to 
     buy that any team, much less the Patriots, was perhaps the best
     team for any length of time during the mid to late '70s but those
     really were some great Pats teams back then. Two players from that 
     era, John Hannah and Mike Haynes , are on that all-time greatest list
     posted recently. The Pats were strong at every other position as well.
     Especially the left side with 'Hog' Hannah at guard and Leon Gray at
     tackle. The Pats were unfortunate in that the Sullivans were the owners 
     because when Leon Gray and John Hannah went to the Pro Bowl and found 
     out how underpaid they were, all hell broke loose. And they were unfort-
     unate in that the AFC was incredibly strong then. Still, it took one
     really bad call to stop them because they were a great great football
     team. Infinitely better than the '85 team that got crushed by the Bears
     in the Super Bowl.
178.98MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 24 1994 15:015
	Was it my imagination or did the Richmond Braves' pitcher look
	like Tom Glavine's little brother?


	billl
178.9925022::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meWed Aug 24 1994 15:087
    I think Pats and Steelers played once of twice between 76-80 and split
    each winning on the others turf in very close battles between the two
    best teams.
    
    And the final Dreith indignity was only the culmination of several
    atrocious calls all against the pats including one involving Russ
    Francis.
178.100CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Wed Aug 24 1994 15:094
|	Was it my imagination or did the Richmond Braves' pitcher look
|	like Tom Glavine's little brother?

Yea, I could see that.
178.101KALVIN::MORGANWed Aug 24 1994 15:256
    Re:  look-a-like pitchers
    
    And to top it off, the kid that pitched the ninth had the exact same
    delivery as Steve Avery!  Same size/build for that matter.
    
    					Steve
178.102MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 24 1994 15:278
>>    Re:  look-a-like pitchers

	Hmmm, maybe we've stumbled onto something here.  Where's our
	conspiracy expert, /er?



	billl
178.103FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Aug 24 1994 15:392
    AAA teams sure are lovin' this strike.  They're even packing it out in
    Phoenix!
178.104GENRAL::WADEFearTheGovernmentWhoFearsYourGunsWed Aug 24 1994 20:0015
    
    	I miss it.
    
    	Got a baseball fix Friday night.  Went to see the Sky Sox
    	(Rockies AAA team) play Tuscon.  
    
    	Mr. Baylor was there.  That man is HUGE.  He was great with
    	the kids too.  When he got up to leave (~6th inning), the
    	kids mobbed him in the aisle.  He pointed them to the top of
    	the stairs.  Like good little soldiers, they all single filed
    	up there.  He stood there for at least 45 minutes signing
    	autographs.  He didn't leave until the last kid got one.
    	Class guy...
    
    Claybone
178.105METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-(Wed Aug 24 1994 20:136
I miss it as well. What is worse is all the pre-season football that is
on. August is meant for baseball not other sports.

The Crazy Met

178.106At least Home Improvement's onODIXIE::ZOGRANWed Aug 24 1994 21:205
    -.1 I agree.  Whats even worse is that the local UGA ranters now take
     up all of the local sports air time talking about the "big" game with
     U of Souf Carolina. UGH!
    
    UMDan      
178.107USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Aug 25 1994 16:0414
re:  a long way back

I don't believe the players could form their own league...at least not
one that would be immediately successful.  The owners all own existing
names...and with certain TV/radio contracts, maybe even markets.

No, this is definitely coming down to who can sit out longest.
The players talk about waiting as long as it takes to break the
owners' salary cap proposal, but they have mortgages too...and
nowhere else to play.  They say this a big owner-small owner fight
that they shouldn't be a part of, but the owners want to roll back
the clock and correct mistakes they've made.

The '94 season is history.
178.108Marvin Miller says new league is possibleOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Aug 25 1994 16:4612
    Heard an interesting interview with Marvin Miller last night. He
    believes a new league is VERY good possibility if the strike extends
    into 1995.
    
    Rational is that there are lots of wealthy people throwing large sums
    of money to get into baseball. Stadiums would be available,public
    /political sentiment would be so strongly weighted against owners that
    antitrust exemption would likely be rescinded and there ARE a ton of
    free agents that will be available.
    
    Owners seem to be going through the motions. Negotiations don't get
    serious until there is a news blackout.
178.109Yes...The Russ Francis CallSTRATA::BARBIERIThu Aug 25 1994 16:4818
      re: .99
    
      Yes, the play involving Russ Francis actually riled me more
      than the roughing call.
    
      The Pats had the ball.  Another first down and this game is
      probably history.  Grogan is back to pass.  He passes to
      Francis and Villapiano IS ALL OVER HIM!!!  It is not even
      questionable.
    
      And there is no call.  If the call is made, its 1st down Pats
      and they run out the clock and the roughing call doesn't even
      have a chance to happen.
    
      Truly one of the worst officiated games in the history of
      professional football.
    
                                                  Tony
178.110Tainted titleOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Aug 25 1994 17:295
178.111rip offCOMET::MARLANDThu Aug 25 1994 18:322
    I also agree, the Patriots had the game won. Ray Hamilton played
    one of the best games I've ever seen by a DL.
178.112Negotiations - to be resumed next week???MSDOA::HYMESI'd rather be fishingThu Aug 25 1994 19:594
    FYI - negotiations broke off.  The players split the meeting
    today around noon.  News at 6:00.
    
    Pat
178.113Bravo! Bravo!FRETZ::HEISERin a van down by the river!Thu Aug 25 1994 20:391
    
178.11425022::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meThu Aug 25 1994 20:425
    If the strike goes on and on perhaps the players will appear during the
    last week, after playoffs and world series are cancelled "ready for
    work".  That may put them in position come spring lock out to declare
    breach of contract and purport free-agency for purposes of playing in
    any new league or exhibitions.
178.115See ya in 1995OPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Aug 25 1994 20:457
178.1161994 sdODIXIE::ZOGRANThu Aug 25 1994 20:464
    Betcha the owners blink first.
    
    UMDan
    
178.117d-day for baseball coming fast25022::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meThu Aug 25 1994 20:512
    there's a d-day where tv and advertisers have to have an agreement to
    sponsor post-season.  Its around sep 10 at latest.
178.118METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-( Thu Aug 25 1994 21:184
I read/heard it was sep15.

The Crazy Met

178.119SOLANA::MAY_BRQUIET--case study in progressThu Aug 25 1994 23:094
    
    I hope they stay out.  I love anarchy.  That's why I work at Digital.
    
    brews
178.120DisappearingOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Tue Aug 30 1994 15:185
    Yesterday's sportscasts were dominated by football and the US Open
    tennis. Baseball is really starting to take a backseat. There's no
    negotiations scheduled,but you still get the feeling that any
    settlement prior to the end of the season would still "save" the
    postseason even if they play the world series in Phoenix in December.
178.1211994 Season is overODIXIE::ZOGRANTue Aug 30 1994 17:0211
    A column in todays column said that the possibility existed for
    warm weather location playoffs in November if the strike were to be
    resolved at the end of September.  Great, I can hear it now "Honey,
    pass the giblet gravy, and can you switch on the Braves - Expo game?"
    
    Give me a break.  This season is toast.  With football starting in
    earnest, the fans, if they haven't already, have given up on baseball. 
    Any contrived playoff will be recognized for the sham that it would be.
    
    UMDan
    
178.122Can baseball overcome those who run it?OPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Tue Aug 30 1994 20:3213
    More evidence why people really don't care about the baseball strike:
    Labor Day has always been steeped in baseball tradition. Well,the
    Yankees,among other teams were scheduled to have the day off this year.
    Why? Because it would have meant they played 21 straight days,a
    violation of the basic agreement. 
    
    Doesn't baseball realize that people may like to take in a baseball
    game on a holiday? I can remember when there were doubleheaders on
    Memorial Day,the 4th of July and Labor Day. 
    
    The greed and shortsightedness is mind boggling. Basbeall has always
    been able to overcome the stupidity of the people who run it. Maybe 
    not this time.
178.1232 good plans :-)MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSTue Aug 30 1994 20:3915
    Hey Here's an Idea, lets totally wipe out baseball and replace
    it with soccer, seeing that there both on the same level in 
    term of excitment maybe no one will tell the differece.
    
    And if the CFL can change the football field well just modify soccer
    rules and standars so it can be played on a baseball Diamond, who says
    the field has to be a rectangle...
    
    Or Just simple dismiss all the Pro's replace them with AAA Players.
    Just like in the CFL you'll have AAA players VS AAA players, and
    AAA Hitters batting against AAA Pitchers.. May not notice much of
    a difference and maybe the game would then be played by men who love
    the sport for more then money.
    
    								mab
178.124METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-( Tue Aug 30 1994 20:458
> maybe the game would then be played by men who love
> the sport for more then money.

now where is your plan to do the same for basketball???

The Crazy Met

178.125FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Tue Aug 30 1994 21:111
    tell that to Danny Manning.
178.126DELNI::CRITZScott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3Wed Aug 31 1994 12:089
    	I miss the Nashua Pirates. When I moved to Nashua in 1984,
    	my family (4 individuals) could go to Holman Stadium and watch
    	a game for less that $15 admission.
    
    	I like the minor league ball so much better than the majors.
    
    	Seen the Mudhens play a couple of times, too.
    
    	Scott
178.127Basketball players dont appear to be as greedyMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSWed Aug 31 1994 13:3914
    -3 I bet if everyone in here entered every Basketball player that
    took a pay cut or was below avg for there talant we would have a
    very long list.
    
    Jordan was underpaid and If I remeber correct wasnt even in the top
    10 salary in the NBA during the bulls 3 year run.  He restructured his
    salary and took a cut in pay to keep a decent young team together.  Now
    how many Baseball players have ever done that ?
    
    In terms of there value to there team, bird, Magic, Air, Barkley are
    all underpaid when you compare there salaries to Shaq, Grand Ma Ma,
    Bradley etc...
    
    								mab
178.128MIMS::ROLLINS_RWed Aug 31 1994 13:4617
>    Jordan was underpaid and If I remeber correct wasnt even in the top
>    10 salary in the NBA during the bulls 3 year run.  He restructured his
>    salary and took a cut in pay to keep a decent young team together.  Now
>    how many Baseball players have ever done that ?

     How many basketball players would do that without the salary cap ?
     
     Would Jordan have pushed to maintain the salary cup during the next
     players-management negotiations, given current NBA financial conditions ?

     Michael Jordan was/is a basketball superstar, but I don't believe he is
     a saint, nor do I believe he claims to be one.  His financial position
     was secure due to the massive amount of non-NBA income, which he enhanced
     with world championships during a down period in the NBA.  He probably
     made more money overall and added to his prestige (and ego) by allowing
     the team to pay more for a better class of surrounding athletes.  This was
     no altruistic decision on his part.
178.129MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 31 1994 13:515
re .127

	And their you have it.


178.130MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Aug 31 1994 13:553
    re .129
    
     That probably went zooming over his head but I appreciated it, billl.
178.131MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 31 1994 14:087
>>     That probably went zooming over his head but I appreciated it, billl.

	I kinda figured that, but I couldn't help myself.



	billl
178.132Damn Rain may ruin my golf this afternoon :-(MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSWed Aug 31 1994 14:3024
    PEtty PEtty Petty once again get a life
    
    
    So why dont baseball players take pay cuts to improve there teams and
    get a shot at the World Series ?  Greedy and without the cap greed runs
    wild (See Baseball).
    
    Im just glad there still on strike, TV is much more entertaining.  The
    sportscast are covering real sports, and all the talk is starting to
    die down.  There first year with the new playoff format and it may
    never happen, that would be great.  No Playoffs, No World Series.. the
    poor poor babies.
    
    Again the only sympathy I can feel for any of this is for the Little
    guys (Concessions, parking etc), but then again most of those are more
    then likley owned by some greedy rich guy and thats why they charge $3
    for a hotdog or a beer.
    
    I refuse to get dragged back down into a rat hole unless its with a
    worthy opponent (Like JD), no more battles of wits VS helpless
    opponents :-).
    
    Basketball/Football > Hockey/Baseball :-)
    								MairB
178.133MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Aug 31 1994 14:4214
    
  >> So why dont baseball players take pay cuts to improve there teams and
  >> get a shot at the World Series ?  Greedy and without the cap greed runs
  >> wild (See Baseball).
    
     Basketball instituted a cap because the league was down and out and
     in danger of being a weak sister to baseball and football. Financial
     controls were needed to revive the game. Baseball players aren't con-
     vinced that their game is in the same state. And given that the owners
     revise the number of teams losing money downward every time that they're
     called on it, who can blame the players? The thing is, if both sides
     really feel like they can't posssibly give in on this cap issue, this
     situation may not even be resolved by next spring. To me, it's con-
     ceivable that we could go to next June or more with no baseball.
178.134wouldn't bother me. plenty of baseball elsewheresCNTROL::CHILDSMember of the Sloan Peterson FanClubWed Aug 31 1994 14:479
>     The thing is, if both sides
>     really feel like they can't posssibly give in on this cap issue, this
>     situation may not even be resolved by next spring. To me, it's con-
>     ceivable that we could go to next June or more with no baseball.


 geez you say this like it's a bad thing....

 mike
178.135SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Wed Aug 31 1994 15:5617
    
    	The answer is simple, How many baseball players are in major TV
    commercials? Baseball does not market there stars. So the players
    don't make that much money outside of baseball.
    	Between Nike and McDonalds Michael Jordan made 20 times his salary.
    The same is true for Bird, Magic, and Barkley. The same is true today
    with Shack and Gran MA MA.
    	The two best players in Baseball today are Bonds and Griffey. When
    is the last time you saw them in a Major TV commerical?
    	Baseball players get money from baseball cards and trade shows.
    The MLB union gobbles a big chuck of that money. Starting in September,
    players will receive up to $8000 a month from there 1993 baseball card
    revenues. The Union has ~250 million dollars of the players money.
    This strike isn't going to end anytime soon, because the players have
    a war chest.
    
    Ron
178.136MKFSA::LONGIt ain't over til it's over, maybeWed Aug 31 1994 16:135
	As a side note to the strike, has anyone seen or heard from
	Glenn Waugaman since this strike started?


	billl
178.137next in lineFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Aug 31 1994 16:232
    don't look now, but it appears that the NHL is also heading for a
    strike.  NHL owners want a cap too.
178.138and NFL refs?HBAHBA::HAASSorry, wrong species.Wed Aug 31 1994 16:253
Aren't the NFL Refs talking about some kinda strike, too?

TTom
178.13930008::ROBICHAUDFootball &gt; BaseballWed Aug 31 1994 16:486
    	I don't understand why sports owners just don't do like the
    rest of corporate America and downsize/rightsize all their players
    and hire temps.  That way their profit margin would be in the hundreds
    of millions instead of just millions and maybe then they could survive.
    
    				   /Don
178.140Strike talkOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Aug 31 1994 16:5616
    In the NY area they have been running a show called "Strike Talk" in
    place of the Yankee games on the radio station that normally does the
    Yankee games.Yankee announcers,John Sterling and Michael Kay have been
    hosting the show. Few teams want baseball back more than the Yankees
    who were headed to the playoffs for the first time since the strike
    season of 1981.
    
    The show has had more than its share of interesting guests,but it's
    funny when the announcers(who are dying to do real games again) have to
    debate phone callers on players/owners issues.
    
    I agree with MAB. Let it continue. I feel bad for the little guys
    and the shutins who depend on this,but they will survive too and they
    should just remember the esteem they are held in by the participants.
    
    
178.141USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Aug 31 1994 20:249
>    players will receive up to $8000 a month from there 1993 baseball card

What's $8000/month to these guys ??  Given that *most* people set their
living standards (ie: spending level) based on their income, it's safe
to say that many players will be hurting to make mortgage payments
should this strike wipeout the rest of this season.

The the owners lose this year's TV $$$, they're going to make 'em hurt
next spring.
178.142CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Tue Sep 06 1994 14:5015
Well, no baseball would bother me (and Glenn I'm sure).

Glenn and I took in a ball game a couple of weeks ago.  It was one of the
few wins that the New Britain Red Sox earned this year, and it didn't look
pretty (a diving bunt by the Red Sox SS, followed by a triple by the Red
Sox "Parolee of the Year").

But, it still had beer (fine Samuel Adams beer) and hot dogs, a cheezy sound
system, and (gasp) Yankee fans in front of us.


I don't care if the ball players and owners don't come back.  I hope the
owners lose a ton of money, and the players all get outta shape....

'Saw
178.14330008::ROBICHAUDCasinoManiaTue Sep 06 1994 16:5714
	Back in the spring I got tickets for the August 12th Red Sox/Orioles
game in Camden Yards from Denny's brother who has season tickets in the
lower luxury boxes, for someone here at work.  At the time Denny charged me
$25.00 for an $18.00 ticket, so I figured his brother was trying to make
a little extra on the ticket.  Found out later that it was a club service
charge since the Orioles provide a waitress in these luxury boxes.  Well 
Denny went down to Baltimore over the weekend to see his brother, so I 
asked him to get me back the money for the tickets.  Turns out the Orioles 
are keeping the $7.00 per ticket service charge and only refunding the 
$18.00.  Now since the owners only act in the best interest of the game I 
have to assume that they are still paying the waitress' salaries during the 
strike.  Mighty decent of them.

				   /Don
178.144HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 06 1994 21:1021
  Hello sports hounds. I just got back from a 3 week vacation to Paris, London,
and Cape Cod. 

  The hotels I was at in Paris and London run a thing called CNN International
which is like regular CNN but more internationally oriented. I was curious to
see what U.S. news made it to the big time. The crime bill was big, a fire out
west seemed to get a lot of time, and the baseball strike was big news. 

  Once I got to London we got the BBC which had lots of coverage of track and
field in the Commonwealth games. 

  The London Cabbies seemed to come down on the side of the owners but then
they were more concerned with the railroad signalmen's strike that had London
streets bottled up with too many people driving into the city. 

  One Lorry driver was frustrated when his truck ran out of petrol near the
entrance to Downing street. He was further disappointed when he returned to
find out that authorities fearing a bomb had blown it up. It was his 1st run
into the city and he vowed that it would be his last. 

  George 
178.145Caught Paul Kelly & the Messengers at a local pub - yeah!24661::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingTue Sep 06 1994 21:3710
    Well, CNN International never mentioned baseball in Hong Kong,
    Singapore, Sydney, nor Aukland.  The Aussies and Kiwis made a big-deal
    out of the Commonwealth Games, but after I reminded my mates that the 
    Tournament featured badminton, bowling and some wuss variant of floor 
    dancing, and that most of the civilized world was excluded from
    competition, even they agreed that the games were irrelevant.
    
    Watching live rugby was way cool, though.
    
    Mark.
178.146CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 07 1994 12:586
>    
>    Watching live rugby was way cool, though.
>    


The god of rugby works in strange ways. ;^)
178.147MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSWed Sep 07 1994 15:5523
    Why dont you see major league baseball stars in commercials, that easy.
    
    THERE NOT MARKETABLE... There not world known, why, obvious, baseball
    is not in the same league with Basketball.  How many people know all
    the players on there own team, do children in other contries know who
    and what barry bonds looks like. (I doubt it).
    
    Even my 9 year old neice knows who larry bird, magic johnson and Air
    Jordan is (And she dont watch basketball), but all the kids at here
    school were basketball jerseys.. I bet she wouldnt know what sport
    barry bonds playerd or who the pirats where ????
    
    If there was a baseball player who was a world wide known superstar
    he would be able to land a huge endorsement contract.  It just comes
    down to what kids/people think of the sport.  Unless youve ever tried
    to hit a FASTBALL you have no idea how hard it is to hit one,  other
    then the great hitters in the game I dont find anything else that
    amazing...
    
    Oh well who cares, we have Football, and basketball is right around the
    courner (When do the Preseason basketball games start ?).
    
    								mab
178.148HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 16:3818
                 <<< Note 178.147 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    Even my 9 year old neice knows who larry bird, magic johnson and Air
>    Jordan is (And she dont watch basketball), 

  Yeah, but does she know any NBA basketball players? The guys you listed were
in the NBA once but they don't play there any more.

  The Dream Team One players got international exposure because of the Olympics
but I doubt that there are many players left in the NBA that have that kind
of international name recognition. Charles Barkley is probably the only NBA
player left who could sell Big Macs over seas.

  As for baseball, the White Sox organization has a minor league outfielder
hitting .192 with 3 home runs who can sell products better than any basketball
player in the NBA :*)} 

  George
178.149MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 07 1994 16:404
    
      George, didn't you predict that the strike would last almost exactly
      as long as you were on vacation? Do you have the box scores from last
      night?
178.150CNTROL::CHILDSTheresa's Sound-worldWed Sep 07 1994 17:044
 Tommy, do you forget anything???

 haaaaaaaaaaaa
178.151HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 17:089
  Well actually what I meant was that it would last as long as I SHOULD be on
vacation. The Louve is the most incredible place in the world. Paris is the
most incredible place in the world.

  As for Box Scores, yes I saw one. Pawtucket evened up the series with
Syracuse at 1 game a piece. 

  GO PAWSOX!!!
  George
178.153CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 07 1994 17:1827
>  Well actually what I meant was that it would last as long as I SHOULD be on
>vacation. The Louve is the most incredible place in the world. Paris is the
>most incredible place in the world.

Except for that room with row upon row of the same friggin' Grecian urn.
Boring!  8^)

Actually, I really enjoyed the Louvre, the Army Museum and Napolean's tomb.


For me, I much prefer Munich, or almost any German city, since they seem
so much cleaner than the French cities, unless the French have gotten
their act together in the 5 years since I've been there.

What I really DID enjoy about France was the Normandy area....



>  As for Box Scores, yes I saw one. Pawtucket evened up the series with
>Syracuse at 1 game a piece. 
>
>  GO PAWSOX!!!

George, we FINALLY agree on something!  8^)  Yeah, what he said, go Pawsox!


'Saw
178.154Shaq the international starOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Sep 07 1994 17:1910
    Re: several back
    
    Shaq is certainly internationally known. The most well known baseball
    players are probably ex-players like Nolan (Advil) Ryan and Reggie
    (Panasonic) Jackson.
    
    It's really hard to name an active major leaguer with a national
    endorsement deal on TV.
    
    BTW,Bobby Bo goes over the $800,000 mark in lost wages today.
178.155Faulk baseball :-)MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSWed Sep 07 1994 17:208
    .192 thats not too freaking good....
    
    Even withough Magic/Bird/Air Id still bet that shaq/zo/grandmama/KJ
    etc make a he'll of alot more endorsement money then any baseball
    players.  None of them are in the same class as the first group but
    I'd say their all internationally known/supported.
    
    So is baseball officially over yet or what ?
178.156CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 07 1994 17:285
Probably the hottest commodity today is Neon Deion Sanders.  He don't play
basketball....


'Saw
178.157Bo and NeonOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Sep 07 1994 17:375
178.158MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Wed Sep 07 1994 17:384
    
>>    BTW,Bobby Bo goes over the $800,000 mark in lost wages today.

	sniff, sniff
178.159HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 17:4321
RE                 <<< Note 178.155 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    Even withough Magic/Bird/Air Id still bet that shaq/zo/grandmama/KJ
>    etc make a he'll of alot more endorsement money then any baseball
>    players.  

  It depends on who's in season. This summer I saw a lot of Ken Griffey Jr.
ads. Maybe Bonds doesn't want to do commercials, who knows.

>    So is baseball officially over yet or what ?

  Today's Globe said that this coming Friday is important with regard to the
strike. They didn't give a reason but they said that if the strike was not
settled by Friday continuation of the season was unlikely. 

  Gammons was saying that if they did resume the contending team with the best
AAA franchise would have a big edge since the regular players would be out of
shape. That would be good for the Braves since they are in contention and
Richmond is playing well. 

  George
178.160CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 07 1994 18:0115
Yeah, lots of Griff, Jr.


re Neon Deion:

	I wasn't making the point that he WAS a baseball player, only
	that he WASN'T a basketball player.  Subtle difference....8^)



I'm a big baseball fan, but quite honestly, they've taken all the enjoyment
out of it now, for me, and to resume the season would be a travesty.....


'Saw
178.161HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 18:2017
  I agree, it was a stupid move. Baseball had it's best season going in a long
time and the owners screwed it up. Yeah the players could have accepted the cap
and played anyway, but it's the owners who control the sport, make the rules,
decide when and where the teams play and it's the owners who will be around
after any group of players grow old and fade away.

  They've proved the players claim that they are poor at managing a business.
There's no way they will recoup the losses that they created with this move
even if they get their salary cap. 

  The baseball owners have proven they can't govern themselves. It's time for
the U.S. Congress and the Canadian parliament to take over and pass a law
providing some system where the President and/or Prime Minister of Canada can
appoint a commissioner who can rule the owners with an iron fist and act in
"the best interest of the game". 

  George 
178.162Tommy right, billthe wrong, strike still on25022::BREENWhen are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear meWed Sep 07 1994 18:2714
    well I have to eat some crow after telling Tommie how wrong he was
    about the length of the strike.  I was convinced (rightly) that players
    would not give in on cap (rightly) and that owners would have to back
    off to save the tv money.
    
    one factor not noticed is lack of pressure from tv moguls - perhaps
    they are not upset about no postseason and would as soon save the
    money.
    
    One question now that George is back... "Can players just show up last
    week(s) of season regardless of cancellation of post season and declare
    themselves "ready to work, play me, pay me".?
    
    billthe
178.163Cancelling out years of idiocyOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Wed Sep 07 1994 18:2710
    George:
    
    Good to have you back. I agree with you about the strike and the
    governmental remedy.
    
    The baseball owners basically said: "We've been f_____g up for 20 years
    and it's time to make up for it by trying to break the union. Stay
    tuned for the result of this struggle in May or June 1995.
    
    
178.164HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 18:3622
RE<<< Note 178.162 by 25022::BREEN "When are ya com'n back?...can't cha hear me" >>>

>    "Can players just show up last
>    week(s) of season regardless of cancellation of post season and declare
>    themselves "ready to work, play me, pay me".?
    
  Well it appears that the owners have the right to declare a lockout so if the
players did come back the owners could refuse to let them play but it's not
likely that they would since the owners stand to gain a lot of money if play
resumes. 

  Of course if they came back at the end of the regular season, only those
teams that made the playoffs would continue and most likely they would only get
playoff money. The rest would be done for the year. 

  There is another possible factor at work here. I read somewhere that the
'81 strike ended when it did because that's when the owners strike insurance
ran out. If the owners have similar insurance paying the bills they may
actually be making money with the players on strike which would explain their
reluctance to negotiate.

  George
178.165MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Wed Sep 07 1994 18:4311
>  The baseball owners have proven they can't govern themselves. It's time for
>the U.S. Congress and the Canadian parliament to take over and pass a law
>providing some system where the President and/or Prime Minister of Canada can
>appoint a commissioner who can rule the owners with an iron fist and act in
>"the best interest of the game". 

	Now there's a real waste of taxpayers' money.



	billl
178.166MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 07 1994 18:464
    
      Why should the government do a damn thing about the baseball
     strike when the vast majority of Americans don't give a ...er, 
     care?
178.167another member of the undergroundCNTROL::CHILDSTheresa's Sound-worldWed Sep 07 1994 18:495
 Considering the amount of note traffic in here about the strike one might
 conclude that soccer has more appeal........

 ;^)
178.168MIMS::ROLLINS_RWed Sep 07 1994 18:4917
>  The baseball owners have proven they can't govern themselves. It's time for
>the U.S. Congress and the Canadian parliament to take over and pass a law
>providing some system where the President and/or Prime Minister of Canada can
>appoint a commissioner who can rule the owners with an iron fist and act in
>"the best interest of the game". 
>
>  George 


 I can't agree; it sets a bad precedent for other industries in the U.S. (and
 Canada).  We don't need baseball that much that we need the Congress involved
 in this.

 BTW, George, would we also want the commissioner to rule the players with an
 iron fist ?  No claims to renegotiate contracts, perhaps kick any one caught
 in a drug offense or gambling or sex offense of any kind out of the game, etc. 
 Certainly none of those things are in the best interest of the game.
178.169HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 18:5715
RE             <<< Note 178.165 by MKFSA::LONG "Strive for five!" >>>

>>  The baseball owners have proven they can't govern themselves. It's time for
>>the U.S. Congress and the Canadian parliament to take over and pass a law
>>...

>	Now there's a real waste of taxpayers' money.

  How so? It shouldn't cost anything.

  If that law were in effect right now, Clinton would appoint George Mitchell,
the Senate would approve it on a voice vote and it would be done in a day.
Where's the cost?

  George
178.170HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 19:0524
RE                     <<< Note 178.168 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R >>>

> I can't agree; it sets a bad precedent for other industries in the U.S. (and
> Canada).  We don't need baseball that much that we need the Congress involved
> in this.

  The only precedent that would be set is that any industry with an anti-trust
exemption would be regulated. Who else would be effected?

> BTW, George, would we also want the commissioner to rule the players with an
> iron fist ?  No claims to renegociate contracts, perhaps kick any one caught
> in a drug offense or gambling or sex offense of any kind out of the game, etc. 
> Certainly none of those things are in the best interest of the game.

  Well I don't see why the commissioner would disallow players from negotiating
contracts but yes like most commissioners they would regulate those other
areas.

  As for drug offenses, they currently kick out repeat offenders and if anyone
is convicted for a sex related felony or any felony they would also be tossed
out of the game. In fact they'd be in jail so there would be no question of
them playing. That's the way it works today, why bring that up?

  George
178.171As I look into the crystal ball25022::BREENIt ain't necessarily soWed Sep 07 1994 20:3825
    I believe the lock out can be executed at the beginning of spring
    training because contracts have not been renewed (in anticipation of
    lockout).
    
    At the present time players have a contract for pay for playing and if
    they report to play and owners refuse then they would have an argument
    for free agency.
    
    However, I have read that that is exactly what owners would want as
    they would then resign players at far less than existing contracts.
    
    Now players if locked out could organize a 50 game world series
    elimination with sites thruout caribbean, asia, u.s. (where they could
    find a stadium), australia, perhaps Spain,France....  Owners would then
    attempt to invoke the reserve clause followed by a Maiewskian legal
    brouhaha with endless appeals and effectively the end of baseball for
    most of this decade (as we know it).
    
    The final result would be two leagues with CBS, Fox covering players; A
    new stadium in Boston to house new league team and Pats could be the
    result of this baseball Bosnia.
    
    Hey, at my age any fantasy I can imagine is worth pursueing
    
    Billthe(dreamer)
178.172MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Wed Sep 07 1994 20:5120
>>  How so? It shouldn't cost anything.

>>  If that law were in effect right now, Clinton would appoint George Mitchell,
>>the Senate would approve it on a voice vote and it would be done in a day.
>>Where's the cost?

>>  George

	Surely you don't think our bureaucratic government is cable of doing 
	anything at all without exorbadent(sp?) over-expenditures???

	Back to the issue of baseball....

	If the two parties can not come to agreement then close the thing
	down, lock it up and start over again from scratch.



	billl
178.173HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 07 1994 20:5621
RE             <<< Note 178.172 by MKFSA::LONG "Strive for five!" >>>

>	Surely you don't think our bureaucratic government is cable of doing 
>	anything at all without exorbadent(sp?) over-expenditures???

  If they have to do anything yes, but where are the expenses in appointing
a commissioner? The President or Prime Minister names someone and the Senate
or Parliament takes a vote. Bingo done.

>	If the two parties can not come to agreement then close the thing
>	down, lock it up and start over again from scratch.

  Ok so if you don't like the government being involved, who's going to shut
it down? The exemption seems to make it difficult for a new league to start
so it appears that the two sides can bicker on indefinitely.

  At some point either the owners insurance or what ever is keeping them going
will run out, or the players will give in, or scabs will be employed and play
will resume. 

  George
178.174MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Wed Sep 07 1994 21:0316
>>The President or Prime Minister names someone and the Senate
>> or Parliament takes a vote. Bingo done.

	So the time that the Senate, or Parliament, spend debating over
	whether or not to confirm is all FREE time.  Reality check!

>>  Ok so if you don't like the government being involved, who's going to shut
>>it down? The exemption seems to make it difficult for a new league to start
>>so it appears that the two sides can bicker on indefinitely.

	It, the whole system, shuts itself down when the owner decide they've
	lost enough money and start filing Chapter 11.  Don't need no stinkin'
	bureaucrat to do that.


	billl
178.175SUBPAC::CAPPELWed Sep 07 1994 21:229
    Owners do not have any strike insurance.  They are losing money as we
    speak.
    
    They do have a line of credit that they can draw off of, but that money
    has to be repaid(I don't know the terms).
    
    I'm a baseball fan but I'm sick and tired of listening to the daily
    whinings of billionaires arguing with millionaires.  I hope the both
    lose ALOT of money.
178.176I hope the whole damned league goes bankruptPTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 07 1994 21:275
    Long live the baseball strike!!!!
    
    
    JaKe
    
178.17756822::MORGANThu Sep 08 1994 12:176
    Word in today's Boston Globe is that the two sides did meet yesterday.
    Supposedly, the players offered a variation of an earlier "taxation"
    proposal.  Big market clubs would have to share part of their revenue
    with the smaller market clubs if they were to exceed a certain payroll.
    
    					Steve
178.178Charity's the big loser...SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Thu Sep 08 1994 12:2318
    
    	I for one don't care if they every play baseball again, I don't
    miss it and I use to watch a lot of games. The big losers in this
    whole thing, is the Charitys. ESPN showed a little segment again
    last night. An organization in Philadelphia use to pack Veterens
    stadium for a silent auction. Last year they raised 500K. The money
    went for some kind of treatment (Can't remember). Where the money
    for the treatment came from the fund.
    	A lot of players donate money based on there stats. With fewer
    HR's/RBI's they are donating less. Granted some are projecting there
    stats for the year and paying the full amount. They had Rod Beck of SFG
    on last night. He still donated money to a Summer Camp for children/
    familys with AIDS.
    	Some charitys were getting a percentage of the gate receipts. No
    gate attendance, no money for charity. The owner and players are losing
    money, but charity's are the big losers in this strike.
    
    Ron
178.179MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Thu Sep 08 1994 13:267
>> Error opening HUMANE::NOTES$LIBRARY:BASEBALL.NOTE;as input 
>> Remote node is not currently reachable

	I think this kinda sums everyting up nicely.


	billl
178.180It looks like there will be baseballOPTION::LAZARUSDavid Lazarus @KYO,323-4353Thu Sep 08 1994 15:299
    It looks like they will get it done at what they perceive to be the
    last possible date of salvaging the postseason. Their arrogance is
    astounding.
    
    They are telling the public that starting on Sept 16 with a 19 game
    finish to the season will restore some semblance of dignity to the
    season.
    
    And the fans will probably come back.
178.18130008::ROBICHAUDCasinoManiaThu Sep 08 1994 17:5110
	If the players hold their ground the owners will cave in because, 
as always, they do have the most to lose.  I for the life of me can't 
understand why it has to be policy that when you buy a baseball team you 
have to be guaranteed to make money.  Colorado isn't exactly a big market, 
yet they're making money hand over fist.  If they did in the computer 
industry what they want to do in baseball, we wouldn't have to be worrying 
about layoffs.  I don't really care if they play baseball again this year, 
but they will.

				   /Don
178.182HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 09 1994 02:2318
             <<< Note 178.174 by MKFSA::LONG "Strive for five!" >>>

>	So the time that the Senate, or Parliament, spend debating over
>	whether or not to confirm is all FREE time.  Reality check!

  Let's see, if they don't debate we pay the salaries of 535 Congressmen and
Senators. If they do, we pay the salaries of 535 Congressmen and Senators. 
I'm still looking for a cost here.

>	It, the whole system, shuts itself down when the owner decide they've
>	lost enough money and start filing Chapter 11.  Don't need no stinkin'
>	bureaucrat to do that.

  Chapter 11 is the chapter for reorganizing. After Chapter 11 a company
typically starts up again. Perhaps you are thinking of Chapter 7. In any
case, neither is likely.

  George
178.183PTOVAX::JACOBFri Sep 09 1994 03:0714
    I dunno what happened at the meeting with the commish and the players
    and the owners tonight, but if the season doesn't resume, I think the
    players will lose bigtime.
    
    If they wait til nexted year, the owners may just say the hell with the
    present players, and bring in "replacement" players, players just out
    of college, and from the minors with no big league contract, etc.,
    sorta what football did back a few years, and before ya know it, the
    players will start trickling back in, and the unions will lose.
    
    As I said, I don't care if baseball ever returns.
    
    JaKe
    
178.184HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 09 1994 03:348
  Bob Lobel on Boston WBZ seems to feel the season will resume. He had an
interview with Roger Clemens who is the Red Sox rep and Clemens says he is
confident they can get it done and will start throwing. 

  If they can work something out tomorrow the season would resume in
about 6 days.

  George
178.185Hope, give me hope!MUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Sep 09 1994 12:199
I personally don't think the owners will accomplish anything by hiring
scabs, for the simple reason that the difference in skill level is too
obvious, particularly on defense.

The last couple of notes are the first upbeat indicators in quite a while.
I spend the month of October in the States, and I've been wondering how
I'm going to pass the time, particularly if the NHL goes out as well.

Steve
178.186Give the Kids a chance to playMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 09 1994 13:0718
    They wouldnt be hiring scabs would they, wouldnt they just bring up 
    there AAA, AA and if need best A players from all there farm leagues.
    
    I would love this, and I would proberbly become a fan if the game was
    played by real ball players.  These guys would all give 100% every
    night and many of them would be happy to just be playing the game.
    
    I played in a softball league a few years back and one of the guys (2nd
    baseman) Was from one of the teams AA clubs, he was awsome (Compared to
    the rest of the team who wouldnt be) but he loved the game and just
    wanted to play (Baseball, Softball, maybe wiffle/stick ball as well).
    
    Bring up the Farm Clubs finish the season, the fans will come...
    
    Let the so called pro's try and make it in the real world, they can
    try it out in the Japan league
    
    								mab
178.187Once up they're on strikeMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Sep 09 1994 13:4218
According to the terms of their contracts, minor leaguers who are
promoted to the majors instantly become members of the Players'
Association.  If the Association is on strike, so are they.  The
only players to whom this would not apply are players not signed
to the standard contract.  By definition: scabs.

This strike could be over in thirty seconds if the owners would
get it into their skulls that the players will *never* accept a
salary cap.  I have to say that this "taxation" idea sounds to
me like one of the dumbest I've ever heard, but if it gets the
two sides talking, I'll take it.

Finally, I don't buy the claim that minor leaguers play any harder
than major leaguers, or love the game any more.  You don't get to
the major leagues without hard work, baseball is just too damn
difficult.

Steve
178.188Bummed out, there will be baseball next weekMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 09 1994 14:2712
    I dont see why the owner's need it in writing, they should agree not
    to carry a total salary over X $'s (Gentalman's agreement) and get
    the players back on the field.
    
    :-)
    
    Face it the Owners OWN THE LEAGUE, they call the shots, they make the
    rules, give the players what they want get the strick done, then fire
    all of them and bring up the AAA players ....
    
    								mab
    (Do baseball players get guarenteed contracts ?)
178.18911th hour?SPIKED::SWEENEYTom Sweeney in OGOFri Sep 09 1994 18:4411
    According to CNN, the players are in one hotel, the owners in another
    about a block away from each other.  The players have backed down from
    the no salary cap to the taxation thingy as we all know.  However, it
    now looks like the owners are starting to also back away from the
    salary cap demand too.  
    
    Today is the last day to reach an agreement for this season.  Hopefully
    an 11th hour agreement can be reached.  Nothing solid yet, but it looks
    like an agreement is not impossible.
    
    zamboni
178.190stick a fork in themFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Sep 09 1994 18:521
    I hope they don't reach an agreement.
178.191MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Fri Sep 09 1994 19:088
    
       Real wise of them to wait until all of about three people in
      the US and Canada really care to see the season resume. I tend
      to doubt that the '94 season will resume. The question that I'd
      like to pose to baseball guys like TCM and Glenn Waugaman is,
      what do you think the long range effects of this strike will be
      on baseball's popularity? Will the fans eventually forgive and
      forget? Or has irreparable harm been done?
178.192Fans screwed againODIXIE::ZOGRANFri Sep 09 1994 19:1918
    My .02 - 
    
    I hope they don't play again this year.  I don't want two weeks of
    spring training ball and then a month of playoffs.
    
    But then, neither side seems to give a rats ass about the fans, so if
    they (players and owners) can somehow agree and end the strike,
    baseball in 94 will continue.  They know people will show up.  They may
    not get the attendance numbers or the Neilsens(?) that they want, but
    they will get the revenue.
    
    If they are gonna have baseball the least they could do would be to
    slash ticket and concession prices.  Right.
    
    Being a Friday cynic (and the Terps play FSU tommorrow.  The over under
    is about 150 - FSU Score only!)
    
    UMDan
178.193MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 09 1994 19:2611
    Dont go, dont watch and they'll wish they had never went on strike.
    
    What people forget is we the consumer's control everything.  If we
    wanted our country to be stronger we would all buy american, if we
    want to teach the Baseball owners/players/etc a lesson we wont watch
    or go to the games.
    
    But if baseball resume, just as sure as the stands will be full the
    parking lots will be full of foreign cars.. Consumers are suckers..
    
    								mab
178.194FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Fri Sep 09 1994 19:457
>    What people forget is we the consumer's control everything.  If we
>    wanted our country to be stronger we would all buy american, if we
    
    ...or become a nation of producers again instead of consumers.  The
    producing nations (to capactiy) are the best off, financially speaking.
    
    Mike
178.195PTOVAX::JACOBFri Sep 09 1994 19:5514
    
    >>             <<< Note 178.188 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>
    >>           -< Bummed out, there will be baseball next week >-

    >>I dont see why the owner's need it in writing, they should agree not
    >>to carry a total salary over X $'s (Gentalman's agreement) and get
    >>the players back on the field.
    
    Because that "Gentleman's agreement" is also known as "collusion".
    
    Something that has cost a few bucks to the owners so far.
    
    JaKe
    
178.196Not happy about it, but maintaining unemotional, healthy attitudeNAC::G_WAUGAMANFri Sep 09 1994 20:2748
> The question that I'd
> like to pose to baseball guys like TCM and Glenn Waugaman is,
> what do you think the long range effects of this strike will be
> on baseball's popularity? Will the fans eventually forgive and
> forget? Or has irreparable harm been done?
    
    I hope they do return this season.  Even though I've lost all interest 
    in this season, and may not even watch some of the World Series games 
    if there happens to be some good college football games on (hey, that's 
    a big sacrifice for me ;-), they might as well get the healing process
    started now.  It won't be forgotten by next spring, regardless, but
    losing the World Series altogether is an almost unpardonable sin.  And
    sorry, I can't use words like "travesty" like some indignant media 
    types are if they do come together to play out the final 2-1/2 weeks 
    and then the postseason.  Baseball has made a huge mess for itself, and 
    marginalized any interest in the postseason, but *on the field* a month 
    from now the quality of those Series games should not be terribly 
    compromised, even if no one is watching.  They might as well play the
    damn thing for posterity's sake.
    
    "Irreparable" harm?  I don't think there's any such thing, to almost
    anything.  I don't recall any devastating aftereffects to the two 
    major NFL strikes of the last decade.  You can make convoluted excuses 
    about how those work stoppages were under completely different 
    circumstances but they really weren't; the underlying principle was 
    the same: they were battles over money that the general public could 
    not care less about since they weren't getting their games.  Are 
    there still some fans holding out?  In spite of the illogic from the 
    likes of MAirB, in the athletic chromosone the "baseball player" gene 
    is not a defective one, the exception to all exceptions.  The game is 
    damaged, maybe extensively and maybe for an extended period, but it's 
    only a matter of time.  And hell, when you get right down to it real 
    devotees to any sport aren't wed to a single league or entity anyway 
    (I got as big a thrill out of watching Oklahoma kick Arizona St's 
    butts around the field on their way to winning the College World Series 
    as anything else I saw in baseball this year...)
    
    I generally agree with what I read in SI last night: "the fans" are
    not those who are screwed.  If there's a cancer that needs to be
    removed rather than linger, maybe "the fans" are better off.  I'm as 
    big "a fan" as any but any reasonably adjusted person moves on 
    to something else, even within the sporting spectrum.  They're only 
    screwing themselves.  For most fans, even dedicated ones, basically 
    the "who cares?" attitude should and does kick in.  Perspective... 
    
    glenn
    
178.197MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-( Fri Sep 09 1994 21:2327
    re: MAir and "real" players
    
    Can it guy. in the NBA (of your MJ Goddom) the regular season counts
    for diddly squat. if you think those folks put in all their effort
    every night you really are living on a different planet than the rest
    of what we call humanity. For the moment the regular season in baseball
    still does mean something.
    
    re: Tommy's question
    
    The short term effect will clearly be bad; the post-season will have an
    asterisk in it in many peoples minds for 1994. Long term I think the
    effect will be minimal. By 1995 spring training most fans will have
    forgiven, if not forgotten, about this strike. Fans will come out for
    their teams and players; in some sense this year may be less damaging
    long term than others (in pure baseball terms) since the percentage of
    folks who "support" the players in the strike is much higher than in
    the past. Fans root for the players on the teams, owners do not come
    into play. On the other hand short term this strike is much much worse
    for baseball because football is in full swing, NHL camps are opening,
    NBA camps are right around the corner. So the real hit will be 1994;
    1995, especially if there is the possibility of a long term labor
    peace, will be fine.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
    
178.198HELIX::MAIEWSKISat Sep 10 1994 01:4224
RE                 <<< Note 178.186 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    They wouldnt be hiring scabs would they, wouldnt they just bring up 
>    there AAA, AA and if need best A players from all there farm leagues.
>    I would love this, and I would proberbly become a fan if the game was
>    played by real ball players.  

  Think for a minute about what you are saying. Of the 700 guys currently
playing major league ball, the vast majority of them were playing AAA, AA, or A
ball in the mid 80's. They're the same guys. 

  What ever influences that unite the guys currently in the majors will be at
work against any new bunch coming along. 

  On the other hand, if what you say is right and the guys currently in AAA,
AA, and A ball are dedicated to the game and don't care about money then all
the owners would have to do would be to though it out for about 5-7 years until
the current guys got old and those "gamers" came up and voted out the union. 

  Of course they know that won't happen. The owners know that when those guys
you are so excited about hit the majors they will be just as pro union as the
guys playing today.

  George
178.199HELIX::MAIEWSKISat Sep 10 1994 02:0029
RE                 <<< Note 178.193 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    What people forget is we the consumer's control everything.  If we
>    wanted our country to be stronger we would all buy american, if we
>    want to teach the Baseball owners/players/etc a lesson we wont watch
>    or go to the games.
    
  This is not necessarily true. If foreign companies are producing better
quality products than American companies then the  way to make American
stronger is to buy foreign, drive the inefficient American companies out of
business, and make room for newer more efficient American companies.

  A large free trading market like NAFTA will beat a small protected market
every time. Why do you think Europe is trying so hard to created a free
trading zone like the U.S.? They are trying because it works.

RE Long term effects.

  If they play the World Series, the strike will be mostly forgotten by the
middle of next season. If they cancel the season and don't settle until next
June the effects will be noticeable next year, measurable the year after that,
then it will fade away to a baseball trivia question. (Q: Since the modern
World Series was started what were the two years with no World Series? A: 1904
and 1994) 

  Remember how everyone was saying they'd never watch football again after
the scab season? Guess what? They're watching.

  George
178.200A humble requestMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Sep 12 1994 08:3916
Would one of you East Coast early birds be so good as to drop a note
with the results of the weekend's negotiations, if any?  CNN International
didn't have anything last night, preferring to concentrate on items of
less significance, like plane crashes, the Population Conference, the
invasion of Haiti, Castro's downsizing, and such.

Glenn, TCM, George: right on.  If there is a postseason while I'm in LA
next month, I'll watch every minute of it.  I won't worry about its
significance being compromised.  I'll simply enjoy the game of baseball
being played by four of its best teams (plus the two West "champions").

Usually the '81 Dodgers are referred to as champions of the "strike-
shortened" season, even now.  Sure, it's a tainted championship.  But
it was a very entertaining postseason.

Steve (passing away from the suspense)
178.201HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Sep 12 1994 13:3221
  Last Thursday and Friday the players offered a deal that involved no salary
cap and richer teams being "taxed" to pay poor teams over a 3 year period. The
owners turned it down. 

  The players are now saying that they are trying but the owners are stone
walling. The Owners are saying that the players offers don't include the thing
they want which is the salary cap. 

  Today the Player reps will be talking it over for what is probably one last
time before the season is canceled. The owners extended the deadline of
canceling the season from last Friday to early this week but it now seems
unlikely that anything will happen. 

  Roger Clemens (the Red Sox rep) was on TV last night and said they are no
further than they were 9 months ago. So while he was optimistic last Thursday
he seems to feel now that the season will be canceled. 

  So if you are going to L.A. next month, you might want to look into Rams or
Raiders tickets. 

  George 
178.202But I don't like footballMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Sep 12 1994 13:5914
Thanks, George, for taking the time.  Well, I can hope hockey starts on
time (I'd love to get down to Anaheim and check out the Ducks and the
Pond).  And the Olympic Auditorium has reopened, so maybe I'll go see
a fight or two.  And if my mother's cable system has added ESPN 2, there'll
be hockey on TV three or four nights a week (not to mention dumptruck
racing or whatever).  And maybe I'll even visit a live human being
now and again.

Nothing I've heard changes my belief that the owners wanted this outcome
from the beginning, in an attempt to bust the union.  I'm kind of sorry
to say so, but I think the time has come for Congress to lift the anti-
trust exemption.

Steve
178.203METSNY::francusBaseball in 94? 95? :-( Mon Sep 12 1994 14:158
ESPN reported that on Thursday night it looked like they might be close
to a deal - might have meant working out some numbers (more or less of
a "tax") but a workable scenario. The Selig came to NY and nixed it.
Selig, the acting commissioner, owns a small market team, hmm ....

The Crazy Met

178.204... now is that a shuttle or a birdie?HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Sep 12 1994 15:199
RE Hockey,

  Don't hold your breath hoping to see a lot of hockey games. The hockey
owners are trying to impose a salary cap on the hockey players and there
is talk of a lockout if the players don't go along.

  Looks like it's football or full contact beach badminton.

  George
178.205HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 13 1994 17:1123
  Bob Ryan had an interesting article in the Globe about the last time the
World Series was not played. The year was 1904. The "Modern" World Series had
only been played once in 1903 between the Boston Pilgrims (Red Sox) and the
Pittsburgh Pirates, the Pilgrims beating Honus Wagner and the Pirates in the
best of 9 series in 5 games behind the pitching of Cy Young. 

  In 1904 the New York Giants had the National League wrapped up early and
announced that they would not play the American League Champion. Meanwhile
Chicago, The New York Highlanders (Yankees) and the Pilgrims fought all season
for the A.L. Pennant. Chicago dropped out with about a week to go and it all
came down to the season ending 5 games between the Highlanders and Pilgrims
(Yankees and Red Sox) with the Pilgrims needing 3 games to win. 

  The Highlanders won the 1st game in Boston but then Boston took both halves of
the double header the next day. Then they traveled to New York where Boston won
the 1st game of the final double header to clinch the pennant. 

  The Pilgrims issued a challenge to John McGraw's NY Giants but the Giants
announced that they would not accept the challenge and no World Series was
played. That was the last time that the two league champions failed to meet for
the fall classic including the years of the depression and two world wars. 

  George
178.20656822::MORGANWed Sep 14 1994 12:265
    Owners will vote today wether to cancel the season or not.  This whole
    thing is only going to get uglier.  I hope the Congress has some gonads
    on Sept. 22.
    
    					Steve
178.207CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 14 1994 12:4615
Cancel it.   Cancel it and let everyone see what October is like without
a world series.

Let it stand forever as a memorial to the folly of the hunger of the
money-grubbers.

Besides, I think it's great that the first year of this "wonderful" new
playoff scheme the entire playoffs are in jeopardy.

If they resume the season, they've effectively taken away most of the 
pennant races, and the WS will be tainted.....


JMHO,
'Saw
178.208WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MWhat a terrible year 1918 Wed Sep 14 1994 13:069
    
    
        Figures a Red Sux fan his team marred in mediocraty would complain
    of the playoffs being tainted. That's all I hear from people up here in
    Mass. But the thing is if the season continues, and the Yankees win it
    all that Champagne in my fridge will still taste just as sweet!
    
    
    Chap
178.209CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 14 1994 13:131
I've heard people all over the country say that Chap....
178.210If the Sox were in 1st. People would be beggin!!!WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MWhat a terrible year 1918 Wed Sep 14 1994 13:167
    
    
       Betcha not as much as up here in Red Sucks country.
    
    
    
    chap
178.211CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 14 1994 13:4414
>             -< If the Sox were in 1st. People would be beggin!!! >-
>
>    
>    
>       Betcha not as much as up here in Red Sucks country.
    
    
    
Nope.  I've heard it from friends all over.

I was looking forward to the race between the Yanks and Baltimore.  I wasn't
looking forward to the playoffs, but the races would've been interesting...

But this whole season is history anyway.....
178.212PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 14:216
    I second yer "CANCEL IT", 'Saw.
    
    Hell, just disband the league and start up a softball league.
    
    JaKe
    
178.213CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 14 1994 14:2620
>
>    I second yer "CANCEL IT", 'Saw.
>    

This I agree with.

>
>    Hell, just disband the league and start up a softball league.
>    

This I don't.

I don't have any great solutions, but I think there should be baseball.
I'm not sure about the salaries.  They seem awfully high to me, but then
again, I've never been one to favor management pissing all over the 
employees either (like here at DEC 8^))


'Saw    

178.214I don't understand anti-trust law; George?25022::BREENIf there's nae excuses,it's nae golfWed Sep 14 1994 14:3117
    One thing I don't understand is antitrust law which seems to require a
    specialist to interpret.  But, I certainly don't understand how one
    sport can have an exemption and others not have it.  Apparently the
    owners in baseball(some) have relationships with members of the Senate
    (same Country Clubs?) which have precluded bringing the subject to
    votes in congress.
    
    But in order to run their business without a strong union the coalition
    of owners who control mlb are counting on their ability to control
    public opinion (blame strike on players) and congress (no exemption, no
    lockout) to pull this off.
    
    Apparently from day 1 (January?) the owners have had a quid pro quo on
    cancelling post season being okay with TV money providers (who in some
    way must be bankrolling the owners position).
    
    billthe
178.215HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 14:3419
  The Globe talked about another way the owners will get burnt this winter.
Turns out the teams depend on early ticket sales to bring in revenue during the
winter. Odds are if they cancel the season people will think twice about buying
tickets for games that might not be played. 

  I'm at a loss as to what the owners are thinking. I see no way that they will
gain from any of this. They'll never get back the money they are losing unless
they have some other source like strike insurance. 

  And I don't see how the cap would help the poor teams who seem to want it
the most. In all likelihood the cap would be set at a price that is high for
them and the rich teams would just get richer. This whole thing is nuts.

  In Minor League News, the AAA International League has finished it's season
and the playoffs. The Richmond Braves swept the Syracuse (Blue Jays) in the
final five game series three games to zip. Syracuse had beaten the Pawtucket
Red Sox in the division final.

  George
178.216PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 14:3540
    
>>I don't have any great solutions, but I think there should be baseball.
>>I'm not sure about the salaries.  They seem awfully high to me, but then
>>again, I've never been one to favor management pissing all over the 
>>employees either (like here at DEC 8^))
    
    I think both sides are money grubbing a$$holes.
    
    The players say they are "entertainers" and look at the salaries of
    other in the entertainment field.  Fine, let them go out on their own
    and make the money all by themselves.  Not a single baseball player can
    step on the field and do a damn thing without a TEAM joining them.  It
    is a TEAM sport, no one man can play the whole thing by hisself.
    
    Hell, make everybody's salary $750k, then, for pitchers, if you win 5
    games, you get x amount of $$$a, 10 games, more cash, and so on, so
    they that perform, make the BUCKS, them that don't get the minimum. 
    Same with hitters.  The guaranteed contract is the biggest waste of
    paper in the league.  If itwas pay fer perfom=rmance, then it would be
    fairer, IMHO.
    
    As far as entertainers salaries goes, I think they too are exhorbitant,
    and who pays it, the hard working stiff who goes to see
    them/movies/whatever.
    
    ANd, while I'm babblling like a fool, who the hell said that the
    baseball playes should be set for freakin' life upon retirement from
    the game at the ripe old age of 30 something????  What's wrong with the
    idea of them going out and working for a living like any other real
    person.  they say that since they're career is only for a limitied
    timespan, they are ENTITLED to make these massive amounts of $$ so they
    can keep themselves in fast cars, drugs, wimmen, drugs, mansions,
    drugs, ets...
    
    The opinions expressed above are in now way opinions of a normal sane
    person.
    
    JaKe
    
    
178.217PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 14:3916
    I gots another thing to spew.
    
    The players bitch about the salary cap and point to the NFL and the
    release of players to stay under the cap.  This won't and can't happen
    in baseball.
    
    Why???
    
    Cain you say, "Guaranteed contract".
    
    They release somebody, they're still responsible for the $$$ owed in
    the contract fer the life of the contract.  That's why it cain't go the
    way of the NFL if a cap is instituted.
    
    JaKe
    
178.218HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 14:4123
RE   <<< Note 178.214 by 25022::BREEN "If there's nae excuses,it's nae golf" >>>

>    One thing I don't understand is antitrust law which seems to require a
>    specialist to interpret.  

  I don't completely understand it either. What I've heard is that because of
the exemption the players can't take the owners to court which might have
resolved this issue without a strike. 

  Red Sox owner John Harrington did an interview with the Boston Press last
night and he said that losing the exemption would hurt most in the area of
player development. Somehow the exemption protects the farm systems by holding
off on competition allowing the major league franchises to invest in a system
that brings minor league baseball to many small communities around the country.

  Harrington went on to say that without the exemption new teams would pop up
all over the place making the investment too expensive. 

  I have yet to see a clear explanation as to how the exemption protects the
existing teams from competition. As others have said, other sports seem to do
fine without the exemption. 

  George 
178.219Trust is not there25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soWed Sep 14 1994 14:4316
    >And I don't see how the cap would help the poor teams who seem to want
    >it the most. In all likelihood the cap would be set at a price that is
    >high for them and the rich teams would just get richer. This whole thing is
    >nuts.
    
    
    I always thought that a cap would be advantagous (perhaps temporaily)
    for players since current budgets are way below 'cap.  Owners public
    theory is for rich teams to subsidize cap level for poor teams while
    privately reducing overall payrolls overtime.
    
    Players are simply saying the only thing we trust is a free market and
    will trade arbitration/early free agency for training (farm teams,early
    mlb years).
    
    billthe
178.220HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 14:4821
RE                      <<< Note 178.216 by PTOVAX::JACOB >>>

>    The players say they are "entertainers" and look at the salaries of
>    other in the entertainment field.  ... 
>    ...As far as entertainers salaries goes, I think they too are exorbitant,
>    and who pays it, the hard working stiff who goes to see
>    them/movies/whatever.
    
  Right but once again keep in mind that what you are arguing for would result
in owners and movie studios making larger profits. The "working stiff" would
never see a nickel of that money if a cap were put in place.

  Same thing in entertainment. If Werner Brothers figures that they can make
$100,000,000 box office for a movie do you think that they would give tickets
away cheaper just because Harrison Ford's share were being held down by a
salary cap or would they charge what the public would pay and pocket the
difference in profit?

  Salary caps never mean lower prices, only bigger profits for the owners.

  George
178.221PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 14:5219
    Maybe we need congress to regulate the business!!!
    
    (8^)*
    
    I see what you say, but all it REALLY says is that EVERYBODY in the
    business  is bleeding the sh_t out of the public.
    
    All it is is outright GREED, nothing more.
    
    I rarely pay to go see a movie.  Anymore, I rarely PAY to go see a
    ballgame, be it any sport.  I have much better things to do with my
    money. THe players and owners, and concessionaires, ans parking lots
    can all go to hell, as far as I'm concerned.  My money's got much
    better places to be spent.  
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
178.222HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 14:5223
RE           <<< Note 178.219 by 25022::BREEN "It IS necessarily so" >>>
    
>    I always thought that a cap would be advantageous (perhaps temporally)
>    for players since current budgets are way below 'cap.  Owners public
>    theory is for rich teams to subsidize cap level for poor teams while
>    privately reducing overall payrolls overtime.
    
  If this is true they why have the cap. George Steinbrenner keeps complaining
that he needs the cap because he doesn't want to give money to a poor team
who will turn around and use that money to buy his players. But if the poor
teams are already below the cap, they will do that anyway.

  The only way that Steinbrenner's problem gets solved is if a cap is set
below what the poor teams can pay by themselves. And if that were done, revenue
sharing would not be necessary.

  But that will never happen. The result of any negotiation is going to be
a cap set between what the richest and poorest team can afford which means
that revenue sharing will still result in Steinbrenner's money being used
against him.

  It makes no sense,
  George
178.223HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 14:5413
RE                      <<< Note 178.221 by PTOVAX::JACOB >>>

>    I rarely pay to go see a movie.  Anymore, I rarely PAY to go see a
>    ballgame, be it any sport.  I have much better things to do with my
>    money. THe players and owners, and concessionaires, ans parking lots
>    can all go to hell, as far as I'm concerned.  My money's got much
>    better places to be spent.  
    
  Paris! I recommend Paris.

  It's the most incredible place on earth, definite "go see".

  George
178.224ROCK::HUBERIndians in '94Wed Sep 14 1994 15:0748
    Re .216
    
    >The guaranteed contract is the biggest waste of paper in the league.
    >If itwas pay fer perfom=rmance, then it would be fairer, IMHO.
    
    Two very interesting statements.
    
    Why is the guaranteed contract such a waste of paper?
    
    It's certainly not for the player.
    
    It's not clear that it's bad for the team, in some cases.  When
    Cleveland signed players like Baerga, and Belle, and Lofton, and
    so on to long term contracts, they did a few things.  First, they
    managed to rebuild some of the long ago eroded respect the Indians
    once held.  This has brought Cleveland to the attention of free
    agents.  Second, they avoided arbitration - it's been nearly four
    years now since the Indians have had an arbitration case come up.
    That's got to help the team spirit - do you really want to work
    for a team that, just a few months earlier, explained to an arbitrator
    just why you _aren't_ as valuable an employee as you believe you are?
    
    Long term contracts for older players are, almost without exception,
    dumb for the team.
    
    And would pay for performance be more fair?
    
    Maybe.
    
    If I'm a pitcher, though, there's no way I want it to be based on wins
    if, for example, I pitch for the Padres.  I know that I'm not going
    to get much offensive support, and I don't want to be hurt in the
    pocketbook for the failings of my teammates.
    
    If I pitch for the Indians, I'm quite happy with the idea.
    
    If I'm a hitter for Colorado, and the stats are park adjusted,
    I'll actively lobby for it.
    
    For all the work that's been done, there's no clear way to determine
    comparative performance completely fairly.  On top of that, some
    players do draw in fans - Valenzuela & Ryan being particularly good
    examples.  In the later stages of their careers, they were average
    or worse performers on the field - but still contributed significantly
    to the bottom line.  Does gate draw then get counted as part of
    performance?
    
    Joe
178.225MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 14 1994 15:1122
     Bob Costas was on the Today show this morning and he pretty
    much sided with the players. His reason being that owners have
    created the mess themselves. He pointed out that after the 
    owners got their new tv deal, they went right out and spent 
    like drunken sailors and salaries for the top players doubled
    almost immediately. My question is, has it ever been established
    that there is a direct correlation between spending and winning?
    You look around the league and you see Bobby Bo' making $7 mil
    and gimpy legged Andre Dawson making $4.75 mil and on and on and
    I can't fault the players for taking the money or for wanting
    to protect it. Especially, after you see the Philadelphia Eagles
    asking players to take big pay cuts to fit under the cap. It's 
    to the point now where the owners will either have to capitulate
    and some teams will be moved and owners will have to start to
    exhibit some financial discipline or the owners will stand firm
    and this will continue into spring and the owners will hope that
    some of the players break ranks, the way the NFL players did, and
    they get a cap after all. Either way, this season is over and it 
    could be well into next year before this is all resolved. The 
    only people benefitting from this all are the NFL and the NBA.
    
178.226HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 15:3229
RE        <<< Note 178.225 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

  Hey, we pretty much agree. That's weird.

>    My question is, has it ever been established
>    that there is a direct correlation between spending and winning?

  Whether it was really due to big free agents or not, many people are of the
impression that George Steinbrenner bought the Yankees championships of the
late '70s by buying big players. That impression, even if it's flawed seems
to have started this whole thing off. If one team is going out and buying
talent it works, but when they all do it they just spread it around again at a
higher price. 

>Either way, this season is over and it 
>    could be well into next year before this is all resolved. 

  Thus it would appear. I believe that if they came to some miraculous 11th
hour settlement and finished the season it would still be good for baseball in
the long run. After a season or so it would be one big trivia question, but if
they cancel the entire season it may have measurable effects for several years.

>The only people benefiting from this all are the NFL and the NBA.
    
  Yes, but I have all the confidence in the world that the NFL and NBA will do
something to screw it up sooner or later and a day will come when people say
"the heck with greedy football/basketball players, let's watch baseball". 

  George
178.227MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 14 1994 16:2114
    
 >> Yes, but I have all the confidence in the world that the NFL and NBA 
 >> will do something to screw it up sooner or later and a day will come 
 >> when people say "the heck with greedy football/basketball players, let's 
 >> watch baseball". 

    Doubtful. Baseball's owner could take lessons from the NBA and the NFL
    on how to market their sport and its stars. They could start by hiring 
    a competent commissioner. Baseball doesn't have anyone on a par with
    with David Stern or Paul Tagliabue and never really has. Basketball and
    football passed the salary without so much as a blink of an eye. Base-
    ball has had 8 times as many work stoppages as the other two combined
    and seems to succeed inspite of itself. 
    
178.228SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Wed Sep 14 1994 17:1120
    
    	I can't understand either side in this strike. The SF Giants were/
    are one of the poorest teams in a small type market. Yet, they spent
    42 Million to get Barry Bonds. The owners always over pay and the
    players rarely produce.
    
    	One of the reasons Baseball has the anti-trust exception. Is
    because MLB funds/develops players from Instructional league, A, AA,
    AAA, and some winter league teams. The thought is that if there was
    another Baseball league, they would be competing for the same players.
    Thus, the salary's in the minor leagues would sky-rocket. MLB could
    lose exclusive rights to players in the minor leagues.
    	Wheras in Football and Basketball. The players are drafted right
    out of college/high school. There is no minor leagues for them. You
    either make the team or you are a free agent and can go anywhere you
    want. Hockey is basically the same, except they draft from Juniors and
    can retain the rights to a Junior player for 2 years. After the 2 years
    however a hockey player is a free agent also.
    
    Ron
178.229Good explanation of antitrust exemption neededDOCTP::TESSIERWed Sep 14 1994 17:2318
Re.

 >>    One thing I don't understand is antitrust law which seems to require a
 >>    specialist to interpret.  

 > I don't completely understand it either. What I've heard is that because of
 > the exemption the players can't take the owners to court which might have
 > resolved this issue without a strike. 

This has been bugging me too.  Reporters like Gammons throw around the
antitrust word all the time, but I have yet to read or hear a good explanation
of how the exemption affects baseball.  Gammons would be doing us all a
service by devoting one of his Sunday columns to explaining this in detail.
God knows it would be more relevant than the column he had one or two
Sundays back about which playoff teams would be better off when the strike
ended because of their AAA players.

Ken
178.230best thing for the gameFRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Sep 14 1994 17:232
    Maybe with AAA players filling out the rosters next season, we can
    recapture the "When it was a Game" spirit.
178.231Yes, colleges are an unpaid minor league, unusual!25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soWed Sep 14 1994 17:317
    As I mentioned in another note this seems to be golden opportunity for
    colleges to take a piece of the action for their role in acting as a
    minor league for football and basketball.
    
    American Business (the nature of) abhors a vacuum and it surprises me
    to see ncaa not maximizing (they do pretty well right now) a revenue
    opportunity.
178.232HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 17:4517
RE               <<< Note 178.230 by FRETZ::HEISER "Maranatha!" >>>

>    Maybe with AAA players filling out the rosters next season, we can
>    recapture the "When it was a Game" spirit.

  I still don't understand this myth about how minor leaguers have more
"spirit" than major leaguers. They are the same guys. Today's major leaguers
are yesterday's minor leaguers. Today's minor leaguers are tomorrow's major
leaguers.

  If there was a fundamental difference involving more "spirit" or what ever
all the owners would have to do is tough it out a few years until the younger
guys came up and voted out the union. But they know that won't happen. Once
these young "spirited" minor leaguers hit the big time they will want their
share just like anyone else. 

  George
178.233PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 17:5331
    re somewhere back a few
    
    The reason I said guaranteed contracts are a waste is becuase all too
    many times, a player signs one and then proceeds to play like sh_t,
    cause he doesn't HAVE to produce.  Even if the team cuts him loose,
    they are obligated to fulfill the $$ defined in the contract.
    
    A few years back, Dave Parker signed one of the highest $$ contracts in
    Pirates history, and proceeds to snort anything white and powdery that
    came near him, and his play suffered, and the Bucs still had to pay him
    mucho $$$ thru the life of the contract, even though he put very little
    forth as a player.  The Bucs later went to court and sued to get the
    deferred part of the contract thrown out, saying his rampant drug abuse
    constituted breach of contract.  PArker and the Bucvs settledout of
    court, but the settlement was sealed so noone cept the Bucs, Parker and
    GOD know how much he got paid.
    
    Now, although he's am mental midget, Barry Bonds has given the Giants
    about everything they paid for.  An MVP year, good power, good hitting
    and good fielding.  
    
    A player cain have one great year, get a megabuck contract, and then
    play like a little leaguer for the rest of the contract time, and still
    chuckle his ass off all the way to the bank, all because of the
    guaranteed contract.
    
    Hell, give everybody one year contracts, but then, it wouldn't cure the
    money woes of the small market teams.
    
    JaKe
    
178.23430008::ROBICHAUDCasinoManiaWed Sep 14 1994 17:546
    	Kind of funny to see John Harrington on the news this morning
    blaming this whole mess on the players.  I have a hard time believing
    something said by one who sucks every dime from his loyal paying
    customers' pockets.
    
    				   /Don
178.235FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Sep 14 1994 18:013
    Re: AAA players
    
    the spirit is called "gratitude and appreciation and love of the game"
178.236HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 18:0217
RE  Guaranteed contracts.

  Guaranteed contracts are like anything else. The teams offer them because
they want to do what ever is necessary to attract the talent. They don't have
to offer those contracts, any team could have a club house rule of no more than
one year but then they wouldn't sign anyone. 

  Actually things like salaries and long term contracts even out. Sure there
are some guys making millions and not producing but we never hear about the
guys on the other end who just came up and are tearing the cover off the ball
for the minimum major league salary. 

  Why is it that the guys who complain that players not producing should not
get paid don't complain about how a rookie having a terrific year should get
paid more? 

  George 
178.237Pittsburgh has right spirit for top AAA ball25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soWed Sep 14 1994 18:1216
    One point of view I read and agreed with had free-market economics
    being forced on owners with the result that small market teams were
    indeed forced to get out of the competition.   This would put the
    pittsburghs, san diegos, milwaukees into a AAA+ type of league with
    lower prices for tickets and beer and more spirit.
    
    Those willing to compete (and having fans such as Boston willing to
    pay) would go after the big prize.
    
    My observation is that the national league as a whole has been
    unwilling to pay as much as al and to some extent is a AAA++ today with
    the exception of retaining some stars.  The repatriation of Bagwell
    (now forestalled) would have been an example of this.
    
    Maybe a better topic is where will(/would) Bagwell play in Boston
    (dh,3b-Mo dh?)?
178.238HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 18:1224
RE               <<< Note 178.235 by FRETZ::HEISER "Maranatha!" >>>

>    the spirit is called "gratitude and appreciation and love of the game"

  Hey, call it anything you want the same argument applies. If today's minor
leaguers really have "gratitude and appreciation and love of the game" then why
don't the owners just wait 5-7 years until they become the major leaguers and
stand back while these noble and pure hearted youths vote out the union? 

  Take the case of Braves rookie Jose Oliva. At the start of the season he was
playing at AAA Richmond showing all the signs of "gratitude and appreciation
and love of the game". Then he came up to the majors and started tearing the
cover off the ball.

  When the players decided to go on strike, Jose Oliva was ready to go out with
them but then the Braves sent him back down to AAA Richmond for experience and
he started playing with "gratitude and appreciation and love of the game"
leading Richmond to the International League Title.

  They're the same guys. They feel the same pressures. There is no fundamental
difference between the way the minor leaguers feel about major league salary
and the way the major leaguers feel about it.

  George
178.239The fat lady is warming up!BSS::NEUZILJust call me FredWed Sep 14 1994 19:036

	Montreal owner has said season is cancelled.  Selig to talk within
	1/2 hour.

	Kevin
178.240Strike Three! You're OUT!SPIKED::SWEENEYTom Sweeney in OGOWed Sep 14 1994 19:093
It's a done deal.  Baseball is cancelled in '94.  The fat lady has sung.

t
178.241PTOVAX::JACOBWed Sep 14 1994 19:215
    Halelujah!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    
    
    JaKe
    
178.242HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 19:3815
  It's already been mentioned that this is the 1st time since 1904 that there
has not been a World Series, but this is the 1st time since the leagues were
started that no A.L. or N.L. Pennant will be awarded.

  The A.L. has managed to pick a champion going back to it's 1st year of 1901
and the N.L. has had a pennant winner since 1876.

  A few weeks ago I read that season ticket holders of one club, I believe it
was Atlanta, were threatening to sue to get all their money back including
games they had already seen. Their argument was that they bought season tickets
but what they saw was not really part of a season. 

  Legal pundits give the suit little chance for success.

  George
178.243CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Wed Sep 14 1994 19:438
Seems like Ken Burns "Baseball" is coming out a year too early.

Somehow I think this is something that will have a bigger affect on 
baseball that Curt Flood ushering free agency back whenever it was, and 
it should be in Burns' film.....


'Saw
178.244ROCK::HUBERIndians in '94Wed Sep 14 1994 19:5829
    
    Guess the owners have some decent strike insurance.  B^P
    
    Re .242
    
> It's already been mentioned that this is the 1st time since 1904 that there
> has not been a World Series, but this is the 1st time since the leagues were
> started that no A.L. or N.L. Pennant will be awarded.

> The A.L. has managed to pick a champion going back to it's 1st year of 1901
> and the N.L. has had a pennant winner since 1876.
    
    Interesting point.
    
    Some quick thoughts:
    
    1) If Fay Vincent was still comish, things wouldn't be in the mess
       they're in.
    2) The Curse of Colavito lives.  (Got that book for my birthday;
       looking forward to reading it.)
    3) I'm not going to lie and say that I won't go back to watching
       baseball when it returns; however, I doubt I'll have the same
       enthusiam for the game I had when it left.  I certainly didn't
       in '81, even with the all-star game in Cleveland marking the
       return, but the Indians have changed significantly since then.
    4) The rumor in Cleveland is that the Indians now owe the Twins
       either Russ Swan or $100 and a good meal for Dave Winfield.
    
    Joe
178.245Oh the poor Millionairs are losing money.. boo HooMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSWed Sep 14 1994 20:1613
    Is it really true, is it over, so how much money will the players lose.
    Do they get paid during the season only or are they paid for 52weeks.
    Id love it if they would continue to lose money in the offseason.
    
    And not that too many have them but I hope any/all endorsement
    contracts were smart enough to not guarentee them :-)...
    
    Long live NBA/NFL :-)
    
    Bye Bye Baseball, I didnt think for a minute that the whole season
    would be scrapped, and no way do I think they wont settle by next
    season, but we can hope :-)
    								mab
178.246FRETZ::HEISERMaranatha!Wed Sep 14 1994 20:202
    Layoffs have started already too.  Texas and Montreal have already let
    some front-office people go.  More to come by Friday.
178.247HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 14 1994 20:4115
  The baseball players get paid for the part of the season they played which
comes to something like 60%. It's the owners who in theory really take a bath
because most of their TV income comes from playoffs and the World Series.
That's why the players picked this time to strike. 

  I still think they must be getting money from somewhere else. The poor teams
who are supposedly the ones holding out would be hurting the most by losing
their share of the late season and winter take.

  You know what would be a good read? A book written by some insider near the
owners. I bet there have been some interesting discussions between owners who
wanted to continue and owners who wanted to hold out. Might even make a good
movie. Not much sex but there might be some violence.

  George
178.248it's been boring so far...now the real fun beginsUSCTR1::GARBARINOWed Sep 14 1994 21:0928
The owners are forfeiting ALL THAT MONEY !  I wonder if the players
still think they'll cave-in ?

I said it before:  people who know labor relations say strikes are
all about miscalculation(s) on one side or the other.  I think it's
clear that the clown leading the players (Fehr) has blown this one.

By canceling the season, the owners will become even more united
in their stand because they've lost most of their '94 revenue.
On the other side, knowing the owners took this huge hit should
make it clear to the players that they're gonna feel some pain for
this job action, which should push their unity to the breaking point.

The owners will implement their cap system and open camps next
spring.  It'll be fun to see who scabs and breaks rank.

The players claim they'll start their own league...yeah, right.
No minor league system.  No established team names.  No history.
No fan base.  No major media outlets.

The players are going to find out that most fans are fans of teams,
not players.  There are some great players on strike, but their
moment in history is a blip in time.  2-3 years from now Derek
Jeter may be a household name in NY, and Don Mattingly will be tossin'
burgers at Mattingly's 23.

I guess that's why Fehr is working Congress for the repeal of
the anti-trust exemption.  It's his only hope.
178.249On the belgian, in the red armor - Roger Clemens25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soWed Sep 14 1994 21:2620
    I mentioned to 'Saw that I was reading one of his author's Barbara
    Tuchman's tome about the 14th century.  She showed that no matter how
    extreme the hostilities were between French Dukes and French King,
    French nobility vs English nobility (and mainland France allies), the
    minute the common people attempted to assert their rights, all those of
    "the blood" quickly united to stamp out the 3rd estate.
    
    Similarly, the Wasp establishment seems to be uniting behind the
    plantation owners to stamp out unionized, uppity common employees of
    baseball once and for all.  The trump card for the players could be an
    alliance with nouveau riche entertainers such as mc hammer, michael
    jordan etal from the non establishment to back them if they must
    disassociate from the owners.
    
    A pay-per-view of a series between Cuba,Japan, two U.S. teams, other
    latin america and perhaps Australia, something like the Canada Cup of
    1972 could provide the leverage for players to finally break the
    owners.
    
    Being a Celtic fan I thoroughly detest caps anyway.
178.250CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Thu Sep 15 1994 12:268
There was some real interesting discussion yesterday afternoon on WFAN
and on the news last evening.

I won't go all into here, but the general point of it all was that the owners
have been planning this, and moving towards this for the past two years.


Oh well......
178.251NY YANKEES 1994 AL EAST CHAMPS??????WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MWhat a terrible year 1918 Thu Sep 15 1994 12:573
    
    
       ....so does anyone wanna buy a bottle of Champagne? :-( :-)
178.252CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Thu Sep 15 1994 13:0413
>    
>       ....so does anyone wanna buy a bottle of Champagne? :-( :-)
>

Bring it to a get together and we can toast the fact that we still get
paychecks every week, or we can toast the fact that none of us has flipped
out, come in here with an AK-47 and gone to town, or we can toast the
fact that the ship is going down......


'Saw


178.253IT's not the players fault!CSLALL::BRULEWho needs baseball? It's football timeThu Sep 15 1994 13:1034
    Someone will have to explain a few things to me and hopefully this
    forum will do this. I blame this whole closing squarely on the owners.
    Will someone please tell me why the players are to blame when.
    
    1. Teams fall all over themselves and give multi-year, multi-million
    dollar contracts to the Matt Youngs, Benito Santiagos, Howard Johnsons,
    etc. all. Did these players put a gun to the heads to the managment of
    these teams? Since noone has brought any criminal charges against these
    players I assume then that there is no smoking gun. There should be a
    "Stupidity Tax" on signings like this. It's also a good Revenue-Sharing
    proposal.
    
    2. While teams like the Indians, Expos, Yankees ( I hate to admit this)
    have shown in the last few years that building a farm system is the
    cheapest way to build a contender why is is that the first place these
    mental midget owners cut is scouting and the Farm Systems. Daah!
    
    3. Why the hell do High School Phenoms get a million dollar signing
    bonuses before they participate in one inning of a minor league game
    and which brain surgeons give major league contracts to the Van Poppels
    and Alex Rodriguez's while they are 18 years old? I don't think it's
    the players fault there.
    
    4. If there is such a shortage of revenue why is there one team in the
    3rd most heavily populated state (Florida) while cities that have shown
    they cann't/won't financially support a team are allowed to keep a
    team? ( Montreal, Milwakee). 
    
    This is just a few of my questions. If there is such a big problem with
    salaries why haven't their been any bankruptcies with teams? Why has
    Cleveland, Baltimore and Texas added millions to their attendance with
    new stadiums? The trouble with baseball is their managment!
    
    Mike
178.254HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 13:5718
  I agree 100% with Mike. 

  I believe that the reason that the players get most of the flack is that most
fans are employees, not business owners, and are more likely to envy someone
with an large salary than someone who runs a fantasy company with huge profits. 

  If the average fan was struggling to meet a payroll rather than picking up a
pay check then you'd hear a lot more criticism aimed toward the owners. But
because most of us are employees fans favor the owners which gives them the
incentive to get tough with the players.

  People are greedy. The owners are greedy for wanting wage/price controls in
their favor, players are greedy for wanting big pay checks and fans are greedy
for showing so much envy toward the players. 

  We're all greedy. We killed the goose and that's it for the golden eggs.

  George
178.255SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Thu Sep 15 1994 15:0519
    
    	The 18 old High School players get the big money, because they
    have all the leverage. Todd Van Poppel had the option of signing with
    the A's or going to the University of Texas. Once classes start at
    College the team loses all rights to the player. So it ends up being
    a wasted draft pick. The A's would look like fools if Van Poppel went
    to Texas became the next Roger Clemens and then got drafted by someone
    else.
    	The rule should be changed so that you can draft a high school
    player. The player either goes to college or signs a contract. If
    he goes to college HE MUST stay all 4 years. Upon graduation the
    club retains the rights to the player for 3 years. Then the player is
    an unrestricted free agent. That way the team gets at least 3 years
    out of the player. The player can go to any team he wishes after 3
    years. If the player is a bust in college, he never make the big club.
    He should still be able to play in the minors for his 3 years with
    the team.
    
    Ron
178.25625022::BREENIt IS necessarily soThu Sep 15 1994 15:055
    GWYNN was 165/419 .394 or if 3 outs were hits he's over .400
    
    Would it have counted against Terry and Williams as last to hit > .400?
    
    Don't know if he ad plate appearances to qualify either
178.257He qualified!AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksThu Sep 15 1994 15:4012
-.1 

   It would have been an interesting call.  The rules state that for a player
   to qualify for a batting title, he has to have 3.1 AB for every game his
   team played.   Well, Gywnn sure had that, his team having played around
   110 games.  No doubt there would have been an astrisk next to his name.


Paul

   
178.258USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Sep 15 1994 15:5131
>                        -< IT's not the players fault! >-
>    I blame this whole closing squarely on the owners.
>    Will someone please tell me why the players are to blame when.

This situation is not the fault of either party.  Both are responsible
for the strike occuring and the season being cancelled.  It's a classic
mgmt-labor battle.  Did the owners plan it this way ?  Who knows.
But the players are the ones not playing.  They took their best shot
(striking when the owners stood to lose the most money), and the
owners are still standing.

We, the fans, are caught in the middle, and I'm sorry to say that,
despite what these idiots are saying, we don't matter.  This is a
battle over a business' revenues, and if the players won't play,
and the owners accept the financial losses, you can't claim one
is more responsible than the other for this mess.  It's their
game, and since this industry doesn't affect public safety, or
cause public hardship, only these 2 parties can fix it.

Without a negotiated agreement, the players are now left to fight
whatever the owners unilaterally implement in court.  The owners
aren't going to change their minds.  A new players-formed league
won't make it (even if it was solvent, do they really think their
salaries will be better than they are now ???).  If you listen
to Fehr, that's where he's heading --> Congress, then to court.

MLB is going to be very different.  Fehr wants the anti-trust
exemption removed.  The owners want to stop the run-away salaries,
and labor from getting more of the pie than they should get.
This is as big as the battle for free agency.  This is a battle
over who owns and runs the business.
178.259Can mlb keep its integrity?25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soThu Sep 15 1994 16:4517
    And if you have the best scenario for the owners, implementing the
    'cap, starting the season with whatever and having players gradually
    break ranks a la nfl '87 and what do they have?  The biggest of all
    problems which I'll call the "Flutie" problem.
    
    This is when the union designates the "scabs" and the "loyalists" and
    plays accordingly.  This was done (I'm convinced) after '87 in the nfl
    but better disguised but still apparent to certain coaches.  Those
    teams most unlike the Patriots who surmounted union politics rose to
    the top (was this the reason behind nfc ascendancy?).
    
    Problem is baseball fans will very quickly get wise to fat pitches  vs
    beanballs and the integrity of mlb, its cornerstone will be in kennesaw
    mountainland.
    
    billte
    
178.260HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 17:0426
RE                    <<< Note 178.258 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>We, the fans, are caught in the middle, and I'm sorry to say that,
>despite what these idiots are saying, we don't matter.  

  I don't really buy this. First of all we are not really caught in the middle
since we can go do others things like watch football, play golf, or read a good
book.

  Second, fans are part of the problem. Because greedy fans envy player
salaries more than owner profits, opinion polls still come out in favor of
the owners which causes them to push harder to break the union. That has
aggravated the situation, so the fans have their share of the blame.

>This is a battle
>over who owns and runs the business.

  Not really. The players don't want to run the business, all they want is a
free market. Do you say that employees in the computer industry run all
computer companies just because there is a free market and we can go work for
anyone who will pay our salary? 

  If computer companies were trying to put an industry wide cap on salaries and
we protested would that be a battle to see who runs the computer business?

  George
178.261MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Thu Sep 15 1994 17:147
	I'm sorry, but no matter how you slice this it still comes 
	down to 'millionaires arguing with multi-millionaires over money'.

	Somehow I have trouble having sympathy for either party.


	billl
178.262HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 18:067
  Well sure, and if computer companies started imposing a salary cap on us and
we started crying, people who work in restaurants or bag groceries that have no
health insurance would have little sympathy for us. But that doesn't mean that
a salary cap is the way to control costs at DEC. It would be a bad idea here
and it's a bad idea for baseball.

  George
178.263MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Thu Sep 15 1994 18:123
	re -1:

	Apples and oranges, man!
178.264Id love to be in the top of my bracket (Cap) :-)MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSThu Sep 15 1994 18:1819
    Hello... We do have a salary cap at dec, for any giving job title
    (Position) you can make a cetain range of money (CAP).  We have trade
    rules (Cant Internally offer a EMPLOYEE/PLAYER more money to come
    work(play) for your group(team)).
    
    And currently we have a FREEZE on the Cap, no one can sign anyone for
    more money until we return to profitablility(sp).  Plus each group
    should have a budget that they try and stay withing (Budget=cap).
    
    Here at Dec they dont even have to give you a cost of living increase
    (Doesnt the league minimum go up every year ?).
    
    The more I hear about it the better I feel about the strike.  The
    little guys will get buy, the money grubbing players/owners will both
    all lose money...
    
    Job CODE X range xx,xxx K thru yy,yyy K Id pretty much call that a cap
    
    								mab
178.265HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 18:2016
RE             <<< Note 178.263 by MKFSA::LONG "Strive for five!" >>>

>	Apples and oranges, man!

  No, big apples, middle size apples, and small apples. 

  Say you were working bagging groceries for minimum wage with no health
insurance and you read about how workers at GM with full benefits and $20 an
hour had just gone on strike because the car companies were imposing a salary
cap. Would you have a lot of sympathy for the workers? I doubt it. Would that
mean that the salary cap was a good idea? No. 

  It's all relative. The players have big salaries and greedy fans are envious
that someone else is making all that money instead of them. 

  George
178.266HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 18:2313
RE                 <<< Note 178.264 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    Hello... We do have a salary cap at dec, for any giving job title
>    (Position) you can make a cetain range of money (CAP) ...

  Yes, but you are free to go "free agent" and go to work for another company
at a higher salary any time you want. 

  Now say that all computer companies got together and agreed to impose a
salary cap on computer employees. Then you would have the situation that the
owners want in Major League Baseball. 

  George 
178.267MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Thu Sep 15 1994 18:2714
>>  It's all relative. The players have big salaries and greedy fans are envious
>>that someone else is making all that money instead of them. 

	so who went on strike here?  Did the fans go on strike against
	the players or did the players go on strike against the owners?

	I'd say the owners make big money and the 'greedy' players 'are
	evious that someone else is making all that money instead of them.'

	Sound familiar?



	billl
178.268HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 18:338
  What you are saying is that no preemptive move is ever justified. I don't
buy that. Obviously if the players didn't strike now the owners would have
unilaterally imposed the salary cap.

  That doesn't mean the players are more greedy, it just means they are not
stupid.

  George
178.269Bassbell has ben berry berry god to meMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSThu Sep 15 1994 18:3624
    Well Ive never worked for another Computer company
    
    But can anyone verify/deny weather they have job codes with
    salary ranges or not ?  IF all/most companies have a job for
    computer operators and pay them say 22K-25K thats a cap, SLOT
    etc to pay that individual more he has to earn it.  Also there's
    no guarentee if they hire me and I decide I dont want to work 100%
    but instead work at a 20-40% rate call in sick etc, then can fire
    my but...
    
    I know a few friends of mine that dont work in the computer industry
    and they all seem to carry some sort of title which has a salary range
    to go along with it (A CAP).  Even a burger flipper trainie more then
    likly has a range associated with it(Even if its not written down).
    
    Plus every companay/business on the planet has to work within a budget
    
    If you owned a business your not going to pay some shmuck 2.3 million
    a year even if he's the best damn burger flipper in the world :-)
    
    The thing that really makes sense is some of those burger flippers have
    a higher IQ then some Professional athlete's :-)
    
    								mab
178.270HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 18:4212
  Most large companies have those slots but most small companies do not.

  When interviewing with  a small company or a startup you often have a good
shot at negotiating a decent salary, stock options, etc 

  And even with the large companies there's no agreement binding them to that
format. If Hewlet Packard decides they want to raid DEC for engineers there's
no agreement that would prevent them from adjusting their structure however
if there is a salary cap the Expos would not be allowed to raise their own
limit to sign players.

  George
178.27130008::ROBICHAUDCasinoManiaThu Sep 15 1994 18:4412
    	Brooksy, there is no salary cap in the computer industry.  Each
    company sets what they think is an appropriate salary for a job
    based on their budget, which is based on their profitability.  While
    there are ranges for the jobs in the industry they can fluctuate
    by as much as 40% or more.
    
    	Billl, you're saying the players are greedy because they want
    a proportionate cut of incredible profits that the greedy owners
    get?  Don't you think the skill of the players is somewhat responsible
    for the profit margin?  Would you pay $20.00 to watch a AAA team?
                              
    				   /Don
178.272Polemics aside, it looks and smells like a practical blunderNAC::G_WAUGAMANThu Sep 15 1994 18:5524
> What you are saying is that no preemptive move is ever justified. I don't
> buy that. Obviously if the players didn't strike now the owners would have
> unilaterally imposed the salary cap.
    
    But they could have waited until after the season to reject that plan
    when it was presented and been in the same position they find themselves 
    in now (actually if anything a better position, both strategically and 
    with regard to public opinion).  Right now it looks as if the intransigence
    on both sides will irreparably damage the current parties (at least the
    parties affected in the short term, over the next 5-8 years) financially,
    which means not only did they fail the morality test (ha!) but they 
    failed (passed?) the stupidity test too.  For either side, in the chaotic
    aftermath of the post-nuclear wasteland of baseball, it might take 
    80-90% of total revenues to equal 50% pre-1994 revenues.  Owners can 
    gamble that the P/L statement might be improved, though, but for players 
    it's money right down the crapper.  Even though for the most part I 
    agree with the players in principle, it's a hell of a price for 
    principle.  They should have played out their hand from the start of a
    season, not the end.  At least they would have stood a fighting chance
    for the dollars of the paying customers.
    
    glenn
    
178.273HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 19:0514
  Well maybe and maybe not. I think it's difficult to judge the long term
impact. If they settle before the 1995 season or early in the 1995 season then
it is not clear that the impact in terms of lost revenue will last for more
than a couple years. 

  From the players point of view this was their best shot at forcing the owners
to back down. It was a gamble that looks terrible in hindsight but at the time
it seemed reasonable. Playing out the season would have been a definite loss
for the players since the owners would have unilaterally imposed the salary cap.

  As for a morality test, I'm not sure what that means. In a country with both
freedom of and freedom from religion, morality is simply a matter of opinion.

  George
178.274No Andre I'll only give you a 1 year dealCSLALL::BRULEWho needs baseball? It's football timeThu Sep 15 1994 19:1422
    But the owners are the reason that the game is perceived to be in 
    deep financial trouble they are in. They refused to bring the Players
    Association into the network negotiations so the players could see what
    happened to the Broadcasting $$. They sign mediocre talent to big buck
    contracts. And looking at the NBA and NFL all the Salary Cap does is
    try to make an even playing field for everyone regardless of how inept
    their managment is. Look at some of the trades this summer in the NBA.
    The Bucks traded a decent player in Kenny Norman to the Hawks for Roy
    Hinson, who hasn't played much in 2 years, just so they can use his
    salary slot. It makes no sense at all.
    And how can a business which has an Anti-Trust exemption get into 
    financial trouble anyway. If IBM had an Antitrust exemption a lot of
    computer companies would never have been started and they would be back
    making a hell of a lot more money then they are now.
    The players struck because the owners forced them to use their only
    weapon they have. They used it, Everyone lost millions and the game
    will never have the same appeal to a lot of people. All because a group
    of owners who cann't run their businesses want someone else to bail
    them out. 
    
    Mike
    
178.275CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Thu Sep 15 1994 19:2534
Mab, 

As usual, you're way off the mark.


You can talk about salary RANGES all you want, but they are not caps.
Perhaps you'll be stuck in your job code all your life, but some of us do
get promoted, and make more money.


It works like this.  Digital has salary ranges so that people of approximate
skillsets get approximately the same pay, with variation based on performance.
Ostensibly, the more responsibility you have, the more you get paid.

If Digital makes more money, they can hire on more people.  There's no
ruling in place that says that they cannot hire another worker despite having
more than enough money to pay them.  That's what the CAP is.


So, if you had some big "governing body" in the computer industry, and they
said "Okay, the cap is 2 billion for employee salaries", even if digital
has 4 billion to blow on employee salaries, they can only spend two billion.

A smaller company, say A-B-C computer company, might just have two billion
to spend, barely.

What the cap has done, in effect, is to "equalize" the bigger company
(digital) and the smaller.....



That's the way it works.  Thus endeth the lesson.......


178.276OURGNG::RIGGENNetworks Sales &amp; MarketingThu Sep 15 1994 19:3624
>>    	Brooksy, there is no salary cap in the computer industry.  Each
>>  company sets what they think is an appropriate salary for a job
>>  based on their budget, which is based on their profitability.  While
>>  there are ranges for the jobs in the industry they can fluctuate
>> by as much as 40% or more.


I cannot believe you guys don't think there is not a CAP in every other 
industry in the USA. Yes there are flex style ranges that might at extreme 
conditions reach 40% and right now Digital is about 10-15% less than the 
industry average. In CXO valuable people are walking daily/weekly over to 
MCI for an average 10-15% increase in pay and Digital is encouraging the 
walkout, prevents TFSO. HP is a large employer in this area they pay a 
software engineer about 5% more than Digital but they use the method of 
hire a college grad pay to move him from the Midwest/South/Northeast out 
to Idaho, Washington or Colorado and pay him about 35K which in some
of those areas is a very good standard of living. In 3-5 years if he 
wants to make the BIG league salary head to Mass New York or California 
and see the big city prices. 

In our industry we all work under a CAP unless we came in as a dock worker 
with a PHD and then designed the Alpha chip out of bubble wrap. 

Jeff 
178.277LEDS::ORSICuz I *FELT* like it...OK?Thu Sep 15 1994 19:5960
     Some history and alot of opinions. 8^)

     Before free agency, I don't think things were all that great for the
     players. The reserve clause kept them under-paid and under the thumb
     of owners. Very few players had any leverage when it came to contracts.
     Essentially, the player either signed the contract that the owner put in
     front of him, or he went home and found some other way to make a living.
     Imagine if you wanted to leave DEC for a better gig, and they said, "sure,
     leave, but you can't write code anymore, for anyone, anywhere...you'll be
     blackballed from the industry." That's the way it was for the players.
     	All the players were saying was that when their contract is up, they
     want the opportunity to make their own deal. Greed was not their initial
     motivation.
     	To make a long story even longer, the players finally hired some
     lawyers to look into the the reserve clause, so did the owners. The
     owners were informed by their lawyers that they would lose if they went
     into a courtroom to argue their case simply because it is unconstitut-
     ional to deprive someone of their livelihood. The owners conceded, but
     declared it would ruin the game of baseball. Talk about a self-fulfilling
     prophecy.
     	The owners were making money even when they knew very little about
     business. You would too if there was a law that all but guaranteed
     you to make money. When free agency was declared, that aspect became
     glaringly apparent. The owners went into a feeding frenzy over good play-
     ers...and then the not-so-good players. Until then, the players really
     had no idea how much money the owners had because they had always claimed
     poverty. Now they were throwing money around like it grew on trees.
     Imagine making ~$10,000/yr and then being offered $250,000/yr by another
     club because you had a pretty good year.....would you take it?
     	The players took owners offers of huge bucks and guaranteed long-term
     contracts. I suspect any of us would too...especially if you had been
     selling used cars or working with your brother the plumber in the
     off-season to make ends meet. Of course, alot of players didn't play up to
     expectation. The owners figured that if they pay the money, that
     guarantees performance. Is that good business or just plain stupidity?
     They're human beings, not automobiles. I never understood huge long-term
     guaranteed contracts.
     	So what are the owners really afraid of? I'll tell you what they're
     afraid of....they're afraid of themselves. They're afraid that if they
     don't sign a certain player, another club will, maybe one in their own
     division, and it might come back to beat them. They are their own worst
     enemy. And their solution is to institute a salary cap on the players to
     protect them from themselves. They started the feeding frenzy and don't
     know how to stop it. Sure, some players are greedy, but if the owners
     aren't offering it, the players ain't gonna get it. Like in all
     businesses, the marketplace changes and some players have refused to
     believe it...and paid the price like Jody Reed. They'll come around, but
     it'll take time.
     	Free agency brought baseball into the real business world, and the 
     owners failed miserably, and continue to do so. Incompetents ran the
     clubs then, and they're still running the clubs now. I don't believe
     baseball needs laws to govern it, just more competent people to manage
     the business and evaluate players. I don't think it's a good thing to
     strong arm your employees because you've screwed up. I don't see how any
     business can survive if the product is cheapened...and that's what I see
     the owners doing. I'll know for sure next spring.

     Neal-mostly a RON

178.278HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 20:1829
Re         <<< Note 178.277 by LEDS::ORSI "Cuz I *FELT* like it...OK?" >>>

  That's a good way of looking at it. In fact, owners have had this problem
before. Back in 1900 when it was clear that the A.L. was about to start up, the
last thing the N.L. owners wanted to do was recognize the American League as an
equal but they went along with the agreement not to compete for major league
players and live with the A.L. because they were afraid of a bidding war. 

  Then in the 1960's, the last thing the NFL wanted to do was to merge with the
AFL but once it was clear that the AFL wasn't going away they felt they had no
choice. Remember the big bonuses wars between the two leagues over new players?
I believe that Joe Willie got one of those bonuses from the Jets the year they
signed him and John Huert. 

  One reason these bad management practices happen is that the established
major leagues are industries in which you hardly ever see a company go out of
business. Sure start up leagues fail, but no Major League baseball team has
folded since 1899. 

  In any other industry, rather than having price and wage gimmicks to prop up
failing companies they are allowed to go out of business. Once other companies
see this they straighten out their act or they go the same way. 

  Same thing should happen in baseball. If they are really in trouble, let a
few teams really go under. The free market will determine how many teams there
should be and how much money players should make. It works in every other
industry in the free world, why not give it a chance to work in baseball. 

  George
178.279Finley, Autry and the Crook(gs)25022::BREENIt IS necessarily soThu Sep 15 1994 20:2822
    Players made fair money prior to the depression and during the 30s
    salaries dropped off to become attractive as working men's salaries
    into the 50s.
    
    With the advent of tv in the 50s owners made big profits of which the
    players shared a small part with scouts, coaches, 7 levels of minor
    leagues...  Only with the advent of the agent and the unstated threat
    of wildcat strikes (see burleson,fisk,lynn in '76) and the stampede to
    buy Charlie Finley's players was the cat out of the bag as to just how
    much money was available.
    
    Ironically with deals like madison square garden entertainment and
    other big city packages more and more money is becoming available which
    the owners don't want to share with mere players.  They feel they can
    easily hide excess revenue and profits from union and agents once a cap
    is put in.  The rounded bellies and sated looks of their nba and nfl
    counterparts is enough evidence of the rich life to be had from the
    'cap system.
    
    One thing that no owner in all of sports cares a pin about is the
    welfare and integrity of the game nor what's best for the fans that
    support these games.
178.280Cap itMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSThu Sep 15 1994 20:3837
    (WAY -3)
    
    I dont know if youve ever actually sat in on salary planning or not but
    back in 88 when I did this is how it worked.
    
    You have a budget of X $$$ Digital sets a % for increases, so you take
    your current salary add x% and then divide that up accross your people.
    The better players get more the little guys get less.  So there still a
    cap if you salary budget in 1993 is X dollers your salary budget in 94
    is x +%increse = newbudget.  Of course unlike in baseball your budget
    and salaries go up every year while your headcount stays the same :-).
    
    Its still a cap, and if baseball players dont like it, just like here
    at dec we can go get another job, let the baseball players go get
    another job. (I bet there's a ton of jobs out there for tabaco chewing
    fat guys who can swing a club).
    
    I for one will savor this moment and the more money the players lose
    the better.  Cam you could be the #1, best in the world at what you
    do and I doubt you'll every see a 1.3Million a year contract :-) and
    when dec was making money hand over fist I still doubt there were many
    players makeing in excess of 1mil a year.
    
    The players need to get back down to reality, The owners will
    eventually have to fold, after all there the ones with all the risks
    payroll, taxes, investments etc etc that there losing money on.  They
    play a game want big buck, no risk contracts, and if they suck oh well
    sorry stupid you signed the contract so give me my money...
    
    Offer the Players no Cap, but No Guarenteed contracts, or more
    incentives, you suck you get paid accordingly... All the younger
    guys coming up from the farm leagues would love it, the over paid
    whinning useless baggage would be in an uproar...
    
    Here's hoping next spring comes along and the fields are still empty
    
    								mab
178.281HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 15 1994 20:4934
RE                 <<< Note 178.280 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    You have a budget of X $$$ Digital sets a % for increases, so you take
>    your current salary add x% and then divide that up accross your people.
>    The better players get more the little guys get less.  So there still a
>    cap if you salary budget in 1993 is X dollers your salary budget in 94
>    is x +%increse = newbudget.  Of course unlike in baseball your budget
>    and salaries go up every year while your headcount stays the same :-).
    
  No, you are just plane wrong. It's only a cap if you have employees who are
too stupid to realize that there are other companies where they can get paid to
do the same job. 

  Unlike baseball players, if your salary planning committee decides that
employee x should get y dollars, employee x can go to work for HP at a higher
amount and tell your committee to go pound sand. 

  A baseball player would not have that option under a cap. Once a team decided
to put him in a slot no other team could offer him more without creating a
slot on their team limited by the SAME CAP. That is NOT the system facing a
digital employee. Digital does NOT set the percentage increase or salary limit
for employees at HP.

>    I for one will savor this moment and the more money the players lose
>    the better.  

  Ok fine, so for what ever twisted reason you are in love with billionaires and
get your jollies watching rich owners rake in more profits. If that's what
turns you on then fine but what that has to do with baseball I'll never
understand. Me, I go to the games to see the players play, not to see some
billionaire run a business in a guaranteed profitable industry at someone
else's expense.

  George
178.282MIMS::ROLLINS_RThu Sep 15 1994 21:3015
	Just for my information, am I correct in understanding that 58% of
	the operating costs of MLB franchises is in labor costs ?  If that
	is correct, how does that compare to other industries ?

	Also, has anyone heard officially whether players are willing to
	trade arbitration for the salary cap ?  IMHO it is not the Sandbergs,
	Bonds, and Bonillas that have led to the problem, but arbitrators
	continually siding with mediocre players and causing the average
	salary to inflate uncontrollably that is a main problem for the
	owners.

	I have no sympathy for either side; both are way too greedy, with
	neither side caring for the fans.  People who say the players aren't
	at all responsible are clueless, just as those who think the owners
	are completely in the right are in a stupor.
178.283PTOS02::JACOBRThu Sep 15 1994 21:5927
    
>>  Ok fine, so for what ever twisted reason you are in love with billionaires and
>>get your jollies watching rich owners rake in more profits. If that's what
>>turns you on then fine but what that has to do with baseball I'll never
>>understand. Me, I go to the games to see the players play, not to see some
>>billionaire run a business in a guaranteed profitable industry at someone
>>else's expense.
    
    GUARANTEED PROFITABLE!!!!!!   BULL$HIT!!!!
    
    Lessee, where's the "guaranteed profitable" for the small market teams
    that are losing money hand over fist???????????
    
    I'm not REALLY on either side, but if I had to pick a side, I'd tend to
    go slightly towards the owners side.  Where in the hell does it say 
    that it is wrong for someone to make a profit????  The owners didn't
    just get HANDED the franchise, they bought it.  So, lessee George, say
    you owned a McDonald's franchise, and by some string of good luck, you
    made $5 million in one year, after only making 1 million$$$ the year
    before.  You didn't increase headcount, so does that, when it comes to
    the players logic, mean you have to distribute, evenly, the extra $4
    mil between you and the workers?????   
    
    Both sides are money grubbing fools.
    
    JaKe
    
178.284With baseball owners, it really is "stop me before I kill again"NAC::G_WAUGAMANThu Sep 15 1994 22:3043
    
> Just for my information, am I correct in understanding that 58% of
> the operating costs of MLB franchises is in labor costs ?
    
    Yep, something like that.  On the other hand, the NFL players just 
    successfully negotiated for 64% of revenues (not costs, that'd be 
    higher) and MaB's selfless basketball players are also in the 60+% 
    range.  It's all about "partnership", and perception, I guess.  When 
    a hoops draft pick magnanimously agrees to have his $100M contract 
    paid out over 15 years to keep the team under the cap (while the
    league authorities wink), he's just a hell of a guy... ;-)
    
> Also, has anyone heard officially whether players are willing to
> trade arbitration for the salary cap ? 
    
    Players might be; in response to questioning owners have already 
    dismissed this as an alternative to a salary cap.  Apparently the 
    costs of arbitration are overrated and the owners aren't enthralled
    with a giveback here in the absence of a cap, even though it is the 
    only significant area where free-market forces are removed and an 
    owner is _forced_ to pay a player more than he might have wanted to.  
    But when you add up all the arbitration awards for 3-year players in a
    given season they don't amount to a large percentage of labor costs,
    anyway.  Owners want to change the system for 4+ year players to
    allow free agency with right of first refusal but only with a salary 
    cap, because they know how valuable the great young players would be on 
    the open market (fact is, probably a good half of 6+ year free agents 
    are too old to command the longterm contracts they do, and with baseball 
    owners generally unable to control themselves with those players, god 
    only knows what the younger, truly valuable properties like Griffey, 
    Thomas, Bagwell et al would bring).
    
    The owners' position just doesn't make a whole lot of sense in that it
    contends that the system is rigged not due to a minimum salary, not due
    to any fixed salary scale that is overly high, not due to arbitration,
    but rather due to the continued irresistable urge of competing teams to 
    give a guaranteed multi-year contract to Spike Owen.  The best players 
    are restricted, in the owners' favor.  The shame of it is that the
    owners looked like they were making great progress last winter in
    combatting mediocrity *on their own*, which is as it should be.
       
    glenn
     
178.285MSE1::FRANCUSBaseball in 94? 95? :-( Fri Sep 16 1994 03:1717
    re: Glen a few back.
    
    Actually the players basically had to strike when they did. Assume
    thety played the entire season and the owners got the TV money for the
    posteason. In November the owners then uni-laterally inmpose their last
    contract proposal because they consider themselves to be at an impasse.
    Players could go to court but the anti-trust exemption is a real big
    issue when it comes to labor relations - that is one of the real big
    things the owners benefit from. The owners basically forced a strike
    and I think they miscalculated when/what/how long it would go.
    
    fwiw this is the first strike in which a large number of top
    columnists, other media folks have made statements favoring the players
    side.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.286The owners got what they wantedMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Sep 16 1994 10:4227
Well, you guys have managed to keep this discussion going pretty well
while I was out of town.  As usual, George and Glenn have supplied the
arguments I would have made, as well as (do I remember right) Neil,
whose .277 was a real contribution.  Let's hear more from you.

The view I really don't understand is "The season is over, great, I hope
it lasts into 95".  Thank you for your sensitivity and compassion.  Hey,
you don't like the game, don't watch it.  I don't like football, so I
ignore it, but I don't trash the game or the players in the topics
where the fans are noting.

Re about 60 back: yes, George, I know the hockey season is in trouble,
because the owners, as in all the major sports, scream "Free market"
whenever the government prevents them from using toxic waste in their
employees' cafeteria, but can't deal with a free market in running
their teams.  But I am an incurable optimist.  Just as I hoped up
to the last moment that the baseball postseason would be rescued,
so I will hope up to the last moment that hockey will start.

I will be watching the owners' next moves with great interest.  My
view is that they are now exactly where they wanted to be (this gives
them credit for cunning).  Let's see where they take it from here.  I
continue to believe they will fail to break the union, and consequently
fear they will do great damage to the game before they cave in (this
gives them credit for stupidity).

Steve
178.287DOCTP::TESSIERFri Sep 16 1994 13:5217
Re.

>  Not really. The players don't want to run the business, all they want is a
>free market. Do you say that employees in the computer industry run all
>computer companies just because there is a free market and we can go work for
>anyone who will pay our salary? 

>  If computer companies were trying to put an industry wide cap on salaries and
>we protested would that be a battle to see who runs the computer business?

Please don't compare major league baseball to the computer industry.  You
cannot expect owners to act the same way as computer company CEOs because
their job is to ensure that other owners stay in business.  Would you
really want baseball owners to try to run other owners out of business 
the way computer companies attempt to do to each other?

Ken
178.288HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 14:0214
RE                     <<< Note 178.283 by PTOS02::JACOBR >>>

>  Where in the hell does it say 
>    that it is wrong for someone to make a profit????  

  No where. And if someone makes a profit in a free market then fine. No one
is saying that anyone should put a cap on profits. However the owners are the
ones who are saying it's not all right for someone to pull in the salary that
the free market will pay and I believe that's wrong.

  I agree with you though on Arbitration, that seems like overkill. It's
regulation in the player's favor and is just as bad as the salary cap.

  George
178.289HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 14:1017
RE                     <<< Note 178.287 by DOCTP::TESSIER >>>

>Would you
>really want baseball owners to try to run other owners out of business 
>the way computer companies attempt to do to each other?

  Letting poorly run companies go belly up is actually good for an industry. In
major league sports it's not really a problem because when a team is about to
go belly up through poor management some other billionaire comes along and buys
the franchise. 

  That's actually good for the league because it weeds out the bad owners.
Putting in artificial controls to prop up those bad owners will ultimately
weaken the quality of management in the league which at this point would
mean going from bad to worse.

  George
178.290The Owners take all the chances, the Players get PlentyMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 16 1994 14:2629
    Yes I understand in Dec we have the right to leave at any time to go
    to another company for more money, better benifits etc etc.
    
    So what your saying is baseball players have no other option, bullshit.
    If there not happy playing a game for Millions of dollers they can 
    leave at anytime, mid season whatever.  And there options are limitless
    there plenty of jobs open from flipping burgers to sweeping floors....
    
    Becuase they cant leave baseball and do some other job that requirs you
    to know how to sit on a bench and spit and be paid Millions they
    deserve more money ????
    
    The Owners have made Millions/Billions in investments on buying the
    team/franchise working out staduim deals etc and if the team stinks
    and no one comes and watches the players still get paid, they have
    no risks, guarenteed contracts etc.  If there salaries were based on
    performance and not guarenteed then the owners would have a Less Risk
    investment....
    
    So I guess the owners arent losing any money this year right... They
    Still have to pay there bills...
    
    I dont care if the owner's are making 500X more then the players they
    build the team/franshise and they did it with there money, there
    investment there risk....  IF the players dont like it, they can get
    together and buy there own teams and they can be owners, there's
    nothing stopping them from making that kind of investment....
    
    								mab
178.291HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 14:3737
RE                 <<< Note 178.290 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    So what your saying is baseball players have no other option, bullshit.
>    If there not happy playing a game for Millions of dollers they can 
>    leave at anytime, mid season whatever.  And there options are limitless
>    there plenty of jobs open from flipping burgers to sweeping floors....

  If DEC was empowered to put a cap across the industry and your choice was
take the DEC salary or go flip burgers then your analogy would work but as it
is it does not work. It's not the same thing. The labor market in the computer
industry is a free market and that's what the players want with they say "no
cap". 
    
>    If there salaries were based on
>    performance and not guarenteed then the owners would have a Less Risk
>    investment....

  That's only because the owners have signed those contracts of their own
free will. They don't have to do that. That's why people say that the salary
cap's only real job is to protect owners from themselves.
    
>    I dont care if the owner's are making 500X more then the players they
>    build the team/franshise and they did it with there money, there
>    investment there risk....  

  No, they do it with our money.

>IF the players dont like it, they can get
>    together and buy there own teams and they can be owners, there's
>    nothing stopping them from making that kind of investment....
    
  Yes there is. The owners control who has the right to buy a franchise and
the anti-trust law makes it difficult for anyone else to start a new league.
Competing against the owners is like playing a card game where one side
controls the Aces and can use them when ever they like. 

  George
178.292MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 16 1994 14:4521
    The owners dont use our money, they make an investment and hope to god
    we come watch the games and spend money.. THere taking a risk if nobody
    goes to a game and they lose money that day, guess what the players
    dont they still get paid (overpaid) for taken no risk.
    
    I consider all sports as one industry, if your a great athlete go
    play another sport, if baseball is the only thing you can do then
    your stuck and live it...
    
    They always have the option of getting another (a real) job....
    
    
    
    Who walked off the field here, the owners were working it out, they
    didnt say take a cap or leave the players said no cap, were walking.
    
    
    
    I just wish the players were losing more then the owners in this war
    
    								Mike
178.293HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 14:498
RE                 <<< Note 178.292 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    Who walked off the field here, the owners were working it out, they
>    didnt say take a cap or leave the players said no cap, were walking.
    
  So does this mean that you would side with the players in a lockout?

  George
178.294talk about good ol boy circleBSS::MENDEZFri Sep 16 1994 15:4318
    The owners have the players and the fans by the huevos.  Been living in
    Colorado for 25+ years and I remember when Marvin Miller had agreed to
    buy the Oakland A's and move them to Denver.  Also remember when Marvin
    Miller agreed to buy the Giants and move them to Denver.  In both cases
    the league (which is made up of owners) decided that the A's could not
    do that.  They cited that no one knew whether the Denver area could
    handle a baseball team.  Same thing happened to Florida a couple of
    years ago.  I heard that Gene Autry has stated that he could no longer
    afford his baseball team the Angels.  Do you know what he paid for the
    Angels?  He paid 1 million dollars.  Do you know what his asking price
    is for the Angels?  Some where in the neighborhood of 150 million
    dollars.  That is some kind of profit!!!!  Now I am not against making
    a good business deal but I have a question.  Why does it seem alright
    for owners to make good business deals but when players make good
    business deals it is called greed.  Face it both sides are in it to
    make money and that is fine.  Remember that it is OUR money that they
    are quibbling over!!!!
                          
178.295METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleFri Sep 16 1994 15:597
re: .294

I am sure you meant Marvin Davis; Marvin Miller was the head of the MLB Players
union.

The Crazy Met

178.296anything over 6figures to play a game is too highMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSFri Sep 16 1994 16:4221
    Yes the owners are in it to make money, the owners made an investment
    the players are the workers, that it....  To demand more to just play
    the game is ridiculous and greedy.  They have other venues they can
    use to make more money off the game if they chose too.  Instead of 
    spending the offseason in the carribean (Dont we wish we had 6months
    off out of the year to hangout), then can do promotinal deals, travle
    do openings, autographs etc etc etc... But were taling about a bunch
    of whinning babies that want there 2+Million a year, want 6months off
    doing nothing all to play a game... Again the players dont care if the
    owners lose money (Granted most dont) but I still say the players have
    nothing to lose, when profits are down they still get paid HUGE BUCKS.
    
    Cap it, and make all the owners give any profits in excess of 1.5 times
    the cap to charity :-)
    
    Or lets pass a new tax, any person paid more the 1Mil a year pays 75%
    in taxes :-)
    
    								MaB
    
    
178.297HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 16:4817
RE                 <<< Note 178.296 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    Or lets pass a new tax, any person paid more the 1Mil a year pays 75%
>    in taxes :-)
    
  Hey, I think we finally agree. Actually when you think about it this could
be the solution to the whole problem. If you tax the bigibies out of anyone
making over $200,000 a year then the entire problem of big salaries would
go away. Not only would all the players money return to the public till but
the money of all those stock brokers, CEO's, contractors and everyone else
making too much loot would be turned in.

  After all, who needs more than $200,000 a year? Why single out the players,
they aren't the only ones making big salaries.

  TAX THE RICH!!!
  George
178.298sorryBSS::MENDEZFri Sep 16 1994 17:015
    at the risk of being hidden.
    
    Isn't that the platform that Clinton ran on????
    
    
178.299METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleFri Sep 16 1994 17:075
Talk about simplifying economics and tax implications!

The Crazy Met

178.300HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 17:379
  Hey, why not? It would take care of the inflated salary problem once and for
all. How hard would players fight for big salaries if they knew that they would
have to give most of it back anyway? 

  As for economic implications there would be few because there are not that
many people making over $200,000 a year and generally those that do don't do
anything that you would call real work.

  George 
178.301METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleFri Sep 16 1994 17:499
Hmm, lets see:

Make up to 200k and pay 40% income tax. Above that pay 75%. So a player
making $1 million gets to keep 25% of the additional 800K - another
200K - not bad, not bad at all. Nope it won't stop anyone from wanting
to make more money.

The Crazy Met

178.302HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 18:1220
  Or you could keep going up beyond that.

  Up to $200,000              40%
  $200,000 - $500,000         70%
  $500,000 - $1million        90%
  Over $1million              99%

  Let's see for Barry Bond's $7,000,000 a year that would be

  .40 X   200,000            $80,000
  .70 X   500,000           $350,000
  .90 X 1,000,000           $900,000
  .99 X 5,300,000         $5,247,000
                          ----------
                          $6,577,000 Federal Taxes

  He'd get to keep $423,000, plenty. And what's more, every other dead beat
rich guy making $7 million a year would be paying the same thing.

  George
178.303METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleFri Sep 16 1994 18:1710
A graduated tax is not a bad thing; but once you get to a certain point it
starts to impact whether people invest in companies and gamble on the
payoff; limits income given to charities; lessens spending. Why this 
interest in giving the government so much of anyones money; they are
certainly not earning it - I mean talk about deadbeats the government
is numero uno when it comes to that.

The Crazy Met

178.304HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 16 1994 18:205
  We elect the government.

  If the government is deadbeats THAT is the fans fault.

  George
178.305LEDS::ORSICuz I *FELT* like it...OK?Fri Sep 16 1994 18:4419
>A graduated tax is not a bad thing; but once you get to a certain point it
>starts to impact whether people invest in companies and gamble on the
>payoff; limits income given to charities; lessens spending. Why this 
>interest in giving the government so much of anyones money; they are
>certainly not earning it - I mean talk about deadbeats the government
>is numero uno when it comes to that.

>The Crazy Met

     In case you haven't noticed, 'Mericans haven't been investing much
     in anything 'Merican. But I agree it's a half-assed way for the
     gov't to stop the bleeding. If they REALLY wanted to stop the
     bleeding, they'd tax the crap out of all the stuff coming back
     into the US, manufactured outside the US, by US companies. That's
     what the rest of the world does. They practice an advanced form
     of protectionism. Maybe that's why they're kicking our asses.

     Neal
     
178.306It's everywhere, the virus of the 90s25022::BREENFri Sep 16 1994 20:2910
    john harrington of the redsox was on dale arnold duing lunch. 
    Although, he had little news re. the strike except for a veiled warning
    that owners are prepared to go on with or without players.
    
    But finally Dale to break the monotony asks him about b.c. and he had
    to go into the "Leahy fears Idaho" sandbagging routinge which as I said
    before has become the worst epidemic since Legion Flu.
    
    Stopping all the 'baggin is more important than a baseball settlement
    right now.
178.307CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Mon Sep 19 1994 12:5720
>    I dont know if youve ever actually sat in on salary planning or not but
>    back in 88 when I did this is how it worked.
>    
>    You have a budget of X $$$ Digital sets a % for increases, so you take
>    your current salary add x% and then divide that up accross your people.
>    The better players get more the little guys get less.  So there still a
>    cap if you salary budget in 1993 is X dollers your salary budget in 94
>    is x +%increse = newbudget.  Of course unlike in baseball your budget
>    and salaries go up every year while your headcount stays the same :-).


It's not a CAP in the baseball sense, what they're arguing about.

Sure, each job code has a salary range and if you don't get promoted, you
ultimately hit the ceiling.

But please, Mab, just for once, try to figure out what's apples and
what's oranges......


178.308MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Sep 19 1994 13:366
    
       Pretty ironic during last night's broadcast of part one of the 
      documentary 'Baseball' to hear read a quote from 1868 by someone 
      decrying what money and commercialism were doing to baseball. Of 
      how players were no longer motivated by a love for the game but 
      by greed. 
178.309Some things never changeODIXIE::ZOGRANMac Meda Destruction CompanyMon Sep 19 1994 14:1912
    I, too, was struck by the irony of last nights show.  If you closed
    your eyes and just listened, you would have thought that they were
    discussing baseball's situation today.   
    
    Of particular interest was the fact that the fans seemed to be as
    intense back then as they are today.
    
    Hope I get to watch most of the series.
    
    UMDan
    
     
178.310CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Mon Sep 19 1994 14:236
I missed it, and didn't record it.  I'll have to pick it up on the re-runs,
but I do love the quote by Walt Whitman that's been playing on the radio,
about the game of "base"......


'Saw
178.31124661::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingMon Sep 19 1994 16:398
    Also ironic was the fact that last night's show ended by bringing
    baseball back to the fields and sandlots, and away from the
    "industrialized" version being held hostage by the owners.
    
    I still maintain that this version of the MLB strike will give baseball
    the necessary enema it sorely needs.
    
    Mark.
178.312Owners-Stick to your guns, cap it, or start the league overMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSMon Sep 19 1994 18:1614
    OH well I guess I'll just never understand the thinking behind these
    men (If you can all them that)....
    
    A bunch of overpaid millionaire whinners complaining about money when
    they all seem to get paid 7 figures... Maybe they should walk down the
    street and look at the homeless people, or drive thru the inner cities
    and take a look at what hard times are...
    
    I cannot side with the players.... Even if the owners were make 10 or
    100 times more then the players I still cannot side with a millionaire
    complaining over money...
    
    The PLAYERS WALKED OUT, not the owners...
    								Mab
178.313pigs, all of them.VAOP28::RicetataMon Sep 19 1994 18:2811
I've been avoiding this rathole, but I have to make a brief
point. 

What sickens me about the whole thing is the TOTAL CONTEMPT
the owners and players have for the fans that pay their meal
tickets. While they are bickering there are millions of kids
who CARED! It's sad and disgusting. May they all end up on
welfare.

josh
178.314MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Sep 19 1994 18:3419
    
       In the first of its nine parts that covered the very crude
      beginnings of professional ball, the documentary 'Baseball'
      was eerily relevant to the current situation. From the be-
      ginning the owners treated the players like chattel, using the
      reserve clause to excerise ownership over players. From the
      beginning owners were omnipotent. No more. There is a power
      shift and I believe it's largely due to the media. In the 
      old days, players took what they were given and if you didn't
      like it then too bad. They had absolutely no recourse. Nowadays 
      just about every sport is star driven. We all tune in to watch 
      Junior Griffey do his stuff not to watch John Harrington do his. 
      If Junior felt he was being underpaid and took his case to the
      citizens of Seattle, you better bet the owners would listen up
      (see Sean Kemp). The era of keep 'em poor and hungry and throw 
      'em an occasional scrap is gone. The era of it's my team and I'll
      do what I like is gone. And it was a long time coming. The problem
      is that the owners realized it too late.
     
178.315Keep it free; after that I could not care less...NAC::G_WAUGAMANMon Sep 19 1994 18:4321
              
    MaB, you've repeated that "free market economics don't apply after the
    first $100K" mantra so many times you're beginning to sound like Karl
    Marx.  I just hope for your sake that a work stoppage doesn't take down
    your beloved NBA, as the storm clouds are building fast there too (as
    with the NHL) with those "millionaire whinners" (average salary $1.3M, 
    > baseball) battling tooth and nail in the courts for the abolition of 
    the salary cap.

    The Burns commentary wasn't so much ironic as intentional, the battle
    of the moment notwithstanding.  The same "irony" has been 
    applicable at any other point of the last 100 years.  Like I mentioned 
    once before, my grandfather once told my father that the reason he'd 
    not go back to Forbes Field in Pittsburgh was that due to the money,
    the game wasn't the same as when the Waner boys played during the
    Depression.  As America's oldest and most cherished sporting
    institution, baseball has always been held to a higher emotional
    standard...
    
    glenn
    
178.316SCOONE::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Mon Sep 19 1994 19:079
Not sure how it plays into the "greedy players" 
argument, but as memory serves me, the $2000/year 
that the top players were getting in the early years
of Spaulding et al. was not exactly a kings ransom.  
The option of going and making as good a living doing
something else was very real to these guys.  Today that
is totally irrelivant.

=Bob=
178.317CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Mon Sep 19 1994 19:1624
Well, Mab, you can side with the owners all you want, but the fact of the
matter is that owners are the ones who are protecting their interests by
insisting on a salary cap and are the ones who are trying to bust the
player's union.   

That surprises me because, based on your notes, I'd have figured you to
be a union guy.

But anyway, all of that aside, one thing that I keep hearing in here is the
average salary that's tossed around, as if every player is making 1.2 mil.
That's not the case.  There's players out there who make maybe 275-300K a
year.  That's not all that much when you come right down to it.

If you average in Robbie Bob's 12 mil last year alone, I'm sure it pulls
all our average salaries up.

But quite honestly, I'm not so sure, after watching what has happened in
football, that the players are not wrong in striking over this cap issue.

Bottom line, the owners, as always, want MORE money, at the expense of the
players.....


'Saw
178.318MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Sep 19 1994 19:1811
   >> The Burns commentary wasn't so much ironic as intentional, the battle
   >> of the moment notwithstanding.  The same "irony" has been applicable 
   >> at any other point of the last 100 years.  

      Burns did not know that there would be a strike when the documentary
      was to be televised. Me not being a student of the game like yourself
      I was really surprised how much of what happened 125 years ago ties
      into and is relevant today. Deja vu all over again and all that. The 
      timing of it all is (at least to me) incredibly ironic. 
    
    
178.319more debateHBAHBA::HAASSorry, wrong species.Mon Sep 19 1994 19:1915
>Bottom line, the owners, as always, want MORE money, at the expense of the
>players.....

Players, workers, employees, etc.

Saw, you're sounding like you're not on the owners side of this great
debate:

	Scumbag Owners vs scumbag players

or

	Owners/management vs union

TTom
178.320PTOS01::JACOBRFollically Challenged!!Mon Sep 19 1994 19:2317
    
>>That's not the case.  There's players out there who make maybe 275-300K a
>>year.  That's not all that much when you come right down to it.
         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    
    I'd gladly go play a KID'S GAME fer $275,000/yr plus the "meal money"
    they get(even though the team supplies a before game buffet, an after
    game buffet, etc.
    
>>Bottom line, the owners, as always, want MORE money, at the expense of the
>>players.....
    
    You could change the position of the words "owners" and "Players" in
    the above statement and it would also ring very true.
    
    JaKe
    
178.321CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Mon Sep 19 1994 19:2926
Right, I never said I was siding with anyone, but if I had to pick someone
to side with I'd pick the players.  

As to playing a kid's game for 275K, sure, so would I, if I had the skill
level that it takes.

When you come right down to it, economically the rarer something is, the
more money it is worth.  Quite honestly, baseball talent is something that
is pretty rare.  If everyone could do it, then the average salary might
be $8.95 an hour.  But not everyone can do it.

Same thing with musicians, or actors, or other artists.

There was an interesting fact on that football history show the other night.
Only about 14,000 guys have ever played pro football.   If you think of how
many generations of young men there have been that were the right ages to
play pro ball over the 75 years, then that 14,000 is a very small percentage
indeed....


I'm not saying the players are right in walking out, and there are a few
who'll never get my respect (Steve Howe for instance), but the owners have
always been scumbags too....


'Saw
178.322CNTROL::CHILDSEverybody knows this is NowhereMon Sep 19 1994 19:3712
> When you come right down to it, economically the rarer something is, the
> more money it is worth.  Quite honestly, baseball talent is something that
> is pretty rare.  If everyone could do it, then the average salary might
> be $8.95 an hour.  But not everyone can do it.

>> Same thing with musicians, or actors, or other artists.

 you lost me here Saw. Are you saying Tom Cruise is talented? or Michael
 Bolton? 

 mike
178.323MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Mon Sep 19 1994 19:5210
    Yabbut (fer Kev), I wouldn't call the average talent possessed by the
    average baseball player 'rare'.  What's rare is the opportunity to
    showoff that talent since the number of major league teams is limited.
    
    The reason, INHO, that there are so few teams is because there aren't a
    whole lot of folks with the vast millions available to invest in this
    extremely expensive venture.
    
    
    billl
178.324NAC::G_WAUGAMANMon Sep 19 1994 19:5824
    
>      Burns did not know that there would be a strike when the documentary
>      was to be televised.
    
    I guess all I was saying was that labor battles are as old as
    professional baseball itself, much more a part of its history than 
    the history of other sports, and especially prevalent in the early
    years when new league after new league cropped up in those days when 
    men were rugged individualists and set out for themselves, and not
    only out of necessity (some of those guys made pretty good bucks--
    witness King Kelly's $10K salary offer and the Cinci Red Stockings' 
    initial $1500 average pay in 1869 which were _huge_ for the times--
    ballplayers weren't really consistently getting severely worked over 
    until after WWII) and those "greedy ballplayer" quotes are favorites 
    with historians.  Ken Burns could not have done even a cursory history 
    of baseball without touching on this subject, the current strike 
    notwithstanding.  But you could still call it irony, considering the 
    near-exact timing of the series against the WS cancellation...
    
    How could they do a series on baseball without mentioning "Old Hoss" 
    Radbourne or "Pud" Galvin, though?  ;-)
    
    glenn
     
178.325MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Sep 19 1994 20:2916
    
    
      Most of the stuff in the documentary was quite new to me.
     I used to be in a Sox season ticket pool but I was never the
     diehard fan that some folks in here are. I loved Fenway Park 
     as much as the team itself. But I found at least the first 
     installment of the doc. enthralling. Just about all of the 
     labor-related quotes in the doc. are being echoed today. 
     Virtually word for word. And the pictures of players in the
     earliest days of baseball are priceless. The quotes from famous
     authors, athletes and personalities on what baseball means
     to them and to us all are great too with the possible exception 
     of Billy Crystal (whose appeal I'll never quite figure out). Quote
     of the night for me was from the guy who said that in two thousand
     years the three things that American culture will be remembered 
     for are "the Constitution, jazz and baseball."
178.326I was skeptical but it has been very well done...NAC::G_WAUGAMANMon Sep 19 1994 21:0739
    
> with the possible exception 
> of Billy Crystal (whose appeal I'll never quite figure out).
    
    Yes, Billy Crystal should be taken out and shot.  This might be
    sacrilege but I thought that Bob Costas was infringing dangerously
    on that territory too.  But both Crystal's blatant romanticizing 
    and his mere visual presence seem so out of place in the setting 
    of a (mostly) historical documentary that I have no idea what the 
    thinking here was.
    
> Quote of the night for me was from the guy who said that in two thousand
> years the three things that American culture will be remembered 
> for are "the Constitution, jazz and baseball."

    That was a great quote.  I also liked what Robert Creamer had to say
    about the game itself aside from all the metaphorical (I believe he
    used "metaphysical") nonsense from the likes of Costas that, after all, 
    is mostly a modern invention that has nothing to do with the reasons 
    that the game became so ingrained in American life over the first 100
    years of its organized existence-- it is the game itself and its simple 
    basic elements that produced that influence with common folks and kids, 
    not the intellectual reminiscing around the game.  Maybe aside from 
    the money aspect there's another hint to the root of baseball's recent 
    decline.  As a former 2B, I couldn't have given a better example of why 
    I love baseball than Creamer's mental image of the man in the pivot on 
    the double play.  Former Negro League (don't miss that segment) great
    Buck O'Neil's comments reflected the same simple theme...
    
    I'm pleasantly surprised that some of the stuff like the afore-
    mentioned quote didn't set you off, Tommy.  To be honest, I think
    18-1/2 hours of this at one time is going to wear long, but it'll 
    always be there with its logical division of eras as a great 
    reference.  Even aside from what one might think of the story being
    told, the number of photos and footage (many newly discovered) 
    assembled in one collection is unprecedented.
    
    glenn
    
178.327HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Sep 19 1994 23:0316
re                 <<< Note 178.312 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>

>    I cannot side with the players.... Even if the owners were make 10 or
>    100 times more then the players I still cannot side with a millionaire
>    complaining over money...

  I'm really struggling to understand this. It's ok for billionaires to
complain about money but not for millionaires, is that it? The more you have
the more you can complain? I'm curious, what if there were trillionaires and
they complained about money, would that make them saints? 

>    The PLAYERS WALKED OUT, not the owners...

  So if it were a lockout, then you'd be on the player's side?

  George
178.328... thanks, but I'll take Jr.HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Sep 19 1994 23:109
RE        <<< Note 178.320 by PTOS01::JACOBR "Follically Challenged!!" >>>

>    I'd gladly go play a KID'S GAME fer $275,000/yr plus the "meal money"
>    they get(even though the team supplies a before game buffet, an after
>    game buffet, etc.
    
  Sure, but do you think anyone would want to pay to see you play?

  George
178.329Not on owner's side, but I don't get some arg.'s against themWONDER::REILLYSean Reilly CSG/AVS DTN:293-5983Tue Sep 20 1994 11:1847
    
> MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!"            19 lines  19-SEP-1994 14:34
>
>      just about every sport is star driven. We all tune in to watch 
>      Junior Griffey do his stuff not to watch John Harrington do his. 
    
    The difference between ownership and employee, as I see it, is that
    employees are rarely willing to take the risk to invest in a team, 
    stadium, public mood, etc., etc., and all the other things an *owner*
    has to risk in order to front a business.  They trade off that risk for
    a little less control and a little less reward.  
    
    Granted, the owner makes BIG $$$ if things pan out - and rightly so, he 
    took the risk.  If Team X fails, Player A can move on, Owner B gets stuck
    with the loss.  If Player A wants it ALL, front it all like the owners do.
    Players have a contract - they know what they're getting.  Owners get
    payed on "spec" - perhaps the players would like to join in the risk in
    order to get a little more reward? 
    
    Will Ken give up some of his salary if fan attendance goes down because
    of a recession or if the team sucks or, heck, even if *he* has a
    crappy year?
    
    I think the fans come to see Griffey, but I don't think most believe
    he should get as much as owners get.
    
> CAMONE::WAY "Pony Boy take me home..."               24 lines  19-SEP-1994 15:16
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Well, Mab, you can side with the owners all you want, but the fact of the
> matter is that owners are the ones who are protecting their interests by
> insisting on a salary cap and are the ones who are trying to bust the
> player's union.   

    "Bust the union," schmust the union.   :^) :^)  The players are
    trying to "bust" ownership -- see how silly that sounds?  This is
    America, people join (union) together in the *hope* that their collective
    power is worth more to ownership than any single employee's is.  
    Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't - but it is just plain
    silly to call it "busting a union" when it doesn't. It's a business crap 
    shoot!  Unions shouldn't be guaranteed to get all they want just because 
    they exist -- and I don't see how they are being busted any more than I 
    am when I don't get the raise I ask for.  
    
    If anyone's being busted, its the fans.
    
    - Sean
    
178.330CNTROL::CHILDSEverybody knows this is NowhereTue Sep 20 1994 12:2320
 I can see where folks might think owners are taking a risk, but when you
 consider every single sports team that has been sold in the last quarter
 of a century or so has been sold at a profit, the chance are that even
 if they operate in the red for 5 years they'll still make a profit when
 they sell.

 Also to be considered is that many of them own other businesses and have
 the ability to write off losses.

 They dug their own mess and until they show the players that they are 
 willing to help themselves out by doing revenue sharing first, why 
 should the players agree to cap?

 I can't see how anybody can take the owners' side in this one. The
 players gave them plenty of time to get their act together. They
 refuse to open their books and prove their point so how can they
 be trusted?

 mike
178.331CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Tue Sep 20 1994 13:0318
|re                 <<< Note 178.312 by MR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKS >>>
|
|>    I cannot side with the players.... Even if the owners were make 10 or
|>    100 times more then the players I still cannot side with a millionaire
|>    complaining over money...
|
|  I'm really struggling to understand this. It's ok for billionaires to
|complain about money but not for millionaires, is that it? The more you have
|the more you can complain? I'm curious, what if there were trillionaires and
|they complained about money, would that make them saints? 

It's mab-logic George.

It's my prediction that physicists will come up with a Unified Field theory
long before anyone ever understands mab-logic.......


'Saw
178.332PTOS01::JACOBRFollically Challenged!!Tue Sep 20 1994 13:1031
    
>> consider every single sports team that has been sold in the last quarter
>> of a century or so has been sold at a profit, the chance are that even
>> if they operate in the red for 5 years they'll still make a profit when
>> they sell.
    
    The Bucs are about to change this.  So called "market value" on the
    Pirates is said to be $75 to $80 million.  Considering that the current
    consortium that owns/mismanages the Bucs paid ~$25 million for them,
    and the fack that the team is in excess of $60 million in debt, they
    WILL take a loss on this team when they sell them.
    
    The owners, to save the smaller market teams, MUST set up a revenue
    sharing plan, and follow thru with it.  When you consider that the
    Yankmees get, what, $40 million a year from their local TV contract,
    and the Pirates cain only get $4 million a year from one here, there's
    a big difference in what kind of players you cain attract and pay for.
    
    Also, when ownership of a team like the Pirates is so tight you
    conldn't pull a greased pin out of their ass with a tractor, you don't
    get many players who cain draw fans into the park, much like the Bucs
    of lasted year, AND this year.
    
    I say get a HUGE meeting of all the owners and the players, and nuke
    them all, cause, admit it everyone, their ALL greedy sons of bitches,
    regardless of what side their on.
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
178.333MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Sep 20 1994 13:1131
    
  >> I'm pleasantly surprised that some of the stuff like the afore-
  >> mentioned quote didn't set you off, Tommy.  
     
     A review in the Globe before the doc. started being televised said
     that the series might not appeal to non fans. I don't think that
     I'm quite a "non fan", a casual fan maybe. A very casual almost
     oblivious fan. BUT I think it's more interesting for folks like
     myself who weren't at all familiar with Rube Waddell or Rube Foster,
     who didn't know that Ty Cobb was a violent racist or that Walter
     Johnson requested a return ticket when he signed his first Major
     League contract in case he went bust. I didn't know that the Harry 
     M. Stevens Company that handles the concessions at Fenway was founded 
     90 years ago. I didn't know how the hotdog was invented or how 'Take 
     Me Out To The Ballgame' gained popularity. Some of the philosophising 
     by the likes of Billy Crystal grates on the nerves but some of the more 
     incisive comments by more literate types is quite poetic and poignant. 
     Baseball inspires such beautiful use of the language. When you watch 
     the doc. and see it in its historical context and watch footage of some
     of the greats perform and the emotional involvement of the fans, I get 
     some small inkling of why. 
    
  >> Former Negro League (don't miss that segment) great
    
     Those are really my favorite parts. I called my dad last night when
     the small bit on Rube Foster was on and he was watching and then proc-
     eeded to tell me about a great uncle who played for St. Paul. Again,
     it's the rich history and tradition of the sport that you really
     don't see with basketball or football at least not nearly to the same
     degree.
        
178.334WONDER::REILLYSean Reilly CSG/AVS DTN:293-5983Tue Sep 20 1994 13:4835
    
 > I can see where folks might think owners are taking a risk, but when you
 > consider every single sports team that has been sold in the last quarter
 > of a century or so has been sold at a profit, the chance are that even
 > if they operate in the red for 5 years they'll still make a profit when
 > they sell.
    
    Easy to say when it's not you.  I know I love when people tell me how much
    of I risk I'm not taking when it's my butt on the line.  
    
    Over and above that, though, is that how you want businesses to be run?
    "Hey you future owners of anything -- take a risk, invest, build up
    something!  If you do bad, sorry Charlie; if you do okay, great; but if you
    do *too* good, well we got some employees and armchair business-crats who
    can tell you how you really didn't take any risk and what your profits
    should be knocked down to."
    
    You start a business and see how receptive and understanding you are when
    people tell you a) how to run it and b) that you should easily make a 
    nice profit, we'll tell you what that is and c) by the way, there's not 
    that much risk.
    
    Sure, its the American way to hate the big, bad, business owners.
    But sometimes the people who put themselves on the line (and unabashedly 
    expect great rewards) get a raw deal and I think that's the case here.  
    If the players don't like their salaries, they can walk.  They did.  If 
    the owners don't want to pay what they want, they decline.  They did.  
    Why is one more right (or wrong) than the other in the world of business?  
    
    In the end the fans weild the most power (and they'll probably never
    use it).  Two groups of grown men should have found a way to share
    this golden gift from heaven, but they couldn't.  Bad business decision
    on both parts and I blame both sides equally.
    
    - Sean
178.335HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 20 1994 14:1324
        <<< Note 178.332 by PTOS01::JACOBR "Follically Challenged!!" >>>

>    The Bucs are about to change this.  So called "market value" on the
>    Pirates is said to be $75 to $80 million.  Considering that the current
>    consortium that owns/mismanages the Bucs paid ~$25 million for them,
>    and the fack that the team is in excess of $60 million in debt, they
>    WILL take a loss on this team when they sell them.
    
  Yes, there are a hand full of teams that have been run so poorly and/or who
get so little fan support even when they win that they can't make it. And there
are others who do poorly because they are never contenders. If their owners
lose money when they sell the team so what?

  The Pirates have been playing in Pittsburgh since at least 1876 and have done
well relative to the rest of the league for most of that time. If things have
changed and the fans won't support them when they win then they could have
moved to Tampa Bay or somewhere else where they would have gotten support. 

  In America, just because you invest your own money that doesn't mean you will
be successful. That's why we have a bankruptcy code. If you invest your own
money and do a lousy job of of managing it, it will be gone. As the saying goes,
"A fool and his money are soon parted".

  George
178.336SCOONE::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Tue Sep 20 1994 14:2431
re: "Baseball" by Burns

As something of a student of the history of the game, I
still am enjoying the series.  A lot of things which 
were not brought up in the histories I read as a kid
(Cobb's racism for one) give new perspective on the 
early days of the game.  Also, you tend to forget things
like the contrast of Mathewson and McGraw or just how
early Branch Rickey made his commitment to get African-
Americans into the major leagues.

One thing that Burns must have struggled with was the 
chronology of the series.  he is staying stricktly with
a historical chronology, despite the temptation to 
follow a story line, then come back in time.  The Branch
Rickey thing is an example.  He planted the seed of 
Rickey being affected by the racism he saw in his early
years as a college baseball coach.  I'm sure the story
line will germinate when he discusses the 40's-50's time 
frame.

I agree that the "cuts" to the celebs pontificating 
about the game are out of context, and generally add
nothing to the show.  In "the Civil War", the cuts were
directly related to what was goign on in the series.  I
get the feeling that Costas, Crystal, Shelby Foote,
George Will, et al. begged Burns to be included, so he
let them, then had to squeeze their comments in some-
where.

=Bob=
178.33730008::ROBICHAUDCasinoManiaTue Sep 20 1994 16:087
	Oh boy, I can see where this PBS Baseball documentary is going to 
bring out the "Baseball/Life metaphor" crowd who wax poetic about 
"athletes" (see John Kruk), whose invaluable contribution to society is the 
ability to spit chewing tobacco and scratch their filberts at the same time.  
Wake me when this LoveFest is over.

				   /Don
178.338PTOS01::JACOBRFollically Challenged!!Tue Sep 20 1994 16:4839
    
>>  Yes, there are a hand full of teams that have been run so poorly and/or who
>>get so little fan support even when they win that they can't make it. And there
>>are others who do poorly because they are never contenders. If their owners
>>lose money when they sell the team so what?

>>  The Pirates have been playing in Pittsburgh since at least 1876 and have done
>>well relative to the rest of the league for most of that time. If things have
>>changed and the fans won't support them when they win then they could have
>>moved to Tampa Bay or somewhere else where they would have gotten support. 
    
    FAN SUPPORT MY ASS, George.  Back a coupla years ago, when the BUcs was
    winning the division, they set attendance records 2 years in a row. 
    The result, they lost money, bigtime.  They drew 2.2 million fans,
    which would be the equivalent of NY or LA drawing about 9 million,
    comparing the size of the areas and the draw the team has to work from.
    The team has a horrible lease, in a lousy concrete donut, in a good
    town, with a lousy roster.  WHat would be so different in another city,
    by moving the Bucs, after the novelty wore off, if the new owners
    wouldn't put out the necessary $$$ to attract marquis players???It
    isn't just a few teams that lose money, it's more like half of the
    teams are in, or shortly will be in, financial strife.
    
    The current owners decide not to pay big bucks to anyone who resembles
    a ballplayer, the team falters, and attendance drops off some, o about
    1.6 mil lasted year.  Would you expect the mediocre bunch of bums on
    the Bucs to draw 2 million every year????
    
    THis is a small market, economically depressed(but getting better,
    finally), and the team is basicaly AAA bal + a little.  SO, we're
    supposed to shell out major bucks to see the bucks, even though there's
    nobody worth seeing. 
    
    BTW, THe Rooneys, who own the STEELERS, have thrown their names into
    the hat as one of 5 possible new onwers who WILL keep the team in
    Pittsburgh.
    
    JaKe
    
178.339HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 20 1994 16:5616
  Ok, but how does that justify a salary cap? If for what ever reason baseball
doesn't work in Pittsburgh, then try somewhere else. 

  That story seems similar to the Boston Braves story in the late '40's. After
winning the N.L. Pennant in '48 they still couldn't make money. So in 1952 when
the city of Milwaukee built a 28,000 seat stadium and the St Louis Brown
started talking about moving back to Milwaukee, the Braves jumped at the chance
and moved there 1st. Then they moved to Atlanta and now they seem to be doing
fine. 

  If the owners are too incompetent to run the Bucks, then they should get new
owners. If there is no way that Pittsburgh will support the team, then they
should move to some city that will support the team. In either case I don't see
how it justifies the cap. 

  George
178.340SCOONE::MCCULLOUGHHakuna Matata - means no worries...Tue Sep 20 1994 17:1714
re: George/JaKe's LDUC

The theory is that small market teams don't draw 
the fans, thus don't make the money that large market
teams do.  They then have less money to invest back into
the team.  The cap would prevent big market teams from
buying more players.

The flaw here is that, despite what the books say, NO
MLB team is losing money.  It just becomes a matter of
owners not wanting to re-invest as large a percent of 
their profits.

=Bob=
178.341CAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Tue Sep 20 1994 17:2020
>
>The flaw here is that, despite what the books say, NO
>MLB team is losing money.  It just becomes a matter of
>owners not wanting to re-invest as large a percent of 
>their profits.
>


I agree.

One thing I've learned over the years, ESPECIALLY here at DEC, is that
you can make the books say anything you want them to say.   Now I'm far
from being a bean counter, but I sure do know that....


Owners are like Bob Palmer -- as long as they get their big fat paycheck/raise
they really don't care what happens....


'Saw
178.342HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 20 1994 17:3623
  One thing that is kind of nuts is that it's not clear that the cap will help
the small clubs. Yet they seem to be the ones who want it most. 

  Even if there is a cap, there will still be an argument as to where the cap
should be set. Most likely it will be set somewhere below what the large teams
can pay and above what the small teams can pay. This means that the small clubs
will be peddling to keep up just as they are now while the rich teams just get
richer. 

  Transferring money from rich to poor teams would result in the same problem of
owners like George Steinbrenner giving poor teams money which they then use to
buy players from the larger clubs. 

  The only way the cap would work is if the owners clobber the Union so bad
that they can then impose a low cap but that's not likely. Even if they manage
it for now, the Union will come back over time.

  What the cap will do is take us back to the bad old days of yesteryear where
a few rich teams get the talent and hold on. Once again only a few teams will
be able to win and the gap between rich and poor teams will grow even more.

  It's a terrible idea,
  George
178.343Cobb not the racist that Anson was25022::BREENTue Sep 20 1994 18:1017
    "Browns (St Louis) move BACK to Milwaukee.  Now that's something I
    never knew - that St Louis Browns were once based in Milwaukee.
    
    Speaking of Browns, I hope Burns features George Sisler who Connie Mack
    and Joe Dugan among others rated so highly.  Also, Sisler was a college
    star and the college game was extremely competitive right into the 20s
    and I hope Burns talks about that.
    
    I'm very pleased with the series and one note I'd like to make is about
    Cobb as racist vs Cap Anson as true racist.  Cobb was a nut and didn't
    like most everyone but had little influence and the incident with the
    black worker and his wife I'd contrast with Anson using his
    considerable powers to turn the tide against blacks in baseball which
    had a chance to happen in the 1880s.
    
    Cobb in his position of enmity vs establishment actually was very good
    to some younger players.
178.344PTOS01::JACOBRFollically Challenged!!Tue Sep 20 1994 18:1218
    re "no team is losing money".  Bullsh_t!!!
    
    The Bucs have been deep in the red for a few years now, and are in
    debt to the tune of $60 million+ to the league and to the city of
    Pittsburgh, who has been making them loans off and on to keep them
    here. 
    
    RE Cap...I never stated in my diatribe on the state of BB here in Pgh
    anything about the cap.  I think they should institute revenue sharing,
    although they won't.  When CBS paid Major League Baseball over $1
    billion for rights to telecast, free agency went thru the roof, cause
    the owners had mucho more $$$ to spend.  Now, without as much $$$, the
    smaller teams don't have the $$$ to spread around like the
    Steinbrenners of the world.  Hell, the Yankmees local TV contract alone
    would've paid the Bucs payroll lasted year.
    
    JaKe
    
178.345Will it ever endMR1PST::CBULLS::MBROOKSTue Sep 20 1994 18:1319
    Doesnt take a rocket scientist to figure it out.. IF the good teams
    in the larger markets with hugh salaries have to drop some players or
    restructure salaries of there current teams to get under tha cap then
    they dont have enough money to buy away the top players from the
    smaller market teams.  Take a team like the blue jays, how many fans
    does there stadium seat, they sell out ?(Alwasy ?) and they bought the
    best players money could buy and bought a couple of championships.  SO
    it can be done (And has been done).
    
    So if you put a cap on a team, the big market teams cannot afford to
    throw these hugh salaries around, and now with the new playoffs how
    many post season games does this add.  It now becomes very financial
    important to make the playoffs and get HFA for those early/extra games
    so the big teams will be looking to steal away more players.
    
    All owners/team benefit by the cap, only the smaller market teams lose
    in a free market with no cap..
    
    								mab
178.346Marx, Lenin, MabCAMONE::WAYPony Boy take me home...Tue Sep 20 1994 18:349
Marx, Lenin, Mab....sounds like a MrT p-name....


Just one question:  what in the world is a hugh salary?  I thought Millen
played football?


'Saw
178.347HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 20 1994 18:3729
RE                      <<< Note 178.343 by 25022::BREEN >>>

>    "Browns (St Louis) move BACK to Milwaukee.  Now that's something I
>    never knew - that St Louis Browns were once based in Milwaukee.

  In 1901 when the American League started one of the 8 original teams was the
Milwaukee Brewers. In 1902 they moved to St Louis and changed their name to the
Browns. Around 1952 Bill Veck Jr wanted to move them again and he considered
going back to Milwaukee but when the Braves moved there he sold the team and
they moved to Baltimore to become the Orioles.
    
  Another interesting point is that one of the 8 original teams was the
Baltimore Orioles. In 1902 they moved to New York and changed their name to the
Highlanders. Some time later they moved to the Bronks and became the Yankees. 

  The other 6 original A.L. teams were:

  1901                     Later                        Now
  ----                     -----                        ---
  Chicago White Stockings                               Chicago White Sox
  Cleveland Blues                                       Cleveland Indians
  Detroit Tigers                                        same
  Philadelphia Athletics   K.C. Athletics               Oakland Athletics   
  Washington Nationals     Washington Senators          Minnesota Twins
  Boston Summersets        Boston Pilgrims              Boston Red Sox

  The rest of the A.L. teams are expansion teams.

  George
178.348OLD1S::CADZILLA2How Unkind, Arrested for flying while blindTue Sep 20 1994 18:449
    
    
    Small nit  
    
       The last Washington Senators team is now the Texas Rangers!
    
    
    Cadzilla2
    
178.349HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Sep 20 1994 18:569
RE<<< Note 178.348 by OLD1S::CADZILLA2 "How Unkind, Arrested for flying while blind" >>>

>       The last Washington Senators team is now the Texas Rangers!
    
  No, the old Washington Senators are now the Minnesota Twins. After they
moved there was an expansion team called the Washington Senators who are now
the Texas Rangers. 

  George
178.350CNTROL::CHILDSEverybody knows this is NowhereTue Sep 20 1994 18:5715
 the reason the small market teams are so behind the cap is big market
 owners are supposedly willing to talk revenue sharing with their smaller
 brethen if they get a cap.

 I find it hard to believe the Bucks would loose money but anything is
 possible. Still if 1/2 the teams were loosing money, why not open your
 books and prove it? If I'm a player and there's really that many teams
 loosing money I'd soften my stance and pitch in by agreeing to a cap.

 Still can't find the risk factor depiste the fact that it ain't my butt
 on the line. I'd gladly put my butt on the line to own a team. Anyone know
 anyone giving out 100 million dollar loans???????

 mike
178.351OLD1S::CADZILLA2How Unkind, Arrested for flying while blindTue Sep 20 1994 19:137
    
    
    Like I said, the last Washington Senators team is now in Texas!
    playing with about the same success as the Washington Senators
    they replaced.
    
    Cadzilla2
178.352ROCK::HUBERIndians in '94Tue Sep 20 1994 19:525
    
    Well, George, if you're going to list the Pilgrim's nickname for the
    Sox, at least include the Naps name for the Tribe... B^)
    
    Joe
178.353MIMS::ROLLINS_RTue Sep 20 1994 20:2427
>                     <<< Note 178.342 by HELIX::MAIEWSKI >>>
>
>  One thing that is kind of nuts is that it's not clear that the cap will help
>the small clubs. Yet they seem to be the ones who want it most. 
>
>  Even if there is a cap, there will still be an argument as to where the cap
>should be set. Most likely it will be set somewhere below what the large teams
>can pay and above what the small teams can pay. This means that the small clubs
>will be peddling to keep up just as they are now while the rich teams just get
>richer. 

 It's true that the rich teams would get richer, BUT they could not use those
 riches to bring in highly paid players once at the salary cap (unless players
 would play for less on a contending team).  This makes it more difficult for
 players on franchises like Montreal to find new markets at the prices so high
 the Expos can't compete; teams Montreal will thus be more likely to sign some
 of their young talent that they will otherwise lose almost entirely.

>  What the cap will do is take us back to the bad old days of yesteryear where
>a few rich teams get the talent and hold on. Once again only a few teams will
>be able to win and the gap between rich and poor teams will grow even more.
>
>  It's a terrible idea,
>  George

 Nope, a salary cap would make the leagues more competitive.  That doesn't make
 it a good idea, it just wouldn't do what George is suggesting.
178.354HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 02:4230
RE                     <<< Note 178.353 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R >>>

> Nope, a salary cap would make the leagues more competitive.  That doesn't make
> it a good idea, it just wouldn't do what George is suggesting.

  Spoken like a true owner. In fact, baseball, which has no cap, is the most
competitive major team sport. Before free agency the American League was
basically a tune up for the Yankees to play the World Series and even the
National League was a race between 3 or 4 contenders, usually the same teams
from year to year. 

  Once free agency came along the dynasties were pretty much done and now it
seems that just about every team gets their chance to be a winner. 

  Also, even with free agency winning involves building a team through the farm
system then adding a few high priced free agents the way Cleveland did this
year. Trying to go out and buy a championship just plane doesn't work. 

  With a cap it will be much more difficult for teams to find guys to fill
a slot and the poor teams might not even be able to make the Cap. The rich
teams will get so rich that they will be able to afford much larger farm
systems giving them a much bigger edge.

  The cap helps the rich teams get richer. It would make winning for the
poor teams almost impossible and would make free agency so difficult that
the same teams will win from year to year.

  Just look at basketball, that's pretty much what you have there.

  George
178.355Fantastic series, but I can't justify $180 to the wife56821::MORGANWed Sep 21 1994 11:4411
    As has been mentioned, it really is amazing just how similar the game
    stands today (owners vs. players) as it was 80 years ago.  From the 
    cheap owners (Commiskey) to the lousy food served in many stadiums.
    
    Ebbetts Field was quite a place huh?
    
    One other thing that I wasn't aware of was just how far down Walter
    Johnson dropped in his delivery.  Never knew a sidearmer could throw so
    hard.
    
    					Steve  
178.356MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 21 1994 13:5022
 >> Spoken like a true owner. In fact, baseball, which has no cap, is the most
 >> competitive major team sport. 
    
    And what do you base this statement on? Toronto is two time dfending
    champ and perennial title contender and Atlanta is fast becoming the
    Buffalo Bills of baseball. Meanwhile, though the 'Boys have won two
    in a row the NFl is the very paragon of parity, there is no current
    hockey dynasty and basketball's dynasty now plays baseball in Birming-
    ham.
    
 >> The cap helps the rich teams get richer. It would make winning for the
 >> poor teams almost impossible and would make free agency so difficult that
 >> the same teams will win from year to year.

 >> Just look at basketball, that's pretty much what you have there.

    Not a fair comparison. In basketball one great player and two or three 
    very good players can make you a contender (see Indiana Pacers) that's
    not true in baseball. You can't build a baseball team by surrounding
    three guys with good role players, it doesn't work (see Pittsbuyrgh
    Pirates). 
178.357Get rid of the freebies in sports25022::BREENWed Sep 21 1994 14:0813
    Since it is fairly obvious that Michael Jordan quit basketball because
    the 'cap forced him to sell his talent for 10cents on the dollar the
    cap did bring some parity to nba.  As a non-jordan, anti-bull fan I'd
    still like to see him play but he needed about 12-15 million /year,
    bottom to justify his playing (using market economies).
    
    Yankees lost heir domiance 10 years before free agency and latter got
    them back to the top in 70s.  
    
    But in baseball today the lack of a cap has forced good management to
    be the key to success and in some case has pushed towns that are
    rightfully minor league to consipire to destroy baseball if necessary
    in order to hang on using 'cap or some other perversion.
178.358HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 14:1227
RE        <<< Note 178.356 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>    And what do you base this statement on? Toronto is two time dfending
>    champ and perennial title contender and Atlanta is fast becoming the
>    Buffalo Bills of baseball. 

  Toronto has really slacked off. They are not nearly the team they were the
past two years. And sure Atlanta has had a pretty good streak going but they've
got nothing to show for it.

  Meanwhile look at how Atlanta and the Twins went from last to 1st to get into
the World Series and look at the turn over in division winners. You don't see
that in other sports. 

  This year the Expos, Dodgers, Astros, Yankees, and Indians came out of
obsecurity to be contenders while the Giants and Blue Jays faded away. Atlanta
and the White Sox hung in to continue contending.

  Anything can happen and no matter how bad your team is doing, next year your
team could be right in the thick of the battle. Or maybe not, you just don't
know.

  I see that as a big plus and it's caused mostly by free agency. Put on a
cap and everything will slow down with the same winners year after year just
like we had before free agency.

  George
178.359MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 21 1994 15:4718
>> Meanwhile look at how Atlanta and the Twins went from last to 1st 
>> to get into the World Series and look at the turn over in division 
>> winners. You don't see that in other sports. 

   Atlanta developed a core of great young players that has helped them
   stay near the top since then. A salary cap won't preclude a team from
   doing that again. It may prevent them from keeping them all indefinitely.
   The Twins  were a case of several players having career years. A salary 
   cap won't stop that either because the Twins payroll wasn't near the
   top anyways.


>> I see that as a big plus and it's caused mostly by free agency. Put on a
>> cap and everything will slow down with the same winners year after year just
>> like we had before free agency.
  
   That may be your gut feeling but there's really no evidence to support it.
    
178.360my $.02PTOVAX::SCHRAMMWed Sep 21 1994 16:287
    
    I, for one, like what the salary cap is doing to the NFL and I think it
    would be good for the MLB (Im from Pittsburgh).   The salary cap in the
    NFL caused more movement in players than I can remember.
    
    If the baseball players want the big money, perhaps having them sign
    non-guarantee contracts + incentives (like the NFL) maybe the answer.  
178.361SNAX::ERICKSONYes I Am !!!Wed Sep 21 1994 17:0625
    
    	I like the salary cap idea, but I don't like how they are going to
    enforce it. I don't like how the NFL is enforcing it. For the primary
    reason that Phil Simms played 15 years for the Giants. The Salary Cap
    forced him to be cut/retire.
    	In MLB if a team drafts a player and he stays with the team for
    X amount of years. That team should be able to keep the player. How
    would Red Sox fans like it if they drafted Roger Clemens. Then when
    it was time for him to make 5 million a year. The Sox don't sign him
    because they would be over the salary cap.
    	In any sport if you draft a player and he has been on your team
    his entire career. That player should be allowed to be paid as much as
    he is worth without effecting the salary cap of the team. If you
    acquire a player in a trade, same thing. If you acquire a player via
    free agency, after so many years with the team. He shouldn't count
    against the cap.
    	Basketball almost has it correct. You are allowed to sign your own
    players to any amount of money. The NBA needs work on how they figure
    out the Salary slots though. Its a shame when a team loses a player to
    injury or death (Reggie). Then only gets to use half of his base year
    contract. The guy is making 4 million a year, and you get a slot of
    600K to sign a replacement? Then should take the average salary for the
    length of the contract. Then get half of that for a salary slot.
    
    Ron
178.362HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 17:0624
RE        <<< Note 178.359 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>   Atlanta developed a core of great young players that has helped them
>   stay near the top since then. A salary cap won't preclude a team from
>   doing that again. It may prevent them from keeping them all indefinitely.

  Actually it works just the other way around. Without a salary cap the
Braves would have a hard time keeping the team together since various players
would go elsewhere for big salaries. With the salary cap each player not only
needs to find someone who wants him, there has to be a slot for him to be paid.

  The result is that players are less likely to move and it's easier to keep a
championship team together. That in turn makes it more difficult for other
teams to win and baseball becomes less competitive.

>   That may be your gut feeling but there's really no evidence to support it.
    
  There's plenty of evidence. Just take a look at the division winners before
free agency and after. Before it was the same teams year after year, after
it was anyone's game. Then compare baseball to any other major sport that
limits free agency and salaries. There's no other sport in which any team
can win from year to year they way they do in baseball.

  George
178.363If I were an owner, I'd LOVE real free agencyWONDER::REILLYSean Reilly CSG/AVS DTN:293-5983Wed Sep 21 1994 17:1617
    
    Ask the players union if they'd accept total free agency.  For
    everyone in baseball from day one.  
    
    Bet they find a way to decline.
    
    And the reason is the players aren't stupid - they know when they have
    a good thing and the good thing is to maintain just a few players
    available for free agency every year.  Its the best way to drive up
    prices (several teams may want the 1 or 2 great 1st basemen available).
    
    Keep no cap, but make total free agency a reality and you'll really
    see capitalism in effect (unlike you have now) - and prices will come
    down when the supply equals the demand.
    
    - Sean
    
178.364HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 17:2818
  I don't think the owners would go for total free agency since they would
get no return at all from the players they developed through the farm system.

  Under the current system, an owner can trade away everyone for a couple
consecutive "classes". That is, they can get a bunch of talented guys who
are about at the same level, say 1st and 2nd year A ball.

  Then they bring them along through AA, AAA, Rookie Year. When they hit about
the 2nd and 3rd year of the majors they buy a few free agents and take a shot
at picking up all the marbles before the talent gets away. That's what
Cleveland is doing. Atlanta managed to get two groups in a row so they were
able to take one shot around '91, '92 and they are set to take another shot
around '95, '96. The Expos are also ready for their shot.

  With total free agency the players would disappear as soon as they hit the
majors and there would be no way to build a winner.

  George
178.366HANNAH::ASHEGoofy's going to collegeWed Sep 21 1994 17:389
    I liked the idea someone had on a call in show last night.
    Cap for 0-3 years experience with a team
    Cap (higher) for 4-8 years with a team
    No cap for players on a team more than 8 years...
    
    This allows guys like Monk, Simms or whoever to stay and finish their
    careers with the same team.  Same with a Whitaker, Trammell, Ripken,
    etc.... if they then go to another team, they'd go under the 0-3 cap.
    
178.367MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 21 1994 17:4340
    >> Actually it works just the other way around. Without a salary 
    >> cap the Braves would have a hard time keeping the team together 
    >> since various players would go elsewhere for big salaries. With 
    >> the salary cap each player not only needs to find someone who wants 
    >> him, there has to be a slot for him to be paid.

       It's you that has it backward, George. Without a cap a team like 
       the Braves with a superstation, a big money owner and in a hot and
       growing market could stockpile players. They could sign a Fred McGriff
       away from San Diego that can't or won't pay him. 
    
    >> The result is that players are less likely to move and it's easier to 
    >> keep a championship team together. That in turn makes it more difficult 
    >> for other teams to win and baseball becomes less competitive.

       That really hasn't happened in basketball which has the most
       experience with the cap. Again, if anything, it's quite the opp-
       osite. There may be an impetus to sign superstars to long term con-
       tracts but player movement in general is anything but stagnant.
       Follow the Suns note, if you doubt it. And in baseball, the Braves, 
       Toronto and San Francisco have stayed together, it's just more diff-
       icult to string titles together in baseball. Toronto stinks this year 
       with essentially the same team that won it all last year. That just 
       doesn't happen in basketball.
    
    >> There's plenty of evidence. Just take a look at the division winners 
    >> before free agency and after. Before it was the same teams year after 
    >> year, after it was anyone's game. Then compare baseball to any other 
    >> major sport that limits free agency and salaries. There's no other 
    >> sport in which any team can win from year to year they way they do 
    >> in baseball.
    
       The salary cap does not eliminate free agency. Players are still free
       to sell their services to the highest bidder. Basketball even with
       it's salary cap is rife with overpaid, underacheiving players. It
       just takes far fewer good players to make a contending basketball
       team than it does a contending baseball team especially when 
       nearly everyone makes the playoffs.
    
178.368HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 17:5030
RE        <<< Note 178.365 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>       It's you that has it backward, George. Without a cap a team like 
>       the Braves with a superstation, a big money owner and in a hot and
>       growing market could stockpile players. They could sign a Fred McGriff
>       away from San Diego that can't or won't pay him. 

  This was the argument that the owners made when free agency was a big issue
about 20 years ago. With free agency, they argued, only the rich teams will
win.

  What has happened is exactly opposite. Look at the period before free agency.
As I said, the American League was just a warm up for the Yankees who won 3 out
of 4 years. Over in the National League the 1st half century it was most often
the N.Y. Giants, the 2nd half the Brookland then L.A. Dodgers.
    
  Since free agency no one can buy a champion because the talent gets spread
around. Take a look at the division winners of the last 20 years, there is
seldom more than 1 of 4 that repeats and often 0 of 4 repeat. Also look at
where they come from, we hear every one complain about the Pirates yet they
were one of the teams that managed to win 3 in a row and came one lucky swing
of the bat from Francisco Cabrera from being in the World Series.

  Since the turn of the century there has never been a time in which baseball
has been so competitive as they have been for the last 20 years or so. Nor has
there been a time since so many fans have had the World Series in their town. 

  It ain't broke and it should definitely not be fixed.

  George
178.369MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Sep 21 1994 18:278
  >> It ain't broke and it should definitely not be fixed.
    
     This is the first time in 90 years that there hasn't been a World
     Series. I'd say that means that the game is *very* broke.  More teams
     are competitive nowadays as compared to when ball players were nothing
     more than chattel but that's really no great shakes. The point is that
     the cap and free agency are not mutually exclusive.
178.370HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 18:3614
RE        <<< Note 178.369 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>     This is the first time in 90 years that there hasn't been a World
>     Series. I'd say that means that the game is *very* broke.  

  When I said that if it ain't broke don't fix it I was referring to the fact
that before the owners upset the apple cart everything was running along fine
as it has been for the last 20 years. 

  The owners attempted to "fix" baseball with this cap even though it was not
broken and only then did the wheels fall off. Had they left it alone we'd be
watching the end of the division races right now preparing for the playoffs. 

  George 
178.371FRETZ::HEISERGrace changes everythingWed Sep 21 1994 19:514
>that before the owners upset the apple cart everything was running along fine
>as it has been for the last 20 years. 
    
    no they only have had 7 strikes in the last 20 years.
178.372HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Sep 21 1994 19:598
  Right, and most of them didn't amount to anything. If you asked the average
fan I'll bet the only one they could recall would be the '81 strike which was
caused when the owners pulled the same stunt. 

  The pattern I'm seeing here is that if the owners would just forget about
the salary cap, everything would be fine.

  George
178.373MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Thu Sep 22 1994 16:269
    >> When I said that if it ain't broke don't fix it I was referring to 
    >> the fact that before the owners upset the apple cart everything was 
    >> running along fine as it has been for the last 20 years. 
    
       The owners are so pleased with what the last 20 years has wrought
       and the course that baseball was on that they sacrificed tens of 
       millions of dollars to straighten it all out. 
    
178.374HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 22 1994 17:1022
RE        <<< Note 178.373 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>       The owners are so pleased with what the last 20 years has wrought
>       and the course that baseball was on that they sacrificed tens of 
>       millions of dollars to straighten it all out. 
    
  This assumes that what the owners did makes sense. It doesn't. They have
essentially killed (or at least wounded) the golden goose by being too greedy.

  And that's not the only thing they have messed up, they have damaged the game
by arranging their TV coverage in such a way as to try to turn baseball into a
"big event" sport like football (i.e. "Baseball Night in America"). It's not
a big event sport and never will be. As George Will says baseball is the
national pastime, not a big event sport. It's meant to be watched night after
night at a leisurely pace.

  Toss in the fact that they can't (or won't) elect a commissioner because
they can't have anyone doing things that are "good for baseball" (read bad
for business) and I think it should be pretty clear just how out of touch
with reality the owners really are.

  George
178.375Legal Update?VAOP28::RicetataThu Sep 22 1994 18:2320
Last night's episode of BASEBALL gave an interesting perspective on the
strike. It talked about the lawsuit filed by the Federal League in the 
early 1910's that was in the court system for 8 years and was finally
ruled on by the Supreme Court around 1922. The decision was that baseball
is exempt from the country's anti-trust laws, and is the basis for most
of the crap going on today. The assumption was that there would be a 
COMMISIONER in place to balance the interests of the various groups.

I never really thought about it before, but it seems pretty weird, kinda
like a license to steal. 

This decision is evidently being reviewed, according to the news this
morning. Does anyone understand the legal situation as it stands? I may
have to reconsider my position on this - it's possible that the players
are doing the "right thing" to fix an old, intolerable situation. The
news this morning also said that next years spring training is now in 
jeopardy.

josh 
178.376HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 22 1994 18:3521
                   <<< Note 178.375 by VAOP28::Rice "tata" >>>

>  This decision is evidently being reviewed, according to the news this
>morning. Does anyone understand the legal situation as it stands? 

  Congress is currently holding committee meetings for the purpose of deciding
if the exemption should be withdrawn. They have called in the representatives
for the owners and players and will use this opportunity today to make vocal
public statements against the players and owners which should go over well in
this election year.

  Next January they will take up the issue and right now it's probably about
50-50 as to whether they pull the exemption. The owners are claiming that if
the exemption is pulled, they won't be able to run as many farm teams. They
currently average about 5 and say that will go down to 2 without an exemption.

  The players are in favor of the exemption being pulled.

  Yes, next season is in jeopardy.

  George
178.377Is this as outrageous as it sounds?VAOP28::RicetataThu Sep 22 1994 18:4310
 > The players are in favor of the exemption being pulled.

I guess they are.

Is there any precedent for the exemption? Am I missing something,
or is the exemption a totally outrageous violation of basic
American rights? The guys that set this up are the same guys that
banned blacks from the game, set up the Black Sox scandal, etc....

josh
178.378METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleThu Sep 22 1994 18:5021
See it goes like this. In 1922 the Supreme Court ruled that baseball was not
a business and therefore exempt from anti-trust regulation. In the Curt Flood
case the Supreme Court said that baseball should not qualify for the
anti-trust exemption BUT it decided that it was up to Congress to change
baseball's status. Congress has so far not done that.

What this means is that unlike the NFL or NBA where the players can go to
court to argue that the owners are in violation of anti-trust laws (salary cap,
draft, etc.) baseball players cannot take that route since baseball has that
anti-trust exemption. The courts have consistently ruled that a salary cap,
unless it is acheived via collective bargaining, violates anti-trust and
labor laws. If baseball did not have the exemption then when the owners impose
their last offer - which includes a salary cap - the players could decertify
their union, sue in court, and the owners would very likey lose in court
on anti-trust grounds. Since baseball has the exemption the players cannot
win in an anti-trust suit; leaving very little choice than to strike and
hit the owners where it counts.

The Crazy Met

178.379HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Sep 22 1994 18:5725
RE                   <<< Note 178.377 by VAOP28::Rice "tata" >>>

>Is there any precedent for the exemption? Am I missing something,
>or is the exemption a totally outrageous violation of basic
>American rights? 

  The exemption was allowed by the 1922 Supreme Court. It is an exemption from
anti-trust laws enacted around the turn of the century to bust up monopolies
created by late 19th century moguls of the industrial revolution. The feeling
was that baseball was more of a sport than a business and didn't need to
be restricted by things like the Sherman Anti-trust Act.

>The guys that set this up are the same guys that
>banned blacks from the game, set up the Black Sox scandal, etc....

  No the Supreme Court had nothing to do with those things. Of course if you
tried to ban a minority from the game today the Courts wouldn't allow it but
they would probably cite the 1964 Civil Rights Act so it's not clear that the
1922 Court acted improperly. I suppose they could have been creative and forced
the league to admit blacks under the 14th Amendment but the 1922 Court was
fairly conservative and not into judicial activism. 

  The 1922 Supreme Court had nothing to do with the Black Sox scandal.

  George
178.380And on real grassMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Sep 23 1994 13:0131
re .374

>>a big event sport and never will be. As George Will says baseball is the
>>national pastime, not a big event sport. It's meant to be watched night after
>>night at a leisurely pace.

Actually, it's meant to be watched day after day at a leisurely pace.
                                   --- ----- ---

re last couple:

Excellent explanation, TCM.  You have made clear to Josh (but probably not
to MaB) why the players have no choice other than to strike.

George, I think he meant the owners when speaking of those who gave us
the color line, etc, not the Court.

As a long time student of the history of the game, I've been interested
to read how revelatory the TV series has been to many of you.  If any
of you are interested in following up, may I recommend Eliot Asinof's
book on the Black Sox scandal, Eight Men Out (there was a movie with
the same title based on the book, but of course the book goes deeper).
Not only does he illuminate the event itself, but you get a wonderful
sense of the time, the years immediately after World War I.

A week from today, I'll be in LA.  My brother-in-law promised to tape
the Burns doc for me, and I'm very much looking forward to it (though
I admit my anticipation is dampened, since I learned that Billy
Crystal makes an appearance).

Steve
178.381CAMONE::WAYNo rest for the wearyFri Sep 23 1994 13:5114
Interesting development yesterday, for whatever it's worth.

Congress has said that if they don't resolve this thing (by spring training
I think) they said they will revoke the anti-trust exemption from the
owners.

The players immediately responded with the statement that if that happens
they will immediately file an anti-trust suit.

Stay tuned folks, it ain't even begun to get interesting yet....



'Saw
178.382What's up is what's downAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksThu Oct 06 1994 05:1617


In todays Constipation, it was revealed that Greg Maddux ace pitcher for the
Braves, and one of my favorite players in the game lost 1.1m in salary for
the duration of the strike.  However, if he wins the Cy Young, his third in
a row, he will receive $750,000.  Greg is obviously the leading candidate to
win this in the NL.  GM John Scheurholz (sp?) said he will pay him, but really
has a problem with this.  Maddux says that he turned down more money to go
to Atlanta rather than the Yankees, so he loaded his contract with incentives.
I believe the Yanks offer was 30m over five years and Atlanta's was 25 over
five.  Is Greg a little out of touch?  He lives in a "Mansion" on a golf
course at the Country Club of the South (he's a golf junkie) that cost about
1m that in the New York area would have cost many times that amount.  Not
to mention he couldn't have used is clubs nearly as much due to climate.

If they struck, should they really expect to receive these incentives?
178.383Videos availableICS::MCDONNELLThu Oct 06 1994 11:4917
    
    I don't know if this was posted anywhere already, Don't remember seeing
    it. Any hoo the Ken Burns Baseball series is available through BMG
    Video Service. 1-800-598-3636 or 
    
    Ken Burns's Baseball
    BMG Video Service
    P.O. Box 5203
    Clifton, NJ 07015-9644
    
    You can buy the whole set or  preview each for 10 days. If you keep the
    first one, Baseball, A National Heirloom, you get it at intro price of
    $4.95 + $3.47 shipping and handling. All future tapes arrive about
    every 6 weeks and cost $24.95, if you decide to keep em.
    
    Later,
    	   Dave 
178.384easy call METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleThu Oct 06 1994 13:339
re: .382

The incentive is based on winning an award; the writers have chosen to
give out awards for 1994. So if Maddux wins the Cy Young award I see
no reason why he should not get the money. The incentive is based on 
his performance during the season and he accomplished that goal.

The Crazy Met

178.385MKFSA::LONGStrive for five!Thu Oct 06 1994 13:5812
    This sure feels strange, but I'm gonna hafta agree with TC* on this
    one.  Most incentives are spelled out very specificly and if the 
    player accomplishes them he's entitled to the compensation.
    
    My question is what happens to the non-awards, ie batting title,
    rbi leader, etc?  Are the people who were at the top of the list
    when the season 'ended' declared the winners and compenated 
    accordingly if they have those type of incentives in there [sic]
    contracts?
    
    
    billl
178.386METSNY::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleThu Oct 06 1994 14:028
I think that the decision was to give the batting title, HR title, etc.
to whoever was leading at the time of the strike. For the batting title
it would require 3.1 plate appearances for number of games a team had
played.

The Crazy Met

178.387The situation was foreseeable last winter, when he signed...EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Oct 06 1994 19:4216
    
> Is Greg a little out of touch?  He lives in a "Mansion" on a golf
> course at the Country Club of the South (he's a golf junkie) that cost about
> 1m that in the New York area would have cost many times that amount.  Not
> to mention he couldn't have used is clubs nearly as much due to climate.
  
    So here's an example of a player who didn't grab at the absolute
    highest buck available and he's still "out of touch".  Schuerholz is
    grandstanding a bit; he knows he doesn't have a leg to stand on.  
    Maddux was having one of the great pitching seasons of all time and 
    really needn't explain himself, legally or otherwise.  There's a major 
    labor dispute on and he's in the category of players most hurt by 
    it, regardless of his personal views.
    
    glenn
         
178.388Reality checkAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksSun Oct 09 1994 02:3349
Re: 178.387

-< The situation was foreseeable last winter, when he signed... >-

Um, it was two winters ago.  What I am trying to say here is that these
players are "out of touch".  When the players struck they should been willing
to forego all of their incentives too.  They are a union.  Doug Jones of 
Houston is about bankrupt because of this strike.  He never had an opportunity
to write an incentive based contract.  Then we have Steve "Seven time drug
offender" Howe saying that the owners don't care about the players.  I am on
the players side, believe it or not, in this strike.  But the player's also
need to get a little dose of reality.  Sure there are teams that are making 
money, and most of those make less than what two players on the pitching staff
are getting paid.  


>>So here's an example of a player who didn't grab at the absolute
    highest buck available and he's still "out of touch".  


Yes he is out of touch and so are you.  Do you think the consumer price index
is the same in N.Y. as it is in Atlanta?  I have heard the argument why should 
the player's police the game for the owners.  I think the salary cap is wrong,
but what about arbitration.  It's good in some situations, but again, I will
use the example of the Atlanta Braves.  Jeff Blauser, pretty average SS, has
a career year.  He is making about 1m.  Arbitration gives him 3.5m.  Instead
of hitting .320 he is hitting about .250.  And what about Barry Bonds?  If
he becomes the template, .340 average, 40 hr, 120 rbi and guareented a luxury
suite on the road, and a 7m salary where does it end?   It ends people when
you can't afford to go to games anymore.  I went to a game at Atlanta-Fulton
County shortly before the strike.  Great tickets, behing the visiting team 
dugout.  They were $20.00 a piece.  I brought my girlfriend, a friend of mine
brought his son.  We scrambled to get down there for the opening pitch.  We
didn't have time to stop for dinner.  I got five hot dogs and four cokes.
This was $28.50.  So with parking and tickets and "dinner", we spent $115.50. 
But it was a great game.  Maddux pitched and won.   How many people though
can afford this amount of money to see baseball?  I wouldn't even try to get
season tickets.   

I hope they (players and owners) find a middle ground in all this.  In Ken
Burns Baseball it was told that when the game started out it was for the 
elite class, well for another reason and another topic, there isn't enough
people in most major league cities that are in that class.

That's all,

Paul

178.389HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Oct 11 1994 14:3947
RE           <<< Note 178.388 by AIMTEC::MORABITO_P "Hotlanta Rocks" >>>

>Um, it was two winters ago.  What I am trying to say here is that these
>players are "out of touch".  When the players struck they should been willing
>to forego all of their incentives too.  

  I think they are willing to forego just about everything that happens during
the strike. The issue here is that these awards are given for things that
happened before the strike.

>But the player's also
>need to get a little dose of reality.  Sure there are teams that are making 
>money, and most of those make less than what two players on the pitching staff
>are getting paid.  

  Well this is the "reality" the owners would like to have you believe. I
wonder why they keep their books closed and forego the opportunity to prove
that what they are claiming is true?

>Yes he is out of touch and so are you.  Do you think the consumer price index
>is the same in N.Y. as it is in Atlanta?  

  I don't think the players are as effected by the high prices in New York as
other people. If you make $2,000,000 a year you don't have to pay as high a
percentage for living expenses as someone making $50,000 a year. Players on
NY teams can keep a house anywhere in the country (world for that matter) and
live out of an apartment during the regular season.

>If [Blauser]
>becomes the template, .340 average, 40 hr, 120 rbi and guaranteed a luxury
>suite on the road, and a 7m salary where does it end?   

  Well 1st of all I believe that Jeff Blauser is critically important to the
Braves. Yes his numbers are off this year but there are times when he
carries the team. And also you don't need the same numbers at SS that you 
would at 1st base or in the outfield.

>It ends people when
>you can't afford to go to games anymore.  

  There's no reason to believe that there is any relationship between ticket
prices and player salaries. Do you really believe that if the owners get their
cap they will lower ticket prices and give the difference back to the fans? I
don't. I think they will charge the highest price they can regardless of what
they have to pay for salaries. 

  George
178.390Capitalism is so hard to fight with rules and regs: why even try?EDWIN::WAUGAMANTue Oct 11 1994 16:1718
> Well this is the "reality" the owners would like to have you believe. I
> wonder why they keep their books closed and forego the opportunity to prove
> that what they are claiming is true?
    
    I agree.  If Greg Maddux and I are the ones "out of touch", then why is
    Maddux receiving the bonus?  Because he's legally entitled to it,
    that's why.  I happen to think that notions like players renouncing all
    potential sources of income on principle and owners giving fans breaks 
    on ticket prices out of the goodness of their hearts are truly 
    naive.  I'm not saying that I feel good (or sorry) for Greg Maddux or 
    anything dramatic like that, but it's certainly not "out of touch" to 
    believe that on the open market he's worth every penny of his $6M 
    salary and that many people will pay top dollar to see him earn 
    that money.  That's reality; the free market reality.
    
    glenn
    
178.391ARGHHH!!!ODIXIE::ZOGRANHear me now, believe me laterTue Nov 01 1994 16:5916
    FLAME ON
    
    Just heard on the radio that as a taxpayer in Fulton County, GA, I will
    have the privelege of paying more <r.o. ing> property taxes next year
    to help offset the payments on the revenue bonds used to build the
    stadium (or something like that!).  This was due to the decreased
    revenues that the Stadium Authority received on account of the <r.o. ing> 
    BASEBALL STRIKE.  I think the amount is something along the lines of
    $2M.  Infrickincredible.
    
    Oughta get Turner to sell a herd of buffalo instead.
    
    Consider me
    
    PissedoffUMDan 
       
178.392AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksThu Nov 03 1994 21:1910
Flame,

Who do you think get will get the revenue from the lease of luxury boxes 
for the new Olympic Stadium once it becomes a baseball arena?  It won't be 
you and me.  This strike is a lose - lose proposition for the fans.  Not
only did we not see the conclusion of the baseball season, but we will be
paying for it's cancellation one way or the other.

Paul
178.393W'ell get the shaftODIXIE::ZOGRANwhatchyalookinat?Thu Nov 03 1994 23:588
    Who else?  Either the owners or the stadium authority.  Think they'll
    ever lower our taxes if they pay off the stadium early?  Yeah, right.
    
    I have been searching the papers for more news on this.  If it ever
    appears it ought to be sent to all of those cities contemplating
    granting tax breaks or floating bonds to attract a pro team.
    
    UMDan
178.394maybe a move?BSS::NEUZILJust call me FredFri Nov 11 1994 13:296

	Ravitch (sp) is out as negotiator for the owners, John Harrington from
	the Red Sox is in.

	Kevin
178.395When will the owners wake up?AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksSat Nov 12 1994 14:104
Ravitch was just a puppet for the owners, as is Selig, and as Harrigton will 
be.  The sooner the owners realize that they are not going to break this 
union, the sooner baseball will resume.  
178.396you're only a sap if you want to be...USCTR1::GARBARINOSun Nov 13 1994 14:1914
>This strike is a lose - lose proposition for the fans.  Not
>only did we not see the conclusion of the baseball season, but we will be
>paying for it's cancellation one way or the other.

Only if you agree to.  The owners/players can't take your money unless
YOU give it to them.

By the way, the owners aren't going to break the union...there will be
one no matter what happens.  But they (the owners) will get a 'correction'
in salaries...which (IMO) is what this really is about.

Dec 7 is the next big day (the day when players can declare for arbitration).
If there isn't a negotiated settlement, the owners will impose the new
salary structure.
178.397gammons a read25022::BREENMon Nov 14 1994 20:4616
    Gammon was interesting Sunday for a few reasons
    
    1.  He's no longer an owners mouthpiece - he was hard on them; mainly
    for stupidly wasting money (usa ad) while cutting personnel
    
    2.  he mentioned a theory that with 4 year free agency in the future
    that players may stay in the minors longer and veterans at reduced
    salaries may play longer
    
    	this could lead to a higher (that is more error free) type of game
    which I welcome
    
    Now could this mean a slow down is the escalation in ticket prices
    because of some reduced salaries?
    
    	nah
178.398Great room service?ODIXIE::ZOGRANOne hand clappingTue Nov 15 1994 12:0610
    Paper today said that the owners have backed off on their position
    regarding the salary cap, opting instead for a payroll or revenue tax.
    
    And, in another note, while many clubs have laid off employees and
    imposed other cost cutting measures, no one must have told the GMs. 
    They are all staying at the luxurious Phoenician, a huge resort where
    standard rooms start at over $200 per night.
    
    UMDan
    
178.399PTOS01::JACOBRsnoring thru my lifeTue Nov 15 1994 12:0910
    
    >>And, in another note, while many clubs have laid off employees and
    >>imposed other cost cutting measures, no one must have told the GMs. 
    >>They are all staying at the luxurious Phoenician, a huge resort where
    >>standard rooms start at over $200 per night.
    
    Sounds like the mgmt of a certain company I know of.....
    
    JaKe
    
178.40061 PiratesODIXIE::ZOGRANOne hand clappingTue Nov 15 1994 12:1911
    Jake,
    
    Not to go down a rathole, but where in Pitt. do you live?  I spent the
    early years of my life (1955 - 63) in West Mifflin.  Still have 
    relatives living in Munhall.  Used to make the twice yearly pilgrimage
    to Pitt. from DC (Easter and Thanksgiving).  Miss the chipped ham from
    Isalys (sp), and seeing the red hot ingots from the mill while driving 
    over the bridge from (mumble) Hill.
    
    UMDan
    
178.401PTOS01::JACOBRsnoring thru my lifeTue Nov 15 1994 13:075
    I live in Pitcairn, which is a small town that was a huge railroad town
    many many years ago, and completely surrounded by MOnroeville.
    
    JaKe
    
178.402our condolencesFRETZ::HEISERGrace changes everythingTue Nov 15 1994 14:551
    >    I live in Pitcairn, 
178.403PTOS02::JACOBRsnoring thru my lifeTue Nov 15 1994 18:284
    And just what in the hell do you know about Pennsylvania, Heiserp.
    
    JaKe
    
178.404actually nothingFRETZ::HEISERGrace changes everythingTue Nov 15 1994 18:460
178.40557045::FRANCUSThere is no joy in MudvilleTue Nov 15 1994 22:175
    I thought that MikeH was wishing the rest of Pitcairn
    condolences.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.406USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Nov 30 1994 15:1713
Boy, it looks like Fehr is 'banking' on the courts to win this one for
the union.  A strategy that will dramatically change MLB, one way or the
other.  If I were a player, I'm not sure I'd want to roll the dice this
way.  There are millions on the table right now.  There will be a lot
less if the owners win this thing.

It's obvious, by their not offering a counter-proposal, that the union
doesn't want to bargain under the current situation.  This "failure
to bargain" will be the owners' reason for implementing their new salary
cap system, which will cause the union to sue the owners for not bargaining
in good faith.

This is going to be fun.
178.407It's just not Fehr...FXTROT::ALLEMANGWed Nov 30 1994 15:457
The $trike didn't stop the SF Giants from sending out their Cactus League
season ticket renewal form right on schedule...  I've got a rotten feeling
that I'm shelling out buck$ 3 months in advance to see instructional league
talent.  Unfortunately it's either that or lose the seats for a long long
time.  $hit.

178.408Cows long out of the barn; don't much matter 'cept play/no playEDWIN::WAUGAMANWed Nov 30 1994 16:0128
> Boy, it looks like Fehr is 'banking' on the courts to win this one for
> the union.  A strategy that will dramatically change MLB, one way or the
> other.  If I were a player, I'm not sure I'd want to roll the dice this
> way.  There are millions on the table right now.  There will be a lot
> less if the owners win this thing.
    
    I look at it a little differently.  I think that Fehr's strategy of an
    end-of-season strike has already so miserably failed that he's left with 
    little recourse but to battle for total player freedom in the courts.
    The problem now is that whether he settles or not, and even if he wins 
    in court, overall the players are looking at drastic pay cuts even in 
    a completely unrestricted talent market.  The money of last year 
    (never mind the incredible money of 2-3 years ago under the old CBS 
    TV contract) is long gone.  It was over a month ago that the owners 
    pulled their guarantee of 50% of existing revenues, $1B salary "floor" 
    (they had to, no doubt that kind of money just won't be there).
    
    What I hope now happens is that similar with the NFL, the players
    technically dissolve their union in order to pursue this in the courts 
    while they return to work next spring.  I don't see this as being so 
    terrible as opposed to settling.  They may win on the principles 
    they've been arguing (while big losers financially), and maybe just 
    maybe some legal (overturning the antitrust exemption would be a good
    start) as well as financial sanity will return to the sport.
    
    glenn
    
178.409HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Nov 30 1994 19:3527
  Last I heard the players were expected to offer a counter proposal. The note
a few back seems to suggest that they didn't. Is that something that just
happened today? 

  In any case, another possibility is that the players feel that the owners
blinked last week (withdrawing their insistence on a cap) and are tightening
the thumb screws. Maybe they feel that the owners are afraid of having their
anti-trust exemption lifted by Congress and are about to cave in. 

  It appears that something happened to change the owners feelings. When they
took the big hit of canceling playoffs and the World Series, just about
everyone was saying that the players had really messed up and nothing would
stop the owners from holding out through the middle of next year. 

  The owners don't make nearly as much early in the year as they do at the end
but holding out until July would really put pressure on the players. And
there's also the possibility of playing with scabs. 

  But none of that happened. After taking the big World Series loss, the owners
dropped their demand for a cap. Something has them scared and the only thing I
can see is the threat from Congress of losing their anti-trust exemption. 

  The players probably see the owners as being on the ropes. Makes sense that
they would apply the pressure to see how far the owners will cave. They can
always offer a counter proposal and take the "tax" in time for opening day.

  George 
178.410USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Nov 30 1994 20:0715
>  Last I heard the players were expected to offer a counter proposal. The note
>a few back seems to suggest that they didn't. Is that something that just
>happened today? 

In today's USA Today it is being reported that the players are not going to
make a counter-proposal.  The owners don't expect one, and feel that they
have no choice but to implement their system next week to insure a '95
season.

None of the articles I've read over the last 2 weeks claim that the
players have an upper-hand.  Fehr keeps saying that this 'script'
has been laid out by the owners for over 2 years, and they're just
implementing it as planned.  I feel that he's going along with it,
putting all hope on the courts.  If he doesn't win there, he's lost
the war.
178.411HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Nov 30 1994 20:2216
  But still there is the question, if the owners were willing to hold out for
the cap and lose all that playoff and world series income, why back down now?

  Making this offer in time to save the World Series made some sense.

  Not making any offer now and saying "we took the big hit, now we're going
to squeeze the players through mid summer" makes some sense.

  But what kind of sense is it for the owners to insist on the cap and lose
the playoff money then turn around and soften their position in November?

  Sounds to me like they are afraid of losing the anti-trust exemption and are
getting cold feet. If that's the case, then by playing hardball the players
could win. 

  George 
178.412When you get down to it, neither side has budged much at allEDWIN::WAUGAMANWed Nov 30 1994 20:5119
> But still there is the question, if the owners were willing to hold out for
> the cap and lose all that playoff and world series income, why back down now?
    
    They're not backing down, nor for all we know have they softened their
    proposal one bit.  There's no reason for the owners to be religious 
    about something called "The Cap".  I don't know the details of the 
    hundreds of pages in this new "tax" proposal, but one thing for 
    certain about it is that it still involves a maximum payroll, and if 
    you throw a 100% tax (or 50%, or even 25%) on anything above that max 
    and remove some guarantees, it's a hard salary cap by another name and 
    the overall deal might be even worse for the players.  The players' 
    union has explicitly acknowledged this possibility and is hedging about 
    not having enough time to review the plan, but more likely as Joe 
    alluded to the union understands the crux of the offer, doesn't like 
    it, and would just as soon battle on in the courts.
    
    glenn
    
178.413He really bagged 'emAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksThu Dec 01 1994 05:1010
The owners are a mess.  Who was the owner that gave Bagwell a 27.5 million/
4 year contract?  The guy has had one great year (100 games) and maybe one 
other good season.  If the owners want to meet the enemy, they should only 
look in the mirror.  They want sanity in salaries and they give a possible
fluke 27M.  At 6M+/yr, this amounts to  about 1/6 of what a the proposed 
salary cap will be.  Insane.


Paul
178.414Bagwell is far from a one year wonderAD::HEATHCan the Pats duplilcate it???Thu Dec 01 1994 11:247
    
    
    One good year for Bagwell.  Get real he won the NL ROY and has been
    a consistant preformer ever since.  He will post .300 30 100 numbers
    for the next 10 years.
    
    Jerry
178.415just don't bid on other owners' playersCNTROL::CHILDSTheresa's Sound WorldThu Dec 01 1994 11:567
  but why throw that much money at Bagwell (who'll obviously be great forever
  as most former redsoxs are) if you're trying to cry poverty? What the owners
  need is a good old lesson in colusion without getting caught from the good
  ole boys of the NFL....

  mike
178.416ROCK::HUBERThe Broncos are the BEST team in the NFL!Thu Dec 01 1994 12:0211
    
    The problem the owners have had in the past is a willingness to throw
    millions at free agents - who, often on the verge of 30 when they
    achieve free agency, are on the whole bad investments (the few
    exceptions being guys like Maddux and Bonds who were only 26, and short
    incentive-laden contracts).
    
    Bagwell's the guy you want to give a big contract to - he's worth it,
    at least as much as any player's worth $7 million/yr.
    
    Joe
178.417HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Dec 01 1994 12:3519
  ... and then there's the problem that not all the owners think alike. 

  There is one group of owners who have plenty of money and are willing to pay
big bucks to get the best players all the time. At the other end there are poor
owners who can never spend those bucks. 

  Then in the middle there are probably owners who will spend when they have a
reasonable shot at winning but will clean house during rebuilding years. 

  If the poor owners and middle owners joint forces to demand a cap then the
poor owners hold out and refuse to support a 2/3rds vote when the middle owners
cave in and want to join the rich owners, you have the mess we have now. 

  Anyway, this morning's Boston Globe is reporting that the upcoming deadline
for arbitration is being extended a couple weeks and that the players will
now have more time to review the "tax" proposal. This seems to be going on
in Atlanta.

  George
178.418USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Dec 01 1994 12:587
>  What the owners
>  need is a good old lesson in colusion without getting caught from the good
>  ole boys of the NFL....

You got it, Mike.  To be honest, I don't see anything wrong with some
type of rules regarding 'salary structure', on some scale.  And the scale
can be revisited each year, looking at where revenues are going.
178.41957042::francusThere is no joy in MudvilleThu Dec 01 1994 17:314
The reason collusion killed the owners is because it was explicitly in the 
contract that this was not allowed. NFL agreement never did have that clause.

The Crazy Met
178.420Baseball Armegeddon Scenarios?25022::BREENBut in the land of the One-eyed MenFri Dec 02 1994 17:3730
    Well I see there's a chance that non-union players will be invited to
    suit up next spring to break the strike.  Both Shaugnessy and Whiteside
    of the Globe talked about this today.
    
    I don't know how I feel about the owners unilaterally installing the
    cap.  It might be entertaining to see the playing out of this drama.
    
    Some possibilities:
    
    	1.  The "new" league that someone has going.  Players whose
    specific contract has expired could enroll here.  Would mlb try to stop
    them by invoking reserve clause.
    		Would any self-respecting judge uphold such a ridiculous
    clause but with Republicanism rampant naything is possible.
    
    	2.  If no new league how about winner take all tournements.
    
    	3.  Players at end of contract may with blessing of union show up
    "ready to work".  Globe says refusal to allow these players back could 
    result in back paying being awarded in a future judgement (with
    penalties?).
    
    	The ultimate irony would be that so much havoc results that an
    entirely new form of baseball emerges from the dust based on free
    market rules with 6 teams in NewYork area, 2 - 3 around Boston and none
    in say Pittsburgh, Milwaukee.  That is the small markets that
    precipitated the armageddon losing all.
    
    	Franchise values in this scenario would essentially start at the
    value of the ballpark lease arrangement.
178.421ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsThu Feb 02 1995 13:5429
    
    Well, I'm come to a decision w.r.t. replacement players/scab games.
    
    I _really_ hope they go through with them.
    
    More than that, I hope the end result is _not_ an end to the strike,
    but instead the formation of a new league.
    
    Baseball's needed a shake up for some time.  The formation of a second
    league has the potential to do some good things...
    
    1) A return of independent minor leagues.  They're making inroads
       already, but competing major leagues makes independent minor
       leagues much more feasable.
    
    2) Expansion of the base from which talent is drawn.  With the need
       for additional players, markets which have been largely untapped
       (most anywhere outside the Americas, really) will be more likely
       to be utilized.
    
    3) More baseball.  I'd love to have more baseball options than the
       Red Sox, Paw Sox, and New Haven.  Worcester, Nashua, and Springfield
       should be able to support teams...
    
    If "scabball" is played, I'll watch it.  If the players form their
    own league, I'll watch that.  And if more minor league teams appear,
    I'll most certainly watch them.
    
    Joe (secretly hoping for Cuyahoga Falls and Westboro rookie-league teams)
178.422HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Feb 02 1995 13:555
  New league, great!!!

  Let's form a Rotisserie league!!!

  George
178.423Wouldn't mind it, can't see it though...EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 02 1995 14:2818
    
>    I _really_ hope they go through with them.
>
>    More than that, I hope the end result is _not_ an end to the strike,
>    but instead the formation of a new league.
    
    I'd go along with that but obviously that's not the owner's strategy 
    in going with replacement games.  The strategy is to prove once and 
    for all the pre-eminence of the existing historical franchises  
    ("the uniforms") over the players who wear them and if it works, it 
    also works against any idea of new leagues being competitive.  That
    includes minor leagues which if anything would be scaled down rather
    than up.  Personally I think there's some middle ground in the 
    argument of the importance of franchise versus player, but the notion
    of successful new leagues coming out of it is a pipe dream.
    
    glenn
    
178.424USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 02 1995 14:582
Fans' love and devotion are to teams, not players (who come and go, and
are only part of the history of a team).
178.425IMBETR::DUPREZThu Feb 02 1995 15:029
RE: .421

There was actually an article in yesterday's (?) Nashua Telegraph about
someone who is trying to organize a short-season A league - among the cities
mentioned were Nashua, Newark, NYC, as well as a few others in NE/NY.

It's a perfect fit for Nashua - short-season wouldn't impinge on too many
of the other events at Holman Stadium.  I'd probably go in for a couple of
season tickets if there is such a thing for short-season A ball.
178.426HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Feb 02 1995 15:3211
RE                     <<< Note 178.423 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>

>Personally I think there's some middle ground in the 
>    argument of the importance of franchise versus player, but the notion
>    of successful new leagues coming out of it is a pipe dream.
    
  Isn't that what the owners of the National League said back in the 1890s
when Ban Johnson, Charles Comiskey, Connie Mack, John McGraw et.al. said they
were going build a new major league out of the Western League?

  George
178.427More relevant, what happened to the USBL concept?EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 02 1995 15:3814
> Isn't that what the owners of the National League said back in the 1890s
> when Ban Johnson, Charles Comiskey, Connie Mack, John McGraw et.al. said they
> were going build a new major league out of the Western League?
    
    Yeah, so?  That was almost 100 years ago when even the "established" 
    National League was in major flux, and even at that period for the one 
    league that survived (the AL) a half-dozen other major leagues 
    including a couple of attempts at players leagues went belly up.  Let's 
    just say that if they were looking for investors I wouldn't put up a 
    dime...
    
    glenn
    
178.428MKFSA::LONGClose, but no cigar!Thu Feb 02 1995 16:248
>>Let's just say that if they were looking for investors I wouldn't 
>>put up a dime...

	Somehow, Glenn, I really doubt you are high on their list
	of perspective high rollers to invest in a franchise.


	billl
178.429Perhaps?AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeThu Feb 02 1995 16:2913
    This morning's discussion does bring up a point.  Many of the player
    reps do seem to be pitchers (Cone,Glavine,Clemens) with secure, high
    paying contracts.  Perhaps these players volunteer because others would
    in fact feel threatened.
    
    Now the impetus of the players association has been towards protecting
    the skewed end of the player-owner divvying of the plot.
    
    If the owners have indeed in the past acted or portrayed themselves in
    a manner suggesting possible reprisal toward reps then this is one of
    those "hung by one's own petard" kind of things.
    
    billte
178.430ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsThu Feb 02 1995 16:4616
    
>    Personally I think there's some middle ground in the 
>    argument of the importance of franchise versus player, but the notion
>    of successful new leagues coming out of it is a pipe dream.
    
    Successful _major_ leagues?  Yeah, probably.
    
    Successful _minor_ leagues, though, is another matter altogether.
    The interest in minor league baseball clearly seems to be growing,
    not waning, and the impasse is unlikely to cut into this interest.
    
    Of course, neither the players nor the owners will make out if
    independent minor leagues take away fans, and the scenario of
    neither of them benefitting is seductive...
    
    Joe 
178.431asked in ::red Sox alsoONOFRE::MAY_BRpet rocks, pogs, Dallas CowboysThu Feb 02 1995 16:537
    Don't these restricted FA only have a limited time to sign, or their   
    rights revert back to their current teams?  And doesn't the current   
    signing lockout by the union preclude these guys from signing before   
    the rights do revert back?
    
    Brews
    
178.432CNTROL::CHILDSUMass &gt; UConnThu Feb 02 1995 17:065
 naw the pitchers sign up because they want to be one of the boys and they
 have the most free time on their hands....

 mike
178.433CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHLindsey is FIVE!!!Thu Feb 02 1995 18:2119
|    This morning's discussion does bring up a point.  Many of the player
|    reps do seem to be pitchers (Cone,Glavine,Clemens) with secure, high
|    paying contracts.  Perhaps these players volunteer because others would
|    in fact feel threatened.

Player reps in all sports have traditionally been targets
by management.  I remember many times when a player rep
is cut, traded, or otherwise screwed byt their club.  By
having high profile, big buck guys in their, the teams 
are less likely to take retribution against them.


|	Somehow, Glenn, I really doubt you are high on their list
|	of perspective high rollers to invest in a franchise.

Yabut I bet ol'glenn is gettin' the arm loose in case the 
Scab Sox need a setup man in the bullpen.

=Bob=
178.434EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 02 1995 18:3112
>|	Somehow, Glenn, I really doubt you are high on their list
>|	of perspective high rollers to invest in a franchise.
>
> Yabut I bet ol'glenn is gettin' the arm loose in case the 
> Scab Sox need a setup man in the bullpen.
    
    No, that's 'Saw's job.  As I recall, six-packs, Red Man chewing tobacco
    and all the attendant damages are involved...
    
    glenn
    
178.435AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeThu Feb 02 1995 18:3916
    But Bob, etal,
    	My point really is whether you agree that this threat or
    retribution has come back to haunt mlb and nhl owners in two costly
    strikes.
    
    	Perhaps if owners had rolled out the red carpet even if it killed
    them and threw perks and post career coaching jobs to these reps that
    in the long term they'd have been better off (at no real cost other
    than pride).
    
    	But that type of thing would be totally opposite in character for
    these owners.
    
    	They all want to copy the nba but they never think of what makes
    nba-players negotiations  work: a mutual trust and the recognition that
    what's good for the players is ultimitely good for the owners.
178.436USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 02 1995 19:356
>    what's good for the players is ultimitely good for the owners.

I don't think I'd accept that statement.  Look at where the NBA is
heading with the spoiled brats that are becoming the stars, having
earned nothing on the floor.  The NBA may have peaked, with future
revenues unable to support the growing player-compensation-monster.
178.437The eye of the beholderAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeThu Feb 02 1995 20:1720
    Part of the problem here is the type of contract offered to the first
    round draft choice, long term.  The Webbers and Hills don't need more
    than a year of orientation to be stars and full contributors.  Why
    shouldn't they ask for full compensation; ironically I do admit they
    have some leverage as high draft choices, something their counterpart
    veterans don't have.
    
    ie I hardly call them spoiled, only savvy marketeers.  It certainly
    does spoil the broth for others such as Pippen who makes half that of
    say Mashburn (true?).  Webber isn't going to allow himself to be put
    into the position of a Pippen(or Michael Jordan for that matter) while
    he has that leverage.  And if he produces Bullet fans won't call him
    spoiled.
    
    But this is also an example of a "problem" which both nba owners and
    players will work together to solve (at the expense of the rookies). 
    
    If they don't get it done soon they'll be a mass exodus this year as
    surely by next year a rookie cap will be in place.  Of course then the
    exodus may be to Europe if the cap is too low.
178.438SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningThu Feb 02 1995 20:428
The reason that the owners are going forward with the replacement 
games is to give the striking players a way to cross the line. No 
games, no pressure on the union. With the replacement games 
going, you'll see a few players crossing that line every week. 
Every player that crosses the line and plays is a nail in the 
coffin of the players union.

daryll
178.439CNTROL::CHILDSUMass &gt; UConnFri Feb 03 1995 12:319
 and what if they don't cross? 

 SO let's see Pittsburg is going to charge 1/2 price for their first 20
 games reguardless of whether it's replacment players or the real players.
 Isn't Pittsburg supposed to be one of the ones suffering the most? Seems
 like a mighty generous offer to try and win fan support imo.........

 mike
178.440USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Feb 03 1995 14:1312
>    ie I hardly call them spoiled, only savvy marketeers.

Chris Morris wouldn't tie his shoes during practice, when asked to do
so.  Derrick Coleman was going to be fined by Beard for something, and
Coleman said he'd give him a blank check.  Kendall Gill skips practice
and doesn't care about the fine.  Anfernee Hardaway wants to renegoatiate
his contract after ONE YEAR, and says the 'older guys' are jealous of
the money he and other younger players are making.  Webber and Sprewell
do their best to get Nelson fired.  Rider fights with his coach through
the press.  Donyell Marshall doesn't even try on the defensive end.

And none of the above have won a thing, or even come close.
178.441DZIGN::ROBICHAUDTheHowardSternMemorialRestStopFri Feb 03 1995 15:057
    	Why pay half price for a Red Sox replacement game when you can
    go see their best AAA talent in Pawtucket for $5.50, or less (along 
    with free parking and reasonable concession prices)?  Unless the
    major leagues force their top AAA talent to cross the line I would
    think the AAA leagues would benefit from scab baseball.
    
    				   /Don
178.442CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Fri Feb 03 1995 15:533
re .441:

	Yeah, what he said.
178.443ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsFri Feb 03 1995 16:349
    
>    	Why pay half price for a Red Sox replacement game when you can
>    go see their best AAA talent in Pawtucket for $5.50, or less (along 
>    with free parking and reasonable concession prices)?
    
    Driving distance, more than anything else, plus the chance to see
    the Indians...
    
    Joe
178.444MSE1::FRANCUSLast day as a free man 7/8Sun Feb 05 1995 03:594
    Yabbut you would hardly be seeing the Indians.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.445CNTROL::CHILDSUMass &gt; UConnMon Feb 06 1995 11:319
 well it's monday and still no agreement but it's interesting that the owners
 backed off the salary cap once the National Labor Board threaten  to take
 them to court. 

 If CLinton wants a deal I think all he'd have to do was say settle it tomorrow
 or we're taking away the anti-trust thing.........

 mike
178.446CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 06 1995 12:025
    Re-1
    I think he did last night. I don't know if the anti-trust thing was
    mentioned but he did send Reich and Usery back to both sides and told
    them to get it done today.
    
178.447Enough already...PCBUOA::MORGANMon Feb 06 1995 12:4710
    Gammons mentioned in his Boston Globe article yesterday that one of 
    the many topics being negotiated, is the very possible move of the 
    Montreal Expos to either Orlando or a northern Va. city.
    
    I'm not sure about the entire process here, but I would hope that when
    the owners and players fail to reach an agreement today, both sides
    allow Usery to offer his proposal, sign the sumbitch and play ball.
    That way both sides can save what little face they have left.
    
    					Steve  
178.448USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 06 1995 12:5211
> If CLinton wants a deal I think all he'd have to do was say settle it tomorrow
> or we're taking away the anti-trust thing.........

You're assuming it's the owners that aren't negotiating, Mike.  I think
both sides are to blame here.

BTW, Gammons (or somebody) wrote a long time ago that removing baseball's
antitrust exemption wouldn't really change the situation very much (from
a negotiating standpoint).  Basically, it would allow 'other' league
competition, and somehow hurt the current minor league setup, but with
regards to the current owners-players impasse, it wouldn't change a thing.
178.449ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsMon Feb 06 1995 13:0212
    
>    Yabbut you would hardly be seeing the Indians.
    
    Well, that all depends.  To me, the Indians are the team representing
    the city of Cleveland; Albert Belle, Carlos Baerga, Jim Thome, and
    so on are players whose career's I've followed and whom I root for.
    
    When they're matched up, that's great; when they aren't, I still
    root for them individually.  I still root for Brett Butler, and he
    and the Indians haven't been together for years now...
    
    Joe
178.450PEAKS::WOESTEHOFFMon Feb 06 1995 14:0214
  Let's see, Police go on strike and the criminals can run free. Firemen
  go on strike and peoples house can burn to the ground. Nurses and doctors
  can go on strike and people can just die in their beds. Teachers can go
  on strike and the kids can just grow up not knowing how to read or write.
  None of these strikes merit goverment intervention. Buuuuttttt, baseball 
  players go on strike and congress is ready to order the players and owners to
  play ball with a gummermint mandated settlement.

  Something makes me think that our gummermint has it's priorities mixed up.

  I say, let em slug it out. The government has too many other important
  things to work on.

	Keith
178.451I'll try with Webber but defending Coleman's past meAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeMon Feb 06 1995 14:0314
    re spoiled vs savvy marketeers
    
    Now you're on the subject of how the team handles them after the player
    has signed the longterm, lifetime security contract before playing a
    game.  I think thought the spoiling happened a long time before.
    
    Apparently the two sides in baseball have a proposal that each equally
    detests so it probably should be forced upon them :-)
    
    The owners would probably be happy with some sort of cap/tax except
    they now want to recoup their losses from last year's strike.  This is
    mostly vengeance  more than anything else which is why Clinton or
    whomever should just impose something on them since they probably can
    no longer bargain in good faith.
178.452Maybe Usery should just split the differenceMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Feb 06 1995 14:148
I'm starting to be guardedly optimistic.  They're at least talking about
the same thing, for the first time, even though they're still far apart.

I suspect the threat of government intervention is sufficient to concentrate
their minds, and no actual dictation will be necessary.  Anyway, how are you
going to prevent a congressman from grandstanding?

Steve
178.453USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 06 1995 14:317
>I suspect the threat of government intervention is sufficient to concentrate
>their minds, and no actual dictation will be necessary.

Any mature adult would think so.  But it appears the hatred between these
two groups runs so deep, that mature, reasonable thought is out of the
question.  A settlement SHOULD BE imposed on them.  And hopefully it
pisses them all off.
178.454Not that big a deal (so far, if ever)EDWIN::WAUGAMANMon Feb 06 1995 14:3323
                  
>  I say, let em slug it out. The government has too many other important
>  things to work on.
    
    Only problem with this is that they'll be slugging it out in the
    federal courts at costs far higher than the salary of the single
    negotiator involved to date.  Throw in the fact that there are
    legitimate _outside_ economic interests at stake running into the 
    hundreds of millions of dollars and some limited government 
    intervention (don't confuse the amount of publicity with the amount 
    of involvement) does make sense.  It's unfortunate and perhaps even 
    "unnecessary" but there are all sorts of "national interests" that 
    in theory the government shouldn't need to be involved with but 
    nonetheless are, for practical purposes.
    
    A second point is that it is impossible for Congress (specifically) 
    _not_ to be involved on a legal basis since they have already passed
    legislation exempting baseball from the country's antitrust laws.
    In this case in order to become truly uninvolved they'd have to 
    intervene on this particular issue by striking the exemption.  
    Congress currently "owns" this legislation whether we like it or not. 
    
    glenn 
178.455CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 06 1995 14:3612
    Re a couple back
    If teachers, police or firemen go on strike the government via the
    courts do get involved issuing back to work orders and fines if the
    strike continues. Florida and Arizona could lose hundreds of millions
    of dollars in tourism in the next 2 months if the strike is not
    settled. Many cities in each state put up big bucks to entice teams to
    train in their cities. If the strike goes into the regular season many
    cities lose big money in taxes and in stadium revenue. This is a 2
    billion dollar/year industry. It does affect many people.
    
    Mike
    
178.456MSE1::FRANCUSLast day as a free man 7/8Mon Feb 06 1995 16:2313
    re: .454
    
    minor nit on the anti-trust thing. Congress did not pass any law
    exempting baseball from anti-trust. In 1922 the Supreme Court ruled
    that baseball was not a business and thus was exempt from anti-trust.
    In the Flood case in 1970 the Supreme Court ruled that baseball was a
    business, however since Congress never passed new legislation to negate
    the Court's 1922 ruling Congress implicitly held that baseball shuld be
    exempt from anti-trust and Congress would need to pass legislation to
    change that.
    
    The Crazy Met
    
178.457PEAKS::WOESTEHOFFMon Feb 06 1995 18:0717
  Whenever any large union goes on strike, it will affect many other people.
  Like when airline mechanics or air traffic controllers go on strike,
  thousands of people are inconvenienced and the travel that is neccessary
  for the well being of many companies is impossible. Or, what if the
  autoworkers or steelworkers go on strike. Then there's a heck of a lot
  less money floating through the cities of Detroit or Pittsburgh not to
  mention all the other problems it would cause in the auto or construction
  industry. 

  I agree, when baseball players go on strike, it affects the
  wallets of many other people who are not owners or players. But it's still 
  not that much different when other unions go on strike.

  Now, if the beer companies ever go on strike, that indeed is a national
  emergency and the gummermint needs to do something to get them back to work.

     Keith     
178.458USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 06 1995 18:165
>  Now, if the beer companies ever go on strike, that indeed is a national
>  emergency and the gummermint needs to do something to get them back to work.

Not as long as the German and Dutch beer workers are still on the job.   :^)
If they go on strike, call an international SUMMIT immediately !
178.459But they have intervened...SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningMon Feb 06 1995 18:3510
                    <<< Note 178.457 by PEAKS::WOESTEHOFF >>>

 > Whenever any large union goes on strike, it will affect many other people.
 > Like when airline mechanics or air traffic controllers go on strike,
 > thousands of people are inconvenienced and the travel that is neccessary

   In the case of the air traffic controllers, the govt DID 
   step in and handled it appropriately.

   daryll
178.460PEAKS::WOESTEHOFFMon Feb 06 1995 18:507
>   In the case of the air traffic controllers, the govt DID 
>   step in and handled it appropriately.

  Of course they did, they were the employer of the controllers, not a neutral
  party like when the autoworkers or baseball players go on strike.

	Keith
178.461Not "we'll make you", more like "I'll take back this, and that"EDWIN::WAUGAMANMon Feb 06 1995 20:1218
    
>  Of course they did, they were the employer of the controllers, not a neutral
>  party like when the autoworkers or baseball players go on strike.
    
    The government has intervened in the past with steel and autoworkers, 
    too.  I don't think you'll see the President or Congress forcing a 
    solution or anyone back to work and that's a precedent I'd just 
    as soon not see set, but I still don't have a real problem with them 
    mediating and using the forum to exert serious pressure.  Maybe it's 
    been mostly at the state and local levels, but plenty of legislation 
    has been written in favor of these baseball owners in stadium deals 
    and such so there are some public interests at stake.  There are
    also areas under Congress' control like tax law that have been abused 
    in favor of sports industries, and where a much-deserved whacking is
    probably long overdue anyway.

    glenn
    
178.462SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningTue Feb 07 1995 11:346
Suprisingly (ha!), the CiC has backed down and extended the 
deadline.

Next he'll send in Jimmy Carter.

daryll
178.463Farewell to our national pasttimeCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Feb 07 1995 12:128
    This whole thing is really sad. The owners it appears want nothing but
    to break the union. I thought that Harrington would be able to
    negotiate a settlement but Bud Selig and the rest of the small market,
    intellectually clallenged, owners want the players to save themselves
    from themselves. This whole thing is about to turn football into the
    national past time.
    
    mike
178.464PCBUOA::MORGANTue Feb 07 1995 12:3412
    I agree with you 100%, Mike.  I wish I had a dime for every time I've
    heard Paul Tagliabue brag about the fact that the NFL owners and
    players have an agreement in place, both sides are very happy, and the
    popularity of the game has never been greater.  Although I'm a big NFL
    fan, it hurts like hell to hear this because I'm a huge baseball fan,
    but, I believe he's correct.
    
    The biggest impediment to this strike situation in baseball is the fact
    that there's no commissioner to look after the best interests of the
    game.  The whole thing is becoming uglier by the day.
    
    					Steve
178.465USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Feb 07 1995 13:153
The players have won too many battles.  The owners (unfortunately) are
determined to win one.  The players should give them something in this
fight, get a settlement, and maybe they can start trusting each other.
178.466Owners want a fool- proof systemCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Feb 07 1995 13:3712
    Re -1
    The players have given up salary arbitration. They have put a proposal
    that would put a tax on teams spending more then X per season. The
    owners tried to put in their own system but saw they were going to lose
    a NLRB verdict and reverted back to the old system. The owners want to
    break the union. They want to have the players give back benefits won
    in previous contracts even though MLB is still making money. They want
    the players to impose salary restrictions on payrolls even though each 
    owner has the power to control their own salary budgets.
    This is all about power.
    
    Mike  
178.467my burning questionAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeTue Feb 07 1995 14:1710
    One thing I'm not sure of and actually wondered aloud awhile ago is if
    in fact the object of the owners is to break union by having players
    actually join the scabs and enough players attrite to make the season
    viable and the rest join (like with nfl strike in '87) then what.
    
    What keeps the union from declaring another strike come the
    playoffs/world series?
    
    The owners must have an answer to this question which is obviously
    being asked by tv.
178.468HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Feb 07 1995 15:4814
  Well if scabs are playing then presumably the union would not be able to
convince them to stop playing around World Series time. If the Union could
control them, they wouldn't be scabs.

  If the Union sent them back to work with the idea in advance of pulling them
again come playoffs then the Union would probably bump into some sort of legal
problem for not bargaining in good faith.

  Most likely any type of settlement between the Union and the Owners would
involve some sort of contract or agreement not to strike for some period of
time. Baring that, only scabs who the Union can not control, will be on the
field.

  George
178.469The stench gets stronger...PCBUOA::MORGANWed Feb 08 1995 11:238
    As expected, Clinton couldn't do anything to move the two sides along. 
    There is supposedly a bill in Congress to force the two into binding
    arbitration.
    
    If one were to believe David Cone, he said that the players were
    willing to agree to binding arbitration, but the owners weren't.
    
    					Steve
178.471CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Wed Feb 08 1995 12:1818
Lessee:

In the tradition of USAToday:

	Usery's Proposal	Binding Arbitration
Owners		Yes			No
Players		No			Yes


Does this remind anyone of the Dems vs. the Repubs?

What makes either of these two sides think that the 
results of binding arbitration would be any different
than the results of a mediator?  Maybe I'm missing 
something here, but isn't it basically the same sort
of process.

=Bob=
178.472CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Wed Feb 08 1995 12:3416
I dunno.  I guess I just don't get it.

I heard on the radio this morning that there's basically 2 billion dollars
being fought over by 600-700 people.

I'm finding it harder and harder to feel anything for any of them.

The owners are rich b______s, and the players make more money in one season
than I'll make in x seasons.   

What they don't realize is that they are basically pounding nails in the 
coffin of baseball.  Baseball's popularity had been waning anyway, and
now they're just driving it farther under....

JMHO,
'Saw
178.473SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningWed Feb 08 1995 12:3814
My impression of this whole situation at this point is that the 
players refuse to give an inch. The owners were willing to accept 
the proposal from Usury(sp) and the players refused it. Selig has 
a valid point, IMO, about leaving the fate of 28 franchises to an 
arbitrator. It's no surprise that the players are all for going 
to arbitration given the results they've gotten in salary 
arbitration over the past few years. Bring on the replacement 
games. The hell with em. I don't see how the threat of removing 
the anti-trust exemption will have any major effect at all. The 
chance of another league starting up is next to nil. They have no 
venues to play in, no investors willing to put up the startup 
cash and I doubt the players have the solidarity to pull it off.

daryll
178.474It would be funny if it wasn't so sad.CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Feb 08 1995 13:0310
    You have to love these guys. They will kill this great sport! The
    players say yes will take binding arbitration and then say no to an
    arbitrators suggestion and the owners say the exact opposite. Let's
    face it the owners want to smash the union and won't negotiate in good
    faith, the players want this to be settled in the courts and won't be
    flexible. And it really boils down to the owners trying to get the
    players to control the spending of other owners and guarentee profits
    for the owners. 
    
    Mike
178.475CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Wed Feb 08 1995 13:0419
I understand what you're saying Daryll, but what I don't
get is that either side thinks there will be signficantly
different results from what Ussery (sp?) proposes, and 
what binding arbitration would come up with.

In grad school I took a course in labor relations, and 
we studies all this stuff, as it pertained to other 
industries.  Mediation was seldom lead to a specific 
proposal, and as I said, I don't see an arbitrator coming
up with anything different.

I totally agree on new league.  It would take at least a 
year for it to get organized, and by that time, either 
the strike would be over, or MLB would be a mess.  I also
suspect that any player who went to the new league would 
be in violation of his contract, thus would be "off the 
books" of MLB.

=Bob=
178.476AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeWed Feb 08 1995 13:5311
    A player is only in violation if his contract in place is '95 and up.
    The reserve clause carries the revolving option and, although upheld in
    1970, probably wouldn't stand up in court.
    
    I'm now 50-50 on this strike.  I'd like to see what alternative
    products could be arranged.  Certainly if teams representing the top
    25% compete in an international tournement with competent, fair,
    objective umpires we might see an excellent product and possibly for
    a fairer price.
    
    But stadia do seem to be a problem.  How much does Omaha seat?
178.477USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 08 1995 14:1517
>    I'm now 50-50 on this strike.  I'd like to see what alternative
>    products could be arranged.

I think baseball, more than any other sport, has deep-seated fan loyalty
to TEAMS.  I can't see myself rooting for (or even being interested in)
new teams, even if they are from my favorite city.

The owners own all of the infrastructure of professional baseball.  Parks,
TV and radio contracts, minor leagues.  It would take years to take all
that down, and even then a new league might only be on the same playing
field.  Given the self interests involved, I don't think any player wants
to sign up for that timeframe (especially knowing that all of the revenues
and salaries will be watered-down).  The players have it good within this
'system'.  Neither party wants to change it.

It seems that the next hurdle is the replacement player threat.  Will the
owners go through with it ?  Will the players call their bluff ?
178.478SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningWed Feb 08 1995 14:1921
I agree with you Bob. I don't see what either side expects will 
be different in arbitration. However, if I were an owner and my 
investment was riding on it, I'd balk at it. The uncertainty of 
the outcome is something I'd be concerned with. 

I really don't see any difference is seeing the top 25% play on a 
team along with what amounts to players that couldn't even make 
the replacement teams. Greenwell, Clemens, Vaughn and a bunch of 
stiffs vs a bunch of career minor leagues and other stiffs doesn't 
present any real distinction for me.

The players have won every single contract dispute in the past. 
They've grown accustomed to the owners backing down. The owners 
are finally standing their ground. I don't see the point in 
questioning why the owners are doing it. Yeah, it's to guarantee 
profits. So? It's to police themselves because they haven't been 
able to control themselves in the past. So? They've got an 
investment and are trying to protect it. If this is what it 
takes, then so be it.

daryll
178.479USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 08 1995 14:3411
>questioning why the owners are doing it. Yeah, it's to guarantee 
>profits. So? It's to police themselves because they haven't been 
>able to control themselves in the past. So? They've got an 
>investment and are trying to protect it. If this is what it 
>takes, then so be it.

The players have acknowledged the need to address the small market
situation by offering a 'payroll tax' option.  So there's no longer
a fight about pure player freedom vs. some type of salary control.
And the owners have backed off the 'salary cap'.  They just need to
agree on the tax % now.
178.480MKFSA::LONGClose, but no cigar!Wed Feb 08 1995 14:3617
	I think someone hit the nail on the head a few replies ago. Not
	since watching Roberto Clemente at Forbes Field have I gon to a
	ballpark to see one baseball player perform.  I go to see a TEAM
	play.  I don't care who the Pittsburgh Pirates put on the field,
	they'll still be my favorite team.

	I'd no more balk (no pun intended) at going to see a group of
	'replacement' players in Red Sox unis at Fenway than I would 
	to buy Mobil gasoline if the Sunoco staion was closed.  As long
	as it fulfills my need, in this case a desire to watch baseball,
	you can put 'most' anyone on the field.

	Now if they are as bad as watching a bunch of Little Leaguers
	I might reconsider.


	billl
178.481SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningWed Feb 08 1995 14:4418
                    <<< Note 178.479 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>The players have acknowledged the need to address the small market
>situation by offering a 'payroll tax' option.  So there's no longer
>a fight about pure player freedom vs. some type of salary control.
>And the owners have backed off the 'salary cap'.  They just need to
>agree on the tax % now.

Right. But, the plan the Usury put forth yesterday contained no 
salary cap and a "luxury tax". The players rejected it outright.
They're talking out both sides of their mouth. People are saying 
that the owners are not bargaining in good faith. I see no 
indication that the players are. It's seems to be all or nothing 
for the players and if that's really their stance, they're going 
to get nothing because I believe the owners have every intention 
of going forward with the replacement games.

daryll
178.482Who hasn't moved? Remember status quo--players are beatenEDWIN::WAUGAMANWed Feb 08 1995 14:4746
> In grad school I took a course in labor relations, and 
> we studies all this stuff, as it pertained to other 
> industries.  Mediation was seldom lead to a specific 
> proposal, and as I said, I don't see an arbitrator coming
> up with anything different.
    
    Who knows?  When you're dealing with a single individual it's a
    crapshoot.  The reason that the owners are willing to accept Usery's 
    proposal is because it includes a 50% luxury tax over a salary cap
    figure.  That's a very significant number.  Another arbitrator very
    well could come up with a lower figure but it's highly doubtful that 
    he'd come up with one higher.  Nonetheless, if you consider Usery's
    proposal as something of precedent, arbitration would probably also 
    result in a pretty good deal for the owners, too.  No matter what 
    comes of this, considering where they used to be it looks like the 
    players have taken a good whupping, the only question being how much 
    of one.  What more do the owners want?
    
    I also disagree that the players are unwilling to give an inch.  They've
    offered up arbitration which for years the owners have insisted is the
    single most destructive factor in cost control, precisely because they
    had no control over it (I guess it wasn't such a big deal after all
    because now the owners say its impact, compared to their own free
    spending habits, is negligible).  They've offered a modest tax proposal.  
    Let's face it, all of the proposals we've heard about to date including
    Usery's amount to large-scale givebacks from the status quo, in an 
    industry that was hardly on its deathbed (although it might be now--
    which might actually help and not hurt the owners in a freer system
    with less guarantees, now that the damage has been done).   You can 
    understand where that'd be hard to swallow (even though the union has 
    made some horrible miscalulations, this is still the basis of the 
    dispute).
    
> They've grown accustomed to the owners backing down. The owners 
> are finally standing their ground. I don't see the point in 
> questioning why the owners are doing it. Yeah, it's to guarantee 
> profits. So? 
    
    "So?"  That's a pretty fair trivialization of the very fabric of
    capitalism.  It's unfortunate that it has to go that route but there's
    a very good chance that the courts will see it the same way, that
    guaranteed profits are hardly a right, even for baseball...
    
    glenn
      
178.483I just don't think we're getting the best right nowAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeWed Feb 08 1995 14:4816
    Well I agree with a friend who said why not just go to Pawtucket.  But
    I know I'm in the minority who would enjoy seeing a better brand of
    ball on the field.
    
    For example, my personal observation is that the National League for
    some reason seems to have drifted into a AAAA level (much more
    observable difference than for example footballs nfc-afc).  But as a
    whole I opine that their are just too many teams per the quality of
    talent available.
    
    And with less true competition the teams at the top are not as good.
    
    Finally, if a plan was in place to play a May-June international
    tournement among four major league teams and four from
    Mexico,Cuba,Santo Domingo and Canada that in itself might break the
    log-jam.
178.484This is a fair fightMARIN::DODGEWed Feb 08 1995 15:5243
    There is too much money at stake for both sides not to agree on
    something.  There will be an agreement.  It is only a question of when.
    
    The owners have the upper hand in getting what they want.  However,
    they also have much more to lose.  They have HUGE investments in these
    teams, up to $100M.  The only way they can get a return on that
    investment is to play ball.
    
    The Players have NOTHING invested, and nothing at risk.  They can hold
    out for as long as their savings hold out.  Then they can go get a real
    job if all alse fails.  I think the sides are pretty evenly balanced in
    terms of strenghts and weaknesses or advantages and disadvantages.
    
    The owners have a slight advantage, but only if they can put a product
    on the field and make some money doing it.  I believe they can.
    The talent diference between triple A teams and teh majors is not as
    great as you might think.  There are a handful of superstars in the
    majors..... and there are the rest.
    
    Every year new stars emerge from the minors to the majors.  This year
    there may be LOTS of new stars emerging from the minors.  They are very
    good players just waiting for their shot.
    
    I think this talent argument is analogous to college basketball vs the
    NBA.  Sure the NBA players are better overall.  But, college basketball
    is still played at a very skilled level and is exciting to watch.  In
    fact I prefer the excitement of college basketball over the
    predictability of NBA basketball.  Believe me, on balance, the skill
    level of triple A players is not that much different from the non
    superstars in the majors.  My next door neighbor is a former major
    league player and now a minor league manager.  He knows the talent
    around the league and he agrees.
    
    The idea of the players starting a league is ridiculous.  They don't
    have the capital, the management, the stadiums, and most importantly,
    the TV contracts.  The players would perform like they do at charity
    games.  It would be a farce that no one would pay to see, especially
    the TV networks.
    
    My guess is that there will be a settlement of some kind before opening
    day in April.
    
    R&G_Don
178.485THE OWNERS ARE TO BLAMCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Feb 08 1995 16:0026
    Darryl,
    Why should the players agree to a contract where the emphasis is placed
    on controlling what an owner spends on contracts when and restricts Free 
    Agency when,
    1. Poor managment has given multi-million dollar contracts to the Matt
    Youngs, Andre Dawsons, Greg Swindells, etc when their careers are on
    the downside or they have never showed to be worth the money spent on
    them. There were no guns used.
    2. Each owner can set a budget and limit his GM to a certain Salary
    cost. If each owner independantly limited his spending on their own
    then they could control spending. The trouble comes when they get
    together and restrict player movements by saying I won't sign your free
    agents if you don't sign mine.
    3. When the majority of Small market teams need to slash costs they cut
    back on their farm systems and scouting when the best way to keep costs
    down are to have a constant flow of minor leaguers at minimum salaries
    to replace aging expensive veterans.
    The owners have done all of this themselves. The players have given up
    arbitration and gained 2 years of Free Agency. This is exactly opposite
    of what Marvin Miller preached against because he thought that the best
    way to raise salaries was to limit the number of free agents and have
    arbitration rulings raise the rest. By flooding the Free Agent Market 
    the top players will get their money and the average players should get
    average salaries.
    
    Mike   
178.486USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 08 1995 17:0728
>    The owners have done all of this themselves. The players have given up
>    arbitration and gained 2 years of Free Agency. This is exactly opposite
>    of what Marvin Miller preached against because he thought that the best
>    way to raise salaries was to limit the number of free agents and have
>    arbitration rulings raise the rest. By flooding the Free Agent Market 
>    the top players will get their money and the average players should get
>    average salaries.

I don't agree.  To be competitive, small-market teams have to get similar
players to those of the big-market teams.  Similar in talent equates to
similar in salary (maybe even MORE salary to get them to come).  BUT the
big-market teams may have a higher 'cap' than the small-market teams.  This
gives the small-market teams a smaller 'margin', which puts them at greater
risk.

I don't believe that any of them is losing 'real' money.  But these 'little'
guys sure don't like the situation, and presently, they have the votes to
hold things up until they get something to make them happy.

And salaries aren't completely set by the owners (via bidding).  As you point
out, the arbitration process has a HUGE part in setting salaries.  And that
process is completely out of their control (especially when you consider that
it's a 'one-or-the-other' deal...ie: the arbitrator picks either the owner's
or the player's $$$, nothing inbetween).


And Glenn, I agree, there's been so much damage done already, the owners
have righted the ship, no matter what settlement is agreed on.
178.487CNTROL::CHILDSTLC &gt;&gt; Salt_N_PeppaWed Feb 08 1995 17:2410
    
RE:    R&G_Don

 But many of the triple AAA players that you expect to step as replacements
 are on the side of the players so they won't play for the owners so the 
 talent the owners can get is considerable less. Why would they be holding 
 open tryouts if they could just move their AAA , AA and A league ball players
 up to the majors?

 mike
178.488Owners are holding them back, many would playMARIN::DODGEWed Feb 08 1995 17:3312
    You are right that the owners will keep their top triple A prospects in
    the minors for now.  They don't want to risk alienating them from the
    current major leaguers when they come back.
    
    However, this could all change if the strike drags on.  It could change
    very fast and spread like dominoes if it looks like the players are not
    going to agree.
    
    I believe the strike will be settled.  I'm just pointing out that the
    owners have some other very good options.
    
    R&G_Don
178.489SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningWed Feb 08 1995 17:3911
Most of the try-out players are being used to fill spots left 
vacant at the A, AA, and AAA level by players being used on the 
replacement teams.

The problem that the players union has is the same problem that 
every other union in this country has already been through. 
They've been asking for more, more, more and have gotten it. It 
had to stop somewhere. It did for the UAW and it's in process for 
the MLPA.

daryll
178.490CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Feb 08 1995 17:5629
    If the "small markets" cann't compete too bad. They should be allowed
    to move to places where they can compete or they should find a way to
    compete with better managment. Why have the Twins, A's and Reds won
    World Championships since 1985 when "Big Market teams like the SOx,
    Yankees and Cubs failed?
    The Indians are a prime example of how to build a competitive team in a 
    small market. Look at what they did.
    1. Refused to get into the major free agent bidding and only signed 
    low risk lower salary veterans.
    2. Rebuilt  their farm system from within and developed and traded for
    young stars like Lofton, Ramirez, Belle. Now they have a bunch of
    pitchers ready for the bigs.
    3. They signed these players to long 3 and 4 year contracts trading
    them security in exchange for arbitration.
    4. Realized that people wanted a new stadium and had a great one built.
    Now their attendance is way up and they should be able to afford their
    stars.
 
    The owners have lost almost a BILLION dollars in greivance arbitration
    cases in the past decade because they didn't follow their contract with
    the players. They have a monopoly but they are going to blow it. The
    players have never lost a NLRB ruling while the owners have lost
    rulings to both the players and the umpire unions. As stated before the
    players have agreed to to some give backs. The owners are just trying
    to break the union pure and simple. They want to be able to poorly
    manage their operations and still make money.
    
    Mike   
    
178.491USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 08 1995 19:0917
>The problem that the players union has is the same problem that 
>every other union in this country has already been through. 
>They've been asking for more, more, more and have gotten it. It 
>had to stop somewhere. It did for the UAW and it's in process for 
>the MLPA.

What he said.


re:  the Cleveland success story

Will they still be on the same playing field with LA, NY, Chi, etc... ?
Can they retain ALL of these young stars when they become free agents ?
Won't they fall back into the same rebuilding hole that Pittsburgh and
SD now find themselves in ?  And if so, where will their revenues be
then, when the newness of the park is gone, and the club is at the bottom
of the division ?
178.492War is kindledAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeWed Feb 08 1995 19:2518
    Well the difference between the players and other unions is in the
    power that ml players have, mainly the warchest, unity and in the past
    savvy.  They are not necessarily the strongest guild or union.
    
    For example in hollywood actors and actresses and writers etc were able
    to break a stranglehold that the major studios had forcing longterm
    contracts at low salaries on new players.  But even Goldwyn and Warner
    and their ilk didn't have quite the cheek to make contracts longer than
    (about) 7 years.  Now the producers have to compete in an open market
    and pay the likes of Stallone and Willis multi-millions per picture.
    
    And if they tried to lock the stars out who would whine about who.  And
    if we don't want to pay movie house prices we rent videos at shaw's for
    a buck.  That reminds me, I need to look for Wyatt Earp with that punk
    Kevin Costner.
    
    And as long as Rosemary Clooney is still performing the top music stars
    can all go on strike
178.493She's lost it...CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Wed Feb 08 1995 19:284
|    And as long as Rosemary Clooney is still performing the top music stars
|    can all go on strike

Uhh billte, have you HEARD ol' Rosie lately?
178.494At least you're saying she once had itAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeWed Feb 08 1995 20:326
    She does a jazzy kind of style rather than her ol' classic 50s voice.
    
    I did here something by her on the radio that I thought was recent and
    also she periodicly performs at the club in Boston (Harbor?) .
    
    Perhaps it's a style thing
178.495CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Thu Feb 09 1995 11:282
Rosemary DID have it at one point, most definitely.  But the last thing
I heard her sing was the Coronet jingle....
178.496ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsThu Feb 09 1995 11:3224
    
> re:  the Cleveland success story

> Will they still be on the same playing field with LA, NY, Chi, etc... ?
    
Possibly.
    
> Can they retain ALL of these young stars when they become free agents ?
    
No - but not all of their young stars are going to become free agents,
at least until they're past their prime (or at least late in it).
    
For example, Baerga's signed through '99.
    
> Won't they fall back into the same rebuilding hole that Pittsburgh and
> SD now find themselves in ?  
    
I don't think so.  It could happen - but the Indians have generally been
fairly logical about who they've been signing to what.  They can't keep
everyone, but they don't need to - _if_ they keep producing players (and
they do have some very good players in the pipeline) and _don't_ start
trading their best young talent away.
    
    Joe
178.497MIMS::ROLLINS_RThu Feb 09 1995 12:025
	I think Montreal is the perfect example of the small market teams.
	They have the BEST minor league system there is; they produce 
	wonderfully talented players, who will come to Montreal, play 3 years, and leave.
	The Expos will never win it all, because they can never re-sign
	their great players.
178.498CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Feb 09 1995 12:1535
>re:  the Cleveland success story

>Will they still be on the same playing field with LA, NY, Chi, etc... ?
>Can they retain ALL of these young stars when they become free agents ?
>Won't they fall back into the same rebuilding hole that Pittsburgh and
>SD now find themselves in ?  And if so, where will their revenues be
>then, when the newness of the park is gone, and the club is at the bottom
>of the division ?
    If they can keep a flow of cheap minor league talent coming thru then yes
    they can. All teams go thru ups and downs so eventually they'll bottom
    out again but if they have good managment they'll come back.
    If we have a salary cap or luxury tax is it fair to the
    Braves to be penalized and be forced to lose some top players because
    they cann't spend the fair market value on their talent that they've
    brought up and developed. 
    Also where does it say that each team have to stay where they are? If 
    cities like Milwakee and Seattle can not support a team which they have
    shown in the past that they cann't why should other teams be penalized?
    Refresh my memory but has any team gone bankrupt in the past 20 years
    since Free Agency? Hasn't the value of every MLB team skyrocketed in
    that time period. Teams like the Astros and Padres cried that they
    couldn't compete but when the teams are sold they make a huge profit on
    the sale. 
    The whole thing comes down to managment. A sharp GM like Andy McPhail,
    Duquette and the Braves GM who's name escapes me at the moment have
    shown how to build teams with limited budgets. The only big market team
    who has consistently had a top team in the past 10 years is the Blue
    Jays and the vast majority of it's players have come via trades or thru
    their farm Systems.
    All the owners want is the ability to make money and to be lazy. They
    want guarenteed profits. I'm sorry but in the real world there are no
    guarentees.
    
    Mike
    
178.499USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 09 1995 13:0939
>    If they can keep a flow of cheap minor league talent coming thru then yes
>    they can. All teams go thru ups and downs so eventually they'll bottom
>    out again but if they have good managment they'll come back.

Yeah, but it's these down years that concern the small-market teams.
Even the best scouting department makes mistakes.  And teams in the
pennant chase do trade young talent to get that veteran who will
hopefully put them over the top.  So when the cupboard is bare, the
only thing left is the free agent market.  Now they've got to compete
at large-market prices.


>    If we have a salary cap or luxury tax is it fair to the
>    Braves to be penalized and be forced to lose some top players because
>    they cann't spend the fair market value on their talent that they've
>    brought up and developed. 

They don't have to lose any talent under the 'tax' proposal.  They'll
just have to pay a little more.


>    Also where does it say that each team have to stay where they are?

This is a valid question, to a point.  These guys aren't making widgets,
which can be manufactured anywhere.  They've built a fan base.  And it's
been proven that if you package it right, and put a winner on the field
(see Cleveland), the fans will come (ie: you'll make money).  But that
can be a costly venture, with no guarantees (that the players you've
put together will win).  The same goes for moving a team.  And this is
the piece of the owners' situation that I agree with.  They cover all of
the expenses, take all of the financial risks, but have very little control
over their payroll...or that their players will produce.


>    Teams like the Astros and Padres cried that they
>    couldn't compete but when the teams are sold they make a huge profit on
>    the sale. 

Hey, there's always another sucker out there.
178.500CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Feb 09 1995 13:3315
>the piece of the owners' situation that I agree with.  They cover all of
>the expenses, take all of the financial risks, but have very little control
>over their payroll...or that their players will produce.
    
    Every owner has complete control over his payroll! He goes to his GM 
    in the off season and says "You have X dollars to spend on players." If 
    his GM cann't live with that budget that's his problem. Just like any
    other business. If enough of the owners did this and lived within their
    means then player salaries would stabalize. If the demand isn't there
    then the salaries are kept down.
    
    Mike 
    
    
178.501I'm banging my head against the wall here....USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 09 1995 14:075
>    Every owner has complete control over his payroll! 

Yeah, like Montreal (as someone pointed out).  You get what you pay
for.  Cheap on salaries, chances are you get a cheap product.  Then
fans don't come out, revenues go down.
178.502SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningThu Feb 09 1995 14:095
Mike,

What about arbitration? There's no control there.

daryll
178.503It's ReplacementBall; tickets are going fast...EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 09 1995 14:5534
  
    How does the current plan help Montreal?  If the tax plan has the
    desired effect of capping salaries (at a level above what Montreal can
    afford to pay, now or ever) so very few taxes are generated, where is 
    Montreal getting the money to pay their players in order to be 
    competitive?  The "revenue sharing" and "competitive balance" aspects
    of this plan are so much smoke and mirrors.  What is being accomplished 
    is guaranteed cost control and profits for the _industry_, period.  
    Everybody's payroll is slashed somewhat proportionately but there is no
    significant re-direction of revenue to Montreal, so they remain in the 
    same competitive position.  What does happen is that the value of the 
    franchises is raised because franchises are a scarcity in a 
    monopolistic system.  Montreal remains a prime candidate to be moved 
    (any guarantees in this plan that small-market franchises won't be 
    moved?), the only difference being that the value of the franchise is 
    higher because costs and profits are guaranteed for whoever takes over 
    in a market that can truly support the franchise.
    
    Hey, the writing is on the wall.  It's ReplacementBall time.  The
    owners have already decided that ReplacementBall is preferable to 
    any movement from a hard salary cap position.  We can talk about
    reasonable compromise all we want but it will not happen because the
    owners have this alternative and are determined to use it (the 
    players have no real alternative-- for making money, that is).  Maybe 
    they're right that it'll work.  Personally, even though I do follow a 
    specific team above most all else, I'm not willing to accept that 
    quality is completely irrelevant.  Otherwise they could be playing 
    tiddlywinks out there and as long as it occupies three hours' time in 
    the surroundings of Fenway Park we'd be expected to buy it.  I just
    can't go so far as to drive 60 miles to pay to see A-level ball being 
    played by old guys.  Others may; it's their prerogative.
    
    glenn
    
178.504CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Feb 09 1995 15:1916
    Re .501
    If Montreal can not support a team then move it.  Montreal has been
    crying for years that they cann't compete. How much money would Brochu
    make if he sold the team to Tampa, Charlotte, Phoenix or Orlando? Would
    he share it with the players?
    Re .502  Arbitration.
    To begin with one of the few things both sides have agreed to is the
    elimination of arbitration in exchange for free agency 2 years earlier.
    And even if their still was arbitration each team has the oppurtunity
    to release players BEFORE arbitration. If Joe Average ball player
    thinks he can make big money let him go as a free agent and see. Teams
    then go out and pay the going rate to replace him. Once again the worst
    thing for the players is to have 300 - 400 Free Agents. Some will get
    big money but a lot will get Jody Reed money.
    
    
178.505HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Feb 09 1995 15:3211
  Weren't the Expos giving the Braves a run for their money in the N.L. East
this summer? In fact I seem to remember them being ahead. 

  Clearly they had a team capable of winning it all this year and they were
pretty close back in the Dick Williams days coming in 2nd to a number of
different teams. A turn of luck and they would have been in the World Series.

  Another point that comes to mind is that Toronto seems to do ok. Are they
a bigger market than Montreal?

  George
178.506DZIGN::ROBICHAUDHappy 100th BambinoThu Feb 09 1995 16:124
    	I'm with Waugamain.  The only thing I'll miss about not going
    to see the Slobs is the trip to Dick's Last Restort after the game.
    
    				   /Don
178.507USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 09 1995 16:5310
>  Weren't the Expos giving the Braves a run for their money in the N.L. East
>this summer? In fact I seem to remember them being ahead. 

But they're losing Hill, Grissom and Wetteland this year 'cause they can't
afford their salaries.


Glen, I know Usery's proposal had tax money going to player pensions, but
wasn't the original idea that this money WOULD BE distributed to the small-
market teams ?
178.508Maybe it would be, if there were any...EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 09 1995 17:0518
    
> Glen, I know Usery's proposal had tax money going to player pensions, but
> wasn't the original idea that this money WOULD BE distributed to the small-
> market teams ?
    
    The money would be distributed to those that aren't spending it,
    regardless of market standing (ironically enough if you made the 
    calculations based on recent seasons, such needy franchises as the 
    New York Mets were set to be the prime beneficiaries-- this is the 
    trouble with such socialism that has no relation to market reality).
    However, at the tax rates of 75-100% in the owners' plan, you don't
    need a PhD in economics to see that spending is going to come into 
    line with the salary cap in a big hurry, generating few tax revenues to
    be shared.  How likely is it that you would willingly purchase an item 
    if you had to pay a 75% tax on it? 
    
    glenn
    
178.509MIMS::ROLLINS_RThu Feb 09 1995 17:5819
>    The money would be distributed to those that aren't spending it,
>    regardless of market standing (ironically enough if you made the 
>    calculations based on recent seasons, such needy franchises as the 
>    New York Mets were set to be the prime beneficiaries-- this is the 
>    trouble with such socialism that has no relation to market reality).
>    However, at the tax rates of 75-100% in the owners' plan, you don't
>    need a PhD in economics to see that spending is going to come into 
>    line with the salary cap in a big hurry, generating few tax revenues to
>    be shared.  How likely is it that you would willingly purchase an item 
>    if you had to pay a 75% tax on it? 
>    
>    glenn

     The point isn't that teams like Montreal would get more money to spend,
     but that the average player is going to be able to leave small markets
     to go to the big city -- those teams won't have room under the cap to
     sign everyone who wants to be a free agent.  Then a team like Montreal
     could keep at least some of their best players.    

178.510USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 09 1995 18:418
>     to go to the big city -- those teams won't have room under the cap to
>     sign everyone who wants to be a free agent.  Then a team like Montreal
>     could keep at least some of their best players.    

No, the cap has (effectively) been thrown out by the owners.  It's all
down to some kind of taxation system, under which big-spenders will pay
a tax on payroll amounts over a specific #.  Nothing stops any club
from spending as much as they want.
178.511I don't have that much trust...EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 09 1995 18:5429
    
>     The point isn't that teams like Montreal would get more money to spend,
>     but that the average player is going to be able to leave small markets
>     to go to the big city -- those teams won't have room under the cap to
>     sign everyone who wants to be a free agent.  Then a team like Montreal
>     could keep at least some of their best players.    
    
    The large market teams wouldn't have room to sign everyone (nor do they 
    now), but what happens is that based on under-cap true market forces, 
    the best ones still leave poor teams for rich ones, top to bottom in
    descending order as those individual salary caps are filled.  Yes,
    there will be a few more players left over but the pecking order still
    remains.  
    
    The real problem is the extent of the huge revenue disparity which
    does not come close to being addressed by this plan (revenue sharing
    is a micro effect).  Last year payrolls varied from roughly $10M to
    $45M.  Presumably San Diego and the like only spent $10M-$15M because
    that's all they had.  How is that fixed?  Under the original offer
    which included an approximate $25-$30M salary _floor_ for all teams the
    only possible result seemed that San Diego would have to hit the road,
    by league mandate.  Consistent with that Peter Gammons has reported
    evidence that any new contract will be accompanied by an inside deal to 
    eventually re-locate Montreal.  I just don't see that the preservation 
    of these franchises is at all a goal of this plan.  If it is then let's 
    see it in writing for the "protection of the fans".
    
    glenn
     
178.512EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 09 1995 19:1819
    
> Nothing stops any club from spending as much as they want.          
    
    I wouldn't call a minimum 75% tax "nothing".  Turn that argument around 
    and apply it on a personal level by saying that high taxes aren't a
    disincentive to earning (or spending, with a sales tax) and you'll be 
    laughed out of town.  Fact is, many fiscal conservatives without a 
    financial or political stake in the matter (like George Will for
    example) consider these proposals to be a joke, counter to everything 
    that is free enterprise.  If you can get past the hangup over that 
    dirty word "union" (which is not a real union anyway because it does
    not attempt to set fixed wage scales or guarantees, only a set of 
    basic rules that are a necessary evil in a monopolistic system-- 
    unless you want to abandon the draft, all player retainer rights, 
    etc.) it's pretty cut and dry that it is the owners' salary caps 
    and luxury taxes that represent socialism.   
    
    glenn
    
178.513USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 09 1995 19:4516
>    and apply it on a personal level by saying that high taxes aren't a
>    disincentive to earning (or spending, with a sales tax) and you'll be 
>    laughed out of town.

BUT, the fact is, if you want it bad enough, you can get it.  Under a
hard salary cap system, you're just window shopping.


>    consider these proposals to be a joke, counter to everything 
>    that is free enterprise.

Stop with the 'free enterprise' garbage.  Businesses operating in a
real free enterprise system DO have cost controls.  MLB doesn't.
I still say, if I'm an owner, give me non-guaranteed contracts
and no arbitration and you can have whatever else you consider
to be free enterprise.
178.514I now honestly believe that owners are pretty happy with thisEDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Feb 09 1995 20:4655
> Stop with the 'free enterprise' garbage.  Businesses operating in a
> real free enterprise system DO have cost controls.  MLB doesn't.
    
    Entire industries outside of the federal government do not have 
    built-in, contracted cost controls.  Indirectly baseball has more with
    its 6-year minor- _and_ major-league retainer rights (that's precisely
    why a kid gets his bonus bucks in negotiation after he's drafted,
    because he'll have no negotiation leverage until after 3 years in the
    majors).  No one denies that in any moderately free system baseball
    owners will freely and willingly spend more in the competition for
    players than they will under these proposals.  I don't see how you can
    say that those are not free market forces that are being artificially
    constrained.  If not then what are these uncontrollable urges to spend
    the money?
    
> I still say, if I'm an owner, give me non-guaranteed contracts
> and no arbitration and you can have whatever else you consider
> to be free enterprise.
    
    Well, it's a good thing that you're not an owner because you'd already
    have a deal (or you'd be estranged like such businessmen of principle 
    as Peter Angelos).  Owners have always had the first right, and the 
    second has been offered up.  Neither of those rights will stop owners 
    from freely spending money to compete against each other (arbitration 
    turned out to be a whopping red herring), so they're not enough.
    
    I do believe that there is room to give the owners _some_ guarantees 
    and cost controls.  However, I think that proposals that cap salaries
    at a phased-in cut of 15% and include taxation at rates of 75-100% are 
    so far removed from what players already _know_ (it's been proved) that
    they will make in a freer system as to be completely arrogant about the
    restriction.  We both know what the market for your services is but we
    don't want you to give a little, we want you to give a _lot_.  Players 
    are to accept the cuts merely because they make "enough" (I'm not 
    familiar with the economic theory that defines the "enough" point on 
    the supply-demand curve).  
    
    The owners _know_ that the players will not accept these drastic
    unilateral impositions before a prolonged multi-year holdout and are
    prepared to go with the replacement.  That's the frustrating part for
    me; I am finally convinced by the events of the last two months
    (imposition after declaring impasse, NLRB loss declared as "victory"
    by owners because it ends impasse and allows negotiations, subsequent 
    offer of even more restrictive system, refusal to accept what would 
    almost certainly be a progressive binding arbitration ruling) that the 
    owners are perfectly happy with this (possibly illegal) end result.
    It's very frustrating.  I think it's arrogant and I would rather 
    see no "major-league" baseball (as with the NHL) to start with 
    because at least then I could believe that there'd be continuing, 
    impending pressure towards making a deal.  I don't sense that sincere 
    pressure with the owners.
    
    glenn
    
178.515USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Feb 10 1995 13:3369
>> Stop with the 'free enterprise' garbage.  Businesses operating in a
>> real free enterprise system DO have cost controls.  MLB doesn't.
    
>    Entire industries outside of the federal government do not have 
>    built-in, contracted cost controls.

No they don't, but they can lay people off with small serverance $$$
and cut costs immediately.  MLB owners can't.


>    Indirectly baseball has more with
>    its 6-year minor- _and_ major-league retainer rights

That's a protection of investment in prospects, and a way to develop
players within your *system*...something that's very important, and unique
in this business.  It's not a cost-control device.  Costs for minor league
players would be insignificant in a totally free system.


>    No one denies that in any moderately free system baseball
>    owners will freely and willingly spend more in the competition for
>    players than they will under these proposals.  I don't see how you can
>    say that those are not free market forces that are being artificially
>    constrained.

I don't think I said that these are not constraints.  I said that there
are constraints in other industries, in one form or another.  I think
MLB owners need constraints.  Unlike other industries, one team is not
trying to drive the other out of business (by setting exorbitant resource
costs).  And I don't believe (as others in here do) that it's good for
MLB (or any professional league) to constantly be moving franchises from
city to city.  There really are no "America's Teams".  Teams are built
through a local fan base.

    
>> I still say, if I'm an owner, give me non-guaranteed contracts
>> and no arbitration and you can have whatever else you consider
>> to be free enterprise.
    
>    Well, it's a good thing that you're not an owner because you'd already
>    have a deal (or you'd be estranged like such businessmen of principle 
>    as Peter Angelos).  Owners have always had the first right,
                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

True, but with the pattern of guaranteed contracts in place now, who is
going to offer a non-guaranteed contract.  That owner won't even be
considered by a free agent.  If the owners act together and begin
offering non-guaranteed contracts, they'll get their *sses hauled into
court on collusion charges.



>    I am finally convinced by the events of the last two months
>    (imposition after declaring impasse, NLRB loss declared as "victory"
>    by owners because it ends impasse and allows negotiations, subsequent 
>    offer of even more restrictive system, refusal to accept what would 
>    almost certainly be a progressive binding arbitration ruling) that the 
>    owners are perfectly happy with this (possibly illegal) end result.

I wouldn't come this far and want to be bound by some 3rd party's decision.
It was written in yesterday's USA Today that we may actually see the owners
declare an impasse again and implement their system.  Their argument would
be that the players rejected a 3rd party's proposal that the owners accepted.
And this time the NLRB would find it hard to say that the owners did not
bargain in good faith.

As for your wish that there be no baseball, so the owners felt pressure
to negotiate a settlement, Lenny Dykstra's comments yesterday convinces
them that they're on the right track.
178.516Take it to binding arbitration and be done with it!EDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Feb 10 1995 14:1942
    
> True, but with the pattern of guaranteed contracts in place now, who is
> going to offer a non-guaranteed contract.  That owner won't even be
> considered by a free agent.  If the owners act together and begin
> offering non-guaranteed contracts, they'll get their *sses hauled into
> court on collusion charges.
    
    And well they should.  You act like this collusion business is a
    trivial legal technicality when it fact it is a serious violation of 
    the basic agreement (or of the law where antitrust laws apply).  
    Collusion to fix salaries or the rules of the marketplace takes the 
    whole system (any system) down, very easily.
    
> I wouldn't come this far and want to be bound by some 3rd party's decision.
> It was written in yesterday's USA Today that we may actually see the owners
> declare an impasse again and implement their system.  Their argument would
> be that the players rejected a 3rd party's proposal that the owners accepted.
> And this time the NLRB would find it hard to say that the owners did not
> bargain in good faith.

    Apparently Usery had no authority to go public with a proposal (it was
    leaked), which is what caused all the fuss.  Usery is paid by both 
    sides only to mediate negotiations and make suggestions, and has 
    admitted that he has not finalized any proposal (although as you say 
    the internal workings of these negotiations could be used in the courts 
    over the impasse question).  Meanwhile, the President of the United 
    States has said let's go to binding arbitration.  The players have said 
    okay, the owners no (nonetheless I pick up the papers and read that the 
    players are somehow showing the president a great disrespect, as if 
    there was any remote chance that this thing was going to be settled 
    over a cup of coffee at the Oval Office).  I maintain that the binding
    arbitration is a way for both sides (especially the players) to save
    face and a way for the owners to pick up some sizable gains this side
    of the nuclear devastation of the sport.  They just won't do it.
    
    I'm with conservative Senator Orrin Hatch: at this point the game is
    being held hostage by a hardline bloc (not all small-market, either)
    of owners who have little respect for the economic principles of the
    country, and will try to get away with whatever they can.
    
    glenn
    
178.517CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Fri Feb 10 1995 14:238
Personally, I think we should get them all in a big room.

Then we should have Hawk come in and




	WHACK THEIR PEEPEES WITH A METAL-EDGED RULER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11
178.5186 mill/yr hard to pass upCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Feb 10 1995 14:336
    I caught a little bit of Lenny Dykstra on ESPN last night. He and about
    20 other top players are meeting this weekend to see why there is no
    agreement and what the negotiating team is doing. He didn't say he
    would cross the line but when asked he said "ask me again in April."
    Maybe some middle ground can be found.
    
178.519The big question is, do the owners want Dykstra back?EDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Feb 10 1995 14:5121
>                        -< 6 mill/yr hard to pass up >-
    
    I'm wondering what happens in the short term if a large handful of
    these guys with the big guaranteed contracts cross, while that large 
    majority of players without contracts (these guys aren't going to get 
    big offers to play ReplacementBall anyway) stay out.  About $10M worth 
    of contracts per team could wreak some real financial havoc with 
    ReplacementBall.  The owners can't very well lock out players with 
    existing contracts while they let replacements in.  It's a bit of
    stretch but the players could almost encourage some guys to go back
    knowing that the rest would hold out, to sabotage the thing, if they 
    were into that.
    
    Now that I think of it, how are the owners differentiating between 
    replacement players and those real major-leaguers that they are now
    refusing to let sign contracts?  Is it by height, weight, or some kind 
    of genetic thing?
    
    glenn
    
178.520And btw, good for LennyAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeFri Feb 10 1995 15:1616
    I'd have to ask George but the answers, Glenn seem to lie in what makes
    up the complex labor law code which was essentially drafted to prevent
    complete chaos (and in the past violence) in management-labor
    negotiations.
    
    I wondered aloud too about players playing for several months or until
    playoffs and "wildcat striking".  I assume that some protocol is
    supposed to be observed by the sides and there is the NLRB umpiring.
    
    And the government has stepped in many times in the past in strikes and
    certainly does it all the time locally (yes, teachers are bigger than
    baseball).
    
    I think if salary escalation was tempered then any agreement forced
    upon both sides would be accepted.  In fact a simple escalation index
    in the "tax" to lower or increase it might be the final solution.
178.521HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Feb 10 1995 15:5212
  In the case of Oil Can Boyd they signed him to a minor league contract but
they are saying (or at least he is saying) that the reason he was signed is
to play, if needed, as a replacement player.

  So maybe that's it, the scabs are being signed to minor league contracts and
will be "brought up" if the strike doesn't settle. Also they might be putting
clauses in some of the contracts saying that they expire if the strike is
settled.

  Anyone know how the scab football players were paid?

  George
178.522MKFSA::LONGClose, but no cigar!Fri Feb 10 1995 16:178
>> Is it by height, weight, or some kind of genetic thing?

	Better be careful, Glenn, you might trigger a sit in protest
	in MKO2's cafeteria.



	billl
178.523CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Fri Feb 10 1995 16:2716
|>> Is it by height, weight, or some kind of genetic thing?
|
|	Better be careful, Glenn, you might trigger a sit in protest
|	in MKO2's cafeteria.
|


No, no, Glenn is correct.

Just yesterday they identified the ball gene.  It's a binary gene.  Yes
if you're major league caliber and will be signed to a contract, No if
you're only replacement caliber.


Hope this helped!
'Saw
178.524USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Feb 10 1995 16:4911
WFAN interviewed a player who is considering being a replacement player.
He gave all the details of what he's been offered.  I can't remember them,
but it went something like this:  lump-sum just for showing up;  so much
per game;  a severence amount if the ML players come back.


As for Glenn's idea of the MLPA's telling high-salaried players to play
to upset the owners' plans, if you buy tickets right now, you pay 'regular'
price.  You will get money back (most, if not all, clubs) if replacement
players are used.  But if owners field teams with some real stars, are fans
seeing replacement ball ?
178.525SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningFri Feb 10 1995 17:321
They get 20K if/when the strike ends.
178.526CAMONE::WAYConspiring to make a mutiny...Fri Feb 10 1995 17:348
>They get 20K if/when the strike ends.


Where do I sign up?  Between that and my DEC salary I might make 21K this year!


Seriously, I always hear them talking about watching carpenters and the UPS
guy playing replacement baseball.  What's wrong with software engineers????
178.527OUTSRC::HEISERGrace changes everythingFri Feb 10 1995 17:352
178.528shhhh, here that ?....it's the sound of a union breakingUSCTR1::GARBARINOFri Feb 10 1995 17:416
Just came back from another facility and had WFAN on... Apparently John
Franco was on this morning and he said he doesn't care what the tax amount
is, he wants to play.

It was also reported that the union denies that Orza called Usery 'senile',
but they clearly said they'd ruin his career.
178.529PTOSS1::JACOBRWhen's football season start???Fri Feb 10 1995 18:5435
    Put all the players in one place, and march the owners in with them,
    and nuke the sons a bitches and start all over without the absoluyte
    greed of both sides.
    
    IMHO, over tha lasted month er so, the owners have caved in and given
    up tons to the players.  If Donald Fehr would get his greeday fat ass
    out of the way and let the player vote on the proposals, I think you'd
    find that the camps would be full o f players fer spring training,
    along with a freshly inked agreement, but Fehr and his moroons at the
    top are working to f__k the owners out of every bloody nickel they
    have.
    
    SOme will use the argument that the players are "entertainers". 
    Partially true.
    
    but, lessee, a movie gets worldwide distribution.  When the Bucs play
    the Cubs, it gets shown in Pgh and Chi., and gets 3 lines in a paper
    somewhere else.  Not exactly Worldwide distribution.  then, you have
    the wonderful guaranteed contract debacle.  Players has one good year,
    signs with new team fer enough money to feed the homeless in 5 cities
    fer a year, and proceeds to play like a AA minor leaguer fer most of
    the contract length, but gets his $$$ cause he "earned it".  I say do
    away wif guaranteed contracts, set up a scale whereby if ya been in the
    league 1 year, ya get $100k, 2 years, $200k, etc.  Then, fer batters,
    ya add incentives.  10 hrs gets an extra $100k, 20 hrs, and extra
    $200k, etc.  Same with batting averages, rbi, runs scored, etc. 
    Pitchers get incentives based on wins, era, saves, innings, strikeouts,
    batters beaned in the haid((8^)*)
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
    
    
178.530Nuke em allCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Feb 10 1995 19:116
    Yeah,
    Dem damn players have been stickin a gun to dose owners haids for
    years now. I remember the gun that Matt Young used on Lou Gormans head.
    Stuck it right in Lou's ear. I remember looking in his other ear at the
    same time and seeing the barrel of the gun aiming at me.
    Mike   
178.531or any proposal for that matterSALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningFri Feb 10 1995 19:134
One does wonder what the outcome would be if the players could 
vote on the Usury proposal...

daryll
178.532PTOSS1::JACOBRWhen's football season start???Fri Feb 10 1995 19:188
    I think that if the proposals that have been flying fer the lasted
    month er so, ANY OF EM, were given to the players to vote on, the
    strike would be over by now.
    
    It's the union mismanagement...er...I mean management.
    
    JaKe
    
178.533GENRAL::WADEAh'm Yo Huckleberry...Fri Feb 10 1995 19:536
    
    'Saw,
    
    	It's cuz software engineers are goofy!
    
    Claybone
178.534HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Feb 13 1995 12:167
  According to the Boston Globe, Boston Red Sox 1st baseman Mo Vaughn has said
that he feels the players should be allowed to vote on recent owner proposals
by secret ballot. He said that leaders like Kirby Pucket, Cecil Fielder, and
Roger Clemens make it difficult for some players to speak openly about the
strike. 

  George
178.535USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 13 1995 12:3712
I hope the 'silent majority' (as Gammons calls them) speaks up during
Fehr's cross-country meetings and forces the idiots at the top to get
a deal done.

Gammons' article was great.  Basically said that the fat asses at the
top (Fehr, Cone, Glavine, Feilder, etc.) don't give a damn about the
middle- and lower-tier players, which is what I wrote a week or so ago.
This thing is all about the multi-million-dollar babies.

Did you catch the line about how Molitor was removed from the negotiating
team 'cause he wasn't militant enough ?  I still think Butler fell for
the same reason.
178.536GatorbrainsCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 13 1995 12:4112
    And in another brilliant move Mike "the brain surgeon" Greenwell
    criticizes both Lenny Dykstra and Vaughn for questioning the MLPA.
    Greenwell states that the players shouldn't be airing their displeasure
    with the union in the media. Mike feels like everyone else should be
    like sheep and follow the Union blindly without questioning Fehr.
    Vaughn has made some good points stating that the Ripkens,Clemons and
    Ripkens can afford to be hawks because they've made their big bucks.
    younger players like Valentin are struggling and cann't afford to
    strike this year. 
    This mess will really get ugly soon if this isn't settled.
    
    Mike
178.537MLPA is TOASTSALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningMon Feb 13 1995 13:193
Does anyone doubt that there will be players crossing the line?

daryll
178.538USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 13 1995 13:299
>Does anyone doubt that there will be players crossing the line?

No doubt in my mind.  Instead of trying to muzzle and brainwash
the masses, Fehr should use his meetings to get a real feel for how
quickly the flood-gates will open.  If it looks like it'll be soon,
he should call off the strike and settle or take the battle to the
courts.  But we keep hearing about how the union is determined not
to lose this thing, so they may keep it going even if it's the wrong
thing to do.
178.539SALEM::DODAStop Global WhiningMon Feb 13 1995 13:554
I bet Fehr is fired after this is finally settled.

daryll

178.540Gammons cut through the BS (better at this stuff than baseball)EDWIN::WAUGAMANMon Feb 13 1995 14:2325
    I hope that the union does take a secret vote and that it passes, so
    that we can get on with it.  However, if the vote is on the owners' 
    last plan, or Usery's plan without serious modification, I seriously
    doubt that it'll pass, as of March 1.  Basing the players' sentiment 
    on the comments of a few players (apparently these players aren't 
    nearly so censured as is made out) is dangerous.  If nothing ever 
    happens with Congress acting on antitrust, or the courts granting an 
    injunction, obviously the players will have to break at some point.  
    Fortunately or unfortunately, I just don't think it's reached that 
    point yet.
    
    Gammons also wrote that the players are in the right on principle, and 
    went so far as to call Don Fehr a good and decent man in spite of his 
    dour public image.  You have to look past the smoke on the issues.  His
    solution was some kind of compromise on the players' part where they
    return under the conditions they don't like, but work behind the scenes 
    to resolve the matter in court, if necessary.  I don't know if that's
    practical or even if the owners would allow it (would they require the
    players to sign on to their agreement for x years?) but it's something
    that worked in the NFL and that I was advocating previously as a way to
    just get everyone out on the damn field...
    
    glenn
    
178.541HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Feb 13 1995 14:2815
  But what I don't understand is why the big name players would be more hawkish
than the middle level players. 

  The big name players will probably be the 1st ones to get what ever money is
available. Also, they don't need it. If you have $20,000,000 why would you care
if you ever got paid again, you could put it in the bank and live like a king
off the interest for the rest of your life. 

  It seems that it would be the middle level guys with the $500,000 - $1.2
million contracts who would get hurt the most because organizations who had put
together teams of hot prospects and a few stars won't be able to "go for it"
and try to win by paying $1 million a pop for middle levels guys to fill out a
winning roster. 

  George
178.542AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeMon Feb 13 1995 14:3412
    Buckley on EEI had some player who's had an extended minor league
    career on Saturday afternoon (my wife kills me when I switch her talk
    radio ("Whitley and Snitley" - she should tm that).  This guy says the
    union has cleared his participation to play in scab games.
    
    I get the impression that the union doesn't have a problem with the
    career minor leaguers (cup of coffee careerists) making a few bucks and
    getting a little exposure and perhaps winning a 25th spot out of it.
    
    But I'll bet Clemens has a few beanballs saved for any A.L. star who
    crosses early.  Apparently a lot want to be the 20th or 30th across
    just don't want Flutie like publicity.
178.543It doesn't add up...EDWIN::WAUGAMANMon Feb 13 1995 14:3615
    
> But what I don't understand is why the big name players would be more hawkish
> than the middle level players. 

    They're not.  Dykstra is in the exact same boat as Fielder, Clemens
    (haven't heard a peep out of Roger, don't know what that's all about),
    and Cal Ripken for that matter.  All are older veterans and all have 
    longterm contracts so they have nothing to gain from this.  Sure, 
    they can all more easily withstand the hit (except maybe Dykstra, with 
    his history god knows where the money is), but certainly _no_ eventual
    settlement coming after a long layoff no matter what the terms works 
    in their favor.
    
    glenn
    
178.544AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeMon Feb 13 1995 14:3912
    George,
    	It's the Jordan-Pippen effect where top mega-stars get slotted in
    somehow and can't get their market worth and can't go anywhere because
    of cap issues.
    	Ironically in my estimation the cap works best for the most.  But
    another issue tends to be revenue that composes the cap base and total
    mlb revenue which somehow escapes the cap.
    	You know the worst feeling in the world is to be making 7mil only
    to find that your employer has some cash hidden away and you could be
    making 8.  Would that just drive you crazy?
    
    Billte
178.545USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 13 1995 14:4416
>  But what I don't understand is why the big name players would be more hawkish
>than the middle level players. 

My thinking is that any type of salary-restrictive system has it effects on
all levels of players.  If there are fewer bidders for a superstar, chances
are the amount bid will be less.  And the middle and lower guys are feeling
the pinch now 'cause they know that when they come back (under any scenario)
their pay is gonna be a lot less because of the financial losses the owners
have already suffered.  And if these guys believe the owners' resolve is
strong enough to win this battle, some of these guys could really be in
trouble (Gammons wrote that if this thing took another year, some of these
middle-piddle guys will actually LOSE THEIR JOBS to talented minor leaguers,
who will play this year and be ready next).


BTW, Gammons also acknowledges that the owners do have financial problems.
178.546Scab baseball comingCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 13 1995 15:2116
    Everybody is going to lose more money. The owners will never get the
    money back that they lost for cancelling the season. In order to get
    some of that money back they will have to cut back on this years
    salaries. (When the owners implemented the cap in December the Red Sox
    had something like a 38 mill. cap. Duquette said Harrington gave him a
    33 mill budget.). 
    As far as the superstars salaries going down, I don't think that will
    happen. Just look at the contract Bagwell signed when everyone thougt
    there would be a cap. The Astros traded 3-4 regulars just to get under
    the cap and sign their superstar. The average to below average players
    salaries will fall.
    And for all the NBA people out there who think that there will be an
    agreement remember there are 2 things that the NBA and MLB have in
    common. Jerry Reisendorf and Ted Turner! Reisendorf is probably one of
    the biggest hawks in ownership and Turner has showed no interest in
    really getting involved.
178.547Is Newt in Ted's pocket?AKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeMon Feb 13 1995 16:219
    Speaking of Ted Turner.  Gammons alluded to him as being the owners
    trump card vis a vis the anti-trust (repeal) legislation.  The feeling
    is Ted can put a lot of pressure on Gingrich because of the money
    Turner put into his campaigns.
    
    This is not my opinion except I agree repeal of anti-trust exemption
    will go slow or not at all (it should be a no-brainer - no sport and
    especially baseball after the last 6 month fiasco should have this
    exemption).
178.548ONOFRE::MAY_BRpet rocks, pogs, Dallas CowboysMon Feb 13 1995 16:276
    
    Anyone think Ted and Newt are really that tight?  They're on opposite
    ends of the political spectrum.  If Ted gave Newt any $, it was
    probably less than he gave Newt's opponent.
    
    brews
178.549Newt and Hanoi Jane?CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 13 1995 16:283
    I cracked up when I read about Newt being in Ted's pocket. The question
    that needs to be answered is Newt in Jane's (Fonda) corner?
     
178.550DELNI::FORGETMon Feb 13 1995 16:509
    
    
     all the Big Stars make more than enough money to survive.  i did see
    Barry Bonds on Renegade last weekend.  The strike hurts all the little
    players.  The Boston Herald had an artilce Tony Fossas. He was smart
    and didn't blow his money.  Instead he bought a regular home and drives
    a 1982 Escort.  The house is paid for.  I could see Lenny d. crossing
    the picket line.  If i had the chance to make 5million a season, see
    ya.  Money talks!!!!!!
178.551This guy scares me...CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Mon Feb 13 1995 17:256
Newt's answer to the strike (this is true, I heard it on the radio):

Get all the owners and players together on an island.  Have them pray and then
watch "Field of Dreams"...

=Bob=
178.552Vegas thinks it'll be a long strike.PEAKS::WOESTEHOFFMon Feb 13 1995 18:046
  Just heard on the radio the Las Vegas odds of the strike being settled
  soon enough for the regular players to play on opening day. If ya think
  the regular players will start on opening day you can bet 1 dollar
  for a chance to win 35.

	Keith
178.553rumor or fact?GENRAL::WADEAh'm Yo Huckleberry...Fri Feb 17 1995 20:308
    
    	I read in another conference that an organization comprised
    	of owners and players (MLBA?) decided to start charging $6
    	per uniform to Little League teams which use names of major 
    	league teams (ie. Tigers, Red Sox, etc...).  If this is indeed
    	true, then a great big boo and a hiss to them.
    
    Claybone
178.554double booHBAHBA::HAASPlan 9 from Outer SpaceFri Feb 17 1995 21:185
Claybone,

I just heard that, too.

TTom
178.555Yes, it's a factMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Feb 20 1995 09:3032
-.2, Claybone:

>   	I read in another conference that an organization comprised
>   	of owners and players (MLBA?) decided to start charging $6
>   	per uniform to Little League teams which use names of major 
>   	league teams (ie. Tigers, Red Sox, etc...).  If this is indeed
>   	true, then a great big boo and a hiss to them.

Wire report (presumably AP) from The Stars and Stripes of Saturday 18 Feb:

MELBOURNE, Fla. - If a Little League team wants to use uniforms with a big
league nickname, it's going to have to pay extra for licenced products.

	Major League Baseball Properties is cracking down on Little League
teams and amateur adult teams.  They still can use the nicknames, but manu-
facturers will have to pay $6 per uniform for using licensed equipment.

[30]

It's not clear to me from this that the mere use of the name will cost money.
It sounds like it's the logo that they're charging for.  In other words, you
can call your Little League team The East Armpit Cardinals for free; but if
your uniform includes the birds on the bat, that's six bucks a pop.  After all,
the name "Cardinals" is not the property of the St. Louis club; otherwise,
they could make Stanford University pay them for the use of it.  And how can
you own a name like "Indians"?  This is however only my interpretation.

BTW:  MLBP is an organ of Major League Baseball, and has no connection with
the Player's Association, except of course that the Basic Agreement has
clauses regulating the distribution of royalties.

Steve
178.556CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Mon Feb 20 1995 12:189
The Red Sox issued a statement that they had no knowledge of this happenign in
the past, and would not support it for the future.  They said they were going to
investigate, and if it proved true, they would remint any money to Little League
baseball.

Too bad they couldn't do somehting to get kids out playing ball with NO
uniforms, teams, coaches, adults...

=bob=
178.557Remembering those sandlot daysCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 20 1995 12:455
>Too bad they couldn't do somehting to get kids out playing ball with NO
>uniforms, teams, coaches, adults...

AMEN
178.558GENRAL::WADEAh'm Yo Huckleberry...Mon Feb 20 1995 12:467
    
    Steve,
    	
    	The first sentence in that article is pretty clear.  It says
    	nickname not logo.  Incredible....
    
    Claybone
178.559CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Feb 20 1995 17:2214
    This strike it seems has taken yet another turn. It seems like a lot of
    the big market teams have said screw this replacement ball stuff. The
    O's have said they won't field a replacment team period. The Dodgers
    and a few other teams have said they won't make any of their minor
    leaguers play in a Scab games. The Blue Jays "home games" will be in
    Florida if the season opens. It now is the Large markets vs the Small
    markets vs the players.
    
    Also Gammons had the salary structure for Scab ball. Each player gets a
    5k signing/reporting bonus. If they start the regular season they get
    another 5k. When the real players come back they get a 25k severance. 
    So for 35k do you want to be a ML ballplayer?
    
    Mike 
178.560Yeah, but it's the APMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Feb 20 1995 17:2312
Claybone, I don't see how they can enforce it.  That sentence also refers
to "licensed products".

Even then, I think it is disgustingly small-minded.  They ought to be
delighted that the kids want to wear their favorite team's colors and
grateful for the free advertising.  The amount of money they'll generate
is a drop in the bucket.

Bully for the Red Sox.  If a few more clubs do the same thing, maybe MLBP
will reconsider and crawl back into its hole.

Steve
178.561Fine if you don't care who wins or loses...EDWIN::WAUGAMANSparky Anderson, man of integrityMon Feb 20 1995 17:3525
    
>    Whether the games should or shouldn't be played is a matter
>    of perspective, and not an absolute.

    For me, there's a basic underlying tenet with any sport that the
    competition is being waged on the up-and-up.  If the owners were 
    aggressively trying to put the "best players available" on the field,
    were sincerely trying to engage in a championship pennant competition
    with their second-line minor-league players and extras, I could see it
    differently.  It's obvious that they're not.  You've got managers and
    coaches disgusted with what they're doing, some teams very much
    indifferent to the entire scheme, the Baltimore Orioles completely 
    refusing to compete, the "Toronto" Blue Jays competing out of Dunedin 
    FL and god knows what else to come.  At best you've got the owners by 
    their own admission offering a "temporary" substitution, at worst it's 
    nothing more that a transparent attempt to break the union, a business
    goal which in the short term does not require offering legitimate 
    competition on the playing field (especially if you've got season-ticket 
    renewal rights hanging over the customer).  To me it's the worst insult 
    possible.  I too was disgusted by the players' decision to strike and 
    cause the cancellation of last year's WS, but better no championship 
    than a bogus one that the teams themselves aren't seriously contesting.
    
    glenn
       
178.562HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Feb 20 1995 17:4115
  It appears that the owners are really split over this thing. Right now
there seem to be at least 3 groups,

  - a group that refuses to field replacement teams

  - a group that would like to settle but will field replacement teams

  - a group that wants to break the union.

  I wonder if there is any chance that the leagues will break up? I could
see a situation where the O's and several other teams decided "heck, let's
cut a deal with our players and play ball" while other owners held out.

  Now that would be chaos,
  George
178.563ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsMon Feb 20 1995 17:514
    
    Bully choas.
    
    Joe
178.564USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Feb 20 1995 19:3832
re:  last few

As long as the MLB players are on strike, WHO CARES if the owners put
little leaguers on the field ???  This is a BUSINESS.  They produce
a product, you either buy it, or you don't !

Glenn, don't turn your %*^@ing TV or radio on.  And don't pay to go
see them play.  As the question goes, "if a tree falls in the
forest, but no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound ?".

As long as ML players aren't there, who cares what the owners do ?
If it's the standings you're worried about, well that's tough luck.
Your players (and mine) aren't on the field.  And like it or not,
the owners OWN major league baseball, and the teams we follow.
The players play by, and we follow by their rules.  That's the
privilege of OWNERSHIP.


As for emerging factions among the owners, I don't believe there
is a GROUP of owners that won't field a replacement team.  To-date
only Angelos has threatened to field a team.

I do agree that it appears replacement ball is not only dividing
players, but also owners.  Perhaps it will be the catalyst to get
things done.


BTW, did you hear Fehr say that ANY MINOR LEAGUER playing in
replacement games (exhibition or real) will be considered a
strike-breaker ?  So now he's trying to intimidate players
the owners have under contract, but are not part of the ML
players union.
178.565Sorry, Joe, I'm not a sheep...EDWIN::WAUGAMANSparky Anderson, man of integrityMon Feb 20 1995 20:1936
    
> Glenn, don't turn your %*^@ing TV or radio on.  And don't pay to go
> see them play.  As the question goes, "if a tree falls in the
> forest, but no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound ?".
    
    Damn straight.  I'm a season-ticket holder and I most definitely will
    _not_ be subsidizing this travesty.  If that's a tree in the forest,
    so be it.
    
> And like it or not,
> the owners OWN major league baseball, and the teams we follow.
> The players play by, and we follow by their rules.  That's the
> privilege of OWNERSHIP.
  
    First of all, "we" are the customer.  "We" don't follow by anything 
    if "we" don't want to.  Secondly, the privilege of ownership only 
    extends as far as allowed within the law.  The NFL learned that 
    lesson when similar to the current owners' plan, they imposed their 
    Plan B free agent plan.  Their "privilege" didn't extend that far, the
    courts let them know it, and it's not inconceivable that the same 
    thing will happen here.  That seems to be something that you continue 
    to ignore with this defense of "ownership can do anything it wants (and
    we shouldn't care)".  No, it can't, not at an absolute, neither in 
    practice nor in principle in a capitalistic system.  At least not under
    the American capitalistic system.
    
> As for emerging factions among the owners, I don't believe there
> is a GROUP of owners that won't field a replacement team.  To-date
> only Angelos has threatened to field a team.
    
    And as a GROUP, MLB has threatened to tag Angelos with a $500K/game
    fine and/or revocation of his franchise.  So much for non-organized,
    non-intimidating, non-UNIONIZED action on the part of the owners.
    
    glenn
                                                
178.566ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsMon Feb 20 1995 21:1921
    
>> Glenn, don't turn your %*^@ing TV or radio on.  And don't pay to go
>> see them play.  As the question goes, "if a tree falls in the
>> forest, but no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound ?".
    
>    Damn straight.  I'm a season-ticket holder and I most definitely will
>    _not_ be subsidizing this travesty.  If that's a tree in the forest,
>    so be it.
    
    Fair enough; I think a lot of people will have the same attitude.
    And I'll be more than happy to take advantage of the good seats
    that I expect will be available.
    
>    Their "privilege" didn't extend that far, the
>    courts let them know it, and it's not inconceivable that the same 
>    thing will happen here.
    
    Are you suggesting that "replacementball" will be thrown out by the
    courts?  That would be a shame.
    
    Joe (Sitting clearly in the minority, it seems...) 
178.567WONDER::REILLYSean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375Mon Feb 20 1995 23:2833
    
    Glenn,
    
      How would the players like to share in the risk as well as profit
      of ownership?  I haven't seen any players offer to take a cut if
      all these purported profits aren't made.  All I've seen is a lot of
      complaining about how much owners make.  EVERYONE makes a lot, but
      only one faction is taking a risk.
    
      If you owned Glenn's Bar And Grille, how would you like your
      bartender telling you how much profit you should earn?  Would
      you say "Listen, here's the salary, take it or leave it," or "Geez, how
      greedy I am -- you're right, why don't you tell me what your pay
      should be based on how much profit you think I should be making."?
     
      Chances are he/she'd be gone because your business "is different."  And 
      us customers of GBAG would maybe keep drinking there or not, depending 
      upon how much we liked that bartender.
     
      But that's business.  The owners of businesses take a risk and reap
      the reward.  Employees decide whether or not they want to work for
      said wages or not.  Sometimes they get together and hope their 
      collective power is enough to convince owners to give 'em a raise
      and sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
    
      The owners can be as dumb as they want and pay the consequences. 
      They are the owners.  Don't support dumb owners - I'm all for that,
      but I don't understand all the "breaking the union" and "scab" stuff.
        
      If I want to work as engineer for DEC at $X K and you don't, am I 
      a "scab" for taking the job?
    
    - Sean  
178.568The owners blew itCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Feb 21 1995 11:2814
    The problem is the owners are the ones who brought on 90% of the
    problems. I have asked this before and noone has answered it. Where are
    the guns the Dawsons, Youngs, Tartabulls etc. used to force the brain
    dead owners to sign them to huge contracts? Where did a poor team like
    the Astros get the money to sign Bagwell to his 7+ mill/year contract.
    I would love to own an franchise which has an antitrust exemption. Face
    it the owners have forced this on themselves thru mismanagment and
    instead of trying to work with the players like the NBA they have
    chosen to try and break the union. And if the owners were correct then
    why are the Umpires now also on strike? Instead of promoting the
    product on the field (the players) they want to trash them. As far as
    taking risks, when's the last time a MLB team went bankrupt? 
    
    Mike
178.569HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Feb 21 1995 12:028
  Exactly right Mike, we so often hear people talk about what it would be like
for the players to have a real job but I always wonder what it would be like
if the baseball owners had to own a real company.

  If only DEC had an anti-trust exemption and some white knight that would
give anything to buy us out and pay all our bills every time we lost money.

  George
178.570WONDER::REILLYSean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375Tue Feb 21 1995 12:0535
    
    > The problem is the owners are the ones who brought on 90% of the
    > problems.
    
    So?  Every owner of every business in the world has to suffer the
    consequences of his bad decisions and reap the benefits of the good.
    Why not baseball owners?
    
    > I have asked this before and noone has answered it. Where are
    >    the guns the Dawsons, Youngs, Tartabulls etc. used to force the brain
    >    dead owners to sign them to huge contracts?
    
    Look in the mirror.
    
    Its the fans who force this.  The fans want the big players.  The fans
    can want *anything* they want, since they don't have to come up with
    the means to pay for it.  But if the teams don't sign those players, the 
    fans get upset, and the sports writers start bashing the team for not 
    "wanting" to spend the money to get the big names.  And if prices go up, 
    watch out!  Can't have that.
    
    If the owners really need to cut costs, how do they do it?  They have
    no way, right now since if they don't pay the bif salaries the fans
    stop going and if they do, they're not cutting costs.
    
    The owners get forced by the market to spend big money, but only they
    are to assume the risks of this spending spree.  The players aren't 
    offering because its easier to just use that good old throwaway line:
    
      "Oh all those teams make money."
    
    Again, in what business do the employees tell their owners how much
    they should earn, and when its enough to give them a raise?
    
    Not any I know.
178.571CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Feb 21 1995 12:3838
    I have no problems with owners making money. I have problems with
    owners who cry poverty and as soon as this strike is over are going to
    soak 2 cities about 180 million bucks each to join in there cartel.
    If things are so tough why add teams?
    The owners don't need a salary cap or a tax to keep costs in line. They
    need them to keep other OWNERS in line. If each owner set their own
    salary structure for their team and stuck with it there would be a lot
    more Jody Reeds out there who would get paid what they deserve and not
    what they want.
    As far as looking in the mirror at the fans being a problem I would
    rather my favorite team the Red Sox had admitted a few years ago that
    they needed to retool and rebuild thru their Minor leagues then spend
    million dollars to sign aging has beens and players who never reached
    their potential. I am more then willing to watch the Trot Nixons, nomar
    G., Frankie Rodriguezs get there feet wet the next few years. I have
    turned off the TV the last few years and won't watch the Dawsons, Greg
    Harris's and the other 35 year plus players who give no hope of
    anything.
    
    Also any person can tell their bosses what they want to make. If the
    boss says no then that person has the right to go to another company to
    see if someone else will pay him what he wants. If he finds someone
    then that person can leave and go to a new employer just like hundreds
    are doing now in this company. If the person cann't find someone then
    he probably is overstating his market worth and will have have to 
    reaccess his worth.
    In a Free Market system that most of these owners have made millions of
    dollars there are no guarentees. When Wang went Chapter 11 no other 
    computer company felt sorry for them and started screaming for employee 
    relief. Why should MLB be any differant.
    
    Mike
     
    
    Mike
    
     
    
178.572Sharing risk/profit as partners? You're making too much senseEDWIN::WAUGAMANPeter Angelos, man of integrityTue Feb 21 1995 12:5528
>      How would the players like to share in the risk as well as profit
>      of ownership?  I haven't seen any players offer to take a cut if
>      all these purported profits aren't made.  All I've seen is a lot of
>      complaining about how much owners make.  EVERYONE makes a lot, but
>      only one faction is taking a risk.
    
    I'm sure that the players would gladly enter into an ownership
    partnership whereby they assume the "risk" (about as small in MLB as
    you'll ever want to see) and share in the profits.  Don't kid yourself, 
    though, this is not on the table nor will it ever be.  The owners 
    will have no part of such an arrangement.  It would be far too
    lucrative to the players because the industry is (was) _not_ losing
    money.
    
    What I've heard with both yourself and Joe (when he said "give me back
    arbitration and guaranteed salaries and I'm happy") are sound, legal 
    business propositions.  Unfortunately, they don't remotely match up 
    with the baseball owners' position, and more closely align with what is
    acceptable to the players.  The baseball owners' position is, we've
    seen what the market has produced for salaries, now we want to cut that 
    back by 15% and cap it.  Why?  Because 4-5 franchises are purportedly 
    in "grave financial danger" (even though no one will open up the
    books), which is something that the players in their current position 
    have little control over.
    
    glenn
     
178.573So it's the fans who've been holding the smoking gun?EDWIN::WAUGAMANPeter Angelos, man of integrityTue Feb 21 1995 13:0517
                                               
>    If the owners really need to cut costs, how do they do it?  They have
>    no way, right now since if they don't pay the bif salaries the fans
>    stop going and if they do, they're not cutting costs.
    
    Um, this is life in the big city.  You're talking about balancing
    supply against demand.  That's business.  You don't just magically 
    get everything you want, both low costs and high demand.
    
    With all due respect, Sean, the "fans force this" argument, as if the 
    fans are responsible for baseball's financial position, is pretty
    ridiculous.  The fans are the customers.  They are part of the equation
    (and should be; there's nothing wrong with incentive to winning) but
    they have no direct control over any of it.
    
    glenn
    
178.574WONDER::REILLYSean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375Tue Feb 21 1995 13:1028
    
    I'd be willing to bet that the last thing the players want is a truly 
    all-out Free Market system.
    
    Almost guaranteed they'd all be making less $$$$.  The way that
    salaries are kept so high is with limited free agency.  It keeps the 
    supply of great players artificially lower than the demand in any 
    given year.  If everybody in baseball were all free agents starting from 
    day 1, that'd be a real free market (and guess what would happen to 
    salaries with that kind of competition).  Ever wonder why you don't 
    see players argue for that as much as they argue for no salary cap?
    
    No, I think the players are babmboozling us as much as owners.  The system
    isn't a free market, granted, but the players are trying to make it seem 
    like only the owners are fighting it, and only the owners are winning 
    from it.  The players, imo, are much smarter than the owners, and, as 
    such, better at the marketing campaign.
    
    I'm all for a free market.  I bet the players really aren't.  They like
    the current system, they just don't want give in to a salary cap.
    
    In the end, a free market in sports, WILL change the game.  It's just
    simple capitalism in progress to assume that the better cities to live
    in and the owners with more money will win out over many current 
    baseball towns.  So, it'll be a great game for Boston and New York
    and Chicago, but.....  Do we all want that?
    
    - Sean    
178.575Record speaks for itself: already been proposedEDWIN::WAUGAMANPeter Angelos, man of integrityTue Feb 21 1995 13:1822
>    I'd be willing to bet that the last thing the players want is a truly 
>    all-out Free Market system.
>
>    Almost guaranteed they'd all be making less $$$$.  The way that
>    salaries are kept so high is with limited free agency.  It keeps the 
>    supply of great players artificially lower than the demand in any 
>    given year.  If everybody in baseball were all free agents starting from 
>    day 1, that'd be a real free market (and guess what would happen to 
>    salaries with that kind of competition).  Ever wonder why you don't 
>    see players argue for that as much as they argue for no salary cap?
    
    Again, another sensible proposition.  But I'm afraid that you're 
    incorrect about the players' unwillingess to go this route; they 
    _have_ offered to roll back free agency to 3 years, whatever it takes, 
    and the owners want absolutely no part of it.  The baseball industry 
    by virtue of its small size and special position will never be an 
    entirely free market, but the owners are trying to move further away 
    from and not closer to that ideal.
    
    glenn
    
178.576CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Feb 21 1995 13:3034
 Re .574   
  >>  I'd be willing to bet that the last thing the players want is a truly 
  >>  all-out Free Market system.
      Exactly correct. By opening up Free Agency to 4-5 year players the
      teams MLB has flooded the field. The top players will get the big
       bucks but the average to below average players will get closer to the
       minimum then the big bucks. Marvin Miller has always said that the
       best thing for the players is 100-150 Free Agents. 
    
    
    >>I'm all for a free market.  I bet the players really aren't.  They like
    >>the current system, they just don't want give in to a salary cap.
       The owners want a few years of payback for the millions they put
    into developing players and I don't blame them. 
    
    
    
 >> In the end, a free market in sports, WILL change the game.  It's just
 >> simple capitalism in progress to assume that the better cities to live
 >> in and the owners with more money will win out over many current 
 >> baseball towns.  So, it'll be a great game for Boston and New York
 >> and Chicago, but.....  Do we all want that?
    What about Miami,Baltimore, Los Angelas, Toronto, Colorado, St Louis?
    The only teams that I can see right now in trouble are Milwakee,
    Minnesota, Pittsburgh Seattle and Montreal. Two of those cities have
    shown in the past that they cann't support teams. (Brewers and
    Mariners.) Pittsburgh is a football town and probably won't support
    baseball as much is as needed today.  Montreal cann't, won't support
    baseball it seems. Minnesota is a borderline case that has won World
    Series in the past ten years. Why expand? Just move a couple of these
    teams to Phoenix or Tampa or Charlotte or Northern Virginia. 
    
    Mike
    
178.577USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Feb 21 1995 14:5715
The owners have the right to put 'replacement ball' on the field.
No court can stop them.  Remember, it is the players who are refusing
to work.  If we don't pay to see replacement ball, the owners will
have to adjust.  But the only voice we have is through our attendance,
which has proven to be a joke...as they said in Field of Dreams,
"build it, and they will come".

For the record, I was for the NFLPA in their fight with ownership.
Clearly, that system was one-sided not fair for the players.  And
MLBPA has *some* valid points, but they're trying to run the business
without ownership rights.  This on-going fight has been dominated by
the players for so long that I believe there needs to be a correction...
sort of a re-establishment of who's the boss.  The owners are criticized
for being a monopoly, yet the players practice similar tactics (regarding
the supply of labor) and that's OK.
178.578If the BB and your team stink, how long will "The Game" matter?EDWIN::WAUGAMANCal Ripken, man of integrityTue Feb 21 1995 21:0413
    One thing that might be expected with ReplacementBall is a wide
    disparity in team performances and records, because teams are 
    starting over without much information on these players (or because
    some teams just don't want to put much effort into it).  If you do 
    actually care about this joke, it might be pretty frustrating if 
    it's your team that comes out of the blocks 2-19, ruining the season 
    regardless of who plays from that point on.  But what the hell, it'd 
    just be another thing for which the striking players are too BLAM, 
    their half-baked idea or not...
    
    glenn
     
178.579SNAX::ERICKSONFifteen 2, Fifteen 4, and 3 is 5Wed Feb 22 1995 12:1727
    
    	I think that once the strike is over. All teams will start out
    0-0. So it isn't going to matter what the replacement players do.
    However, there will be a point of no return. Sorta like in Hockey,
    if we don't start playing by this date. The whole season will be lost
    or in this case played by replacement players.
    	I'm not a season ticket holder when I say this. I do not like the
    way the owners are handling tickets for season ticket holders. Making
    them renew there season tickets or lose them. Then telling them that
    for games in April/May will be $8.00 a piece. What if I am a season
    ticket holder and don't want to go see replacement players? Sure I
    could sell the tickets. Problem is I'm going to eat the cost of more
    tickets then I sell. Season ticket holders should have the right to
    turn in there tickets. On a month by month basis for a full refund,
    Until the strike is settled. So that the owners can try and resell the
    tickets not the season ticket holder.
    Example --- I should be able to bring all of my April tickets to the
    box office for a refund now. During the first week of April, I should
    be able to bring ALL of my May tickets to the box office for a refund.
    This should continue during the season, until the strike is settled.
    They shouldn't be allowed to shaft people who have been season ticket
    holders for years. Reminder I'm not a season ticket holder and don't
    know anybody who is. I also don't favor either side in the strike. The
    owners are money hungry. While the players are money hungry and have
    a big ego of themselves.
    
    Ron
178.580HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Feb 22 1995 12:4117
RE Making the playoffs

  Another possibility is that they might do something like they did back in '81
when they had the leaders of the 1st half and the leaders of the 2nd half make
the playoffs. 

  Of course the really weird thing about the '81 season was that despite the
strange season and the weird playoffs, it still ended up with the Yankees and
the Dodgers in the World Series. Then in '84 which was a regular season they
ended up with the Padres beating the Cubs to take on the Tigers, so go figure, 

  Anyway, this time around they could have teams leading the strike season make
the playoffs along with teams leading the none strike part of the season. Or
perhaps they could base the divisions on overall record but base the wild cards
on the non-strike part of the season. 

  George 
178.581USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 22 1995 13:0023
>  <<< Note 178.578 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Cal Ripken, man of integrity" >>>
                                                    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If the strike is on when the season begins, you can change that to
"Cal Ripken, man who wouldn't play the game".   (snicker...snicker)


>    actually care about this joke, it might be pretty frustrating if 
>    it's your team that comes out of the blocks 2-19, ruining the season 

Glenn, if there is ReplacementBall, if/when the striking players come back,
they'll be so out of shape that all bets are off re: where your team will
finish anyway.

And YES, the players are more to BLAM than the owners.  The NBA players
agreed to PLAY BALL (showing some respect for the game) while their
contract is settled.  Your obstinate, pompous, egotistical cry babies
won't do the same.  If the owners asked the fans' opinion, I'd vote for
them to pull a Ronald Reagan-PATCO move, acknowledging that it may take
2 seasons to get this thing back to where it was, BUT the ship would be
righted and the Cones-Glavines-Fielders-and-the-like would be OUTTA HERE !

And ReplacementBall will count.  Can you imagine the legal problems with
fans, TV and Radio if these games didn't ?
178.582CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardWed Feb 22 1995 13:1011
|If the strike is on when the season begins, you can change that to
|"Cal Ripken, man who wouldn't play the game".   (snicker...snicker)

Or you could put

	
		Cal Ripken, Paper Pony


8^)

178.583It'd be a shameANGLIN::WIERSBECKWed Feb 22 1995 13:165
    Sorry to say, but if replacement ball happens - even for one game and
    Cal doesn't play, his streak ends.  Remember, it's his choice to sit.
    
    
    Spud
178.584CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardWed Feb 22 1995 13:199
You know who Cal reminds me of.

He reminds me of that actor who played the FBI guy in "To Live and Die in LA"

I can't remember his name.  But I'll be he could play Cal in the inevitable
"Cal Ripken Story" movie that will be made someday....


'Saw
178.585ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsWed Feb 22 1995 13:2910
    
>                              -< It'd be a shame >-
    
    Nah, it'd be life.  All indications are that his streak hasn't ever 
    been in his team's best interest; if he cares more about the MLBPA
    than his team, well, that's his choice.  But it would have been
    more of a shame if ole' Moonlight Graham had only been a doctor
    for one day... B^)
    
    Joe
178.586HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Feb 22 1995 13:369
RE                    <<< Note 178.583 by ANGLIN::WIERSBECK >>>

>    Sorry to say, but if replacement ball happens - even for one game and
>    Cal doesn't play, his streak ends.  Remember, it's his choice to sit.
    
  Maybe and maybe not. Someone earlier was saying that football streaks were
not broken by their replacement games back in the mid 80's.

  George
178.587They can delay, but the clock isn't going to be rolled backEDWIN::WAUGAMANFay Vincent, man of integrityWed Feb 22 1995 14:1844
> And YES, the players are more to BLAM than the owners.  The NBA players
> agreed to PLAY BALL (showing some respect for the game) while their
> contract is settled.  Your obstinate, pompous, egotistical cry babies
> won't do the same.
    
    I just hope that you're consistent if/when the NLRB comes down on the
    owners again, striking their "system" and re-imposing the old one, then
    locking the players out when they attempt to return (which is _exactly_
    what both parties in the NBA agreed to-- to play on under the old system,
    which the MLB players will do, the owners won't-- you've again managed
    to twist what happened in the NBA completely in the opposite direction 
    towards your own purpose).  Somehow I doubt it.
    
> If the owners asked the fans' opinion, I'd vote for
> them to pull a Ronald Reagan-PATCO move, acknowledging that it may take
> 2 seasons to get this thing back to where it was, BUT the ship would be
> righted and the Cones-Glavines-Fielders-and-the-like would be OUTTA HERE !
    
    If any of this were to come to pass, and the game returned to immense
    profitability for the owners, with the next batch of stars establishing
    themselves, what makes you think that this next generation of players 
    is going to agree to be bound by a non-negotiated, owner-imposed 
    restriction on salaries?  Hint: they won't.  It's 1995, not 1955.
    That's the lunacy of all of this.  If Derek Jeter becomes a huge
    superstar, he's going to fight for his dough.  I might not like it, 
    but it's reality.
    
    The guys you're in love with now are the ones you'll be showing
    contempt for tomorrow, just as the praises for the great character
    of the 1994 NY Yankees (and those _are/were_ a good bunch of guys) 
    have been replaced with condemnations.  You're tilting at windmills,
    Joe.  Human nature isn't going to be changed by the actions of the 
    28 lords.  You may not be able to stomach the modern athlete, at 
    which point maybe it _is_ time to just stop following the games, but
    they're not going to change, in any sport.  My choice is to more 
    or less remain indifferent to the kind of money they make.  And if the
    modern athlete can't agree with the modern owner over the basic rules
    that define the system, then throw the rules out and make everyone 
    subject to the laws of the real world.  Let the chips fall where they
    may.
    
    glenn
    
178.588He was Treasury (Secret Service) not FBIPCBUOA::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingWed Feb 22 1995 16:043
    Saw - William Petersen ("Manhunter").
    
    Mark.
178.589CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Wed Feb 22 1995 16:356
glenn

Yo sure are gettin' a lot of mileage out of your "..., man of integrity"
p-names.  Keep up the good work.

=bob=
178.590SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceWed Feb 22 1995 16:438
     <<< Note 178.588 by PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE "PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing" >>>
                 -< He was Treasury (Secret Service) not FBI >-

  >  Saw - William Petersen ("Manhunter").
   
    Dafoe was in that as well wasn't he?

     daryll
178.591EDWIN::WAUGAMANTommy Brydie, fan of integrityWed Feb 22 1995 16:4811
> Yo sure are gettin' a lot of mileage out of your "..., man of integrity"
> p-names.  Keep up the good work.
    
    The "Man of Integrity" series hereby promises to remain faithful to
    those rare individuals of demonstrated courage and intestinal 
    fortitude over the course of this long, painful baseball work 
    stoppage (yeah, I know, spare us...)
    
    glenn
    
178.592And a panama hat with a triple hat bandAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeWed Feb 22 1995 17:042
    One thing's for sure if he walks into the OPP with that prom dress on
    they'll be talking about him in 2095
178.593CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardWed Feb 22 1995 17:0524
|> Yo sure are gettin' a lot of mileage out of your "..., man of integrity"
|> p-names.  Keep up the good work.
|    
|    The "Man of Integrity" series hereby promises to remain faithful to
|    those rare individuals of demonstrated courage and intestinal 
|    fortitude over the course of this long, painful baseball work 
|    stoppage (yeah, I know, spare us...)
    
Well, sign me up.....

Now that I live a scant 10 minutes from Beehive Field in New Britain,
I'll be seeing any baseball I see this season THERE, as long as the
truck drivers and UPS guys and electricians are playing baseball-wannabes....


Replacement players are sacrilege.  

And you know, for all the bitchin' I do about Cal breaking the Great Gehrig's
record, I'd have like to have seen him have the chance LEGIT.  None of
this, 'Oh Cal didn't cross the line so he loses it' stuff....


'Saw    

178.594PCBUOA::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingWed Feb 22 1995 17:4011
     <<< Note 178.590 by SALEM::DODA "Donald Fehr, man of intransigence" >>>

>    Dafoe was in that as well wasn't he?
    
    Yup.
    
    Both _Manhunter_ and _To Live and Die in LA_ are excellent.  Both are
    Michael Mann (_Last of the Mohicans_, Miami Vice, Crime Story)
    productions.
    
    Mark.
178.595USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 22 1995 18:1443
>    I just hope that you're consistent if/when the NLRB comes down on the
>    owners again, striking their "system" and re-imposing the old one, then
>    locking the players out when they attempt to return

1st, what system have the owners implemented ?  I thought they repealed
the cap system.

Glenn, I ain't bitchin' about the players being on strike, just reminding
you pro-player guys, who are blaming the owners for all this, that it's the
players who refused to play last year.  I don't know where you get the idea
that I'd be pissed if things turn around and the owners lock 'em out.  I won't.
I'm not bitchin' 'cause their won't be *real* baseball.  I believe the
owners have a point, and there should be a change to the player pay system.
They shouldn't allow the players to play under last year's rules.  The
owners want negotiated change.  The players want status quo (why wouldn't
they ?).


>    If any of this were to come to pass, and the game returned to immense
>    profitability for the owners, with the next batch of stars establishing
>    themselves, what makes you think that this next generation of players 
>    is going to agree to be bound by a non-negotiated, owner-imposed 
>    restriction on salaries?  Hint: they won't.  It's 1995, not 1955.

>    The guys you're in love with now are the ones you'll be showing
>    contempt for tomorrow,

>    You may not be able to stomach the modern athlete,

I don't know where you get the idea that I'm against Mattingly or
Griffey making megabucks.  I'm not.  I do believe the middle-piddle
guys (Gallego, Spike Owen) shouldn't be making what they're making.
And I do believe the current system makes it very hard, if not
impossible, for the owners to control salary escalation, which
closes some teams out of the bidding for certain players.

IF, the owners 'flush' the players out over a 2-yr period, the
players that do play will be playing under the owners' system, not a
negotiated system.  Their proposal provides a lot of money for the next
generation of stars (what is it in terms of today's money ?  $40M for 25
players ????).  But I don't believe there will never be a union or a
collective bargaining agreement.  But it WILL be different.  The MLBPA
is a monster that is totally out of control.  It needs to take a hit.
178.596Tell Nike I want a gold card!BSS::NEUZILJust call me FredWed Feb 22 1995 18:179

	Did anyone see the SNL skit last week with Deon Sanders?  Kinda
	a parody on the big bucks players (Deon in particular).  For what
	it's worth, I don't follow baseball that much, but I'm on the side
	of the players on this one.  Seems like the owners want the players
	to protect the owners from themselves.

	Kevin
178.597CNTROL::CHILDSKittles &gt;&gt; AllenWed Feb 22 1995 18:5716
 I thought it was a gold car? I saw it not bad.

 It seems to me that replacement ball will be pretty boring. I'd suspect
 it would be like mixing a few high school players in with some little
 leaguers when it comes to the talent aspect. If one of the High
 Schoolers happens to be the pitcher I pity the little leaguers.

 How anybody can side with the owners when they refuse to open up their
 books is beyond me. 
 
 I'm in agreement that system is crazy and the players greedy but until
 the owners prove they are less greedy by proof of the books then I say
 the hell with them.........

 mike
178.598CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Feb 22 1995 19:1316
    Why are the players out of control when all they are asking is the
    continued right to be able to get the best price for their abilities
    and their talent? IT'S THE SAME RIGHT AS ANY OTHER AMERICAN CITIZEN!!
    Is their jealousy because they make so much? All you have to do is go
    and try out for a scab team and see if you can make a team that isn't
    even Class A talent. And then if you make it you have a shot to impress
    the Front offfices and when the players come off strike you can then
    compete against them. If you make it this far you'll be eligible for
    about 130k/ year. Then you won't have the right to seek baseball 
    employment with any other place in the US for 3 years and the team that
    your on will set the terms of employment. After that your all set
    because then you can negotiaite with any team you want. But in the 5th
    and 6th years of employment your old team can match any offer you
    receive.  So go ahead and try out. There's about 700 openings!
    
    Mike
178.599That pendulum didn't fall, it was pushed...EDWIN::WAUGAMANFay Vincent, man of integrityWed Feb 22 1995 19:1550
> 1st, what system have the owners implemented ?  I thought they repealed
> the cap system.
  
    They pulled the original cap system under the authority of the NLRB, 
    then banned signings until such time that they impose a new system 
    (no one yet knows what this will be).  Actually, they didn't 
    completely ban signings, only signings by individual clubs.  Contracts 
    _can_ be signed through the Player Relations Committee (the owners' 
    union, if you will).  Under what terms and conditions (a league-wide 
    secret salary cap?) no one but the owners know...
    
> Glenn, I ain't bitchin' about the players being on strike, just reminding
> you pro-player guys, who are blaming the owners for all this, that it's the
> players who refused to play last year.  I don't know where you get the idea
> that I'd be pissed if things turn around and the owners lock 'em out.  I 
> won't.
    
    I know you won't.  I was asking if you'd remain consistent in who
    is to blame for _no_ baseball (of any kind) after a lockout, or would
    you then change your tune and claim that the players "forced" the
    lockout.  That's if and when the NLRB again renders its opinion to the 
    courts that it's the owners who have acted illegally, and the courts
    ban the replacement system effectively telling them to go the route 
    of the NBA owners (either play under the old rules for now or don't play 
    at all).  I certainly don't know what is going to happen (granted it
    can't all happen before April 3), but I'm not one to pretend that 
    the owners should be above the country's labor laws if this does occur 
    (again).
    
> I don't know where you get the idea that I'm against Mattingly or
> Griffey making megabucks.  I'm not.  I do believe the middle-piddle
> guys (Gallego, Spike Owen) shouldn't be making what they're making.
> And I do believe the current system makes it very hard, if not
> impossible, for the owners to control salary escalation, which
> closes some teams out of the bidding for certain players.
    
    We've heard this again and again yet no one has given any rational 
    explanation for why it is so (Gallego, Owen were _not_ signed under 
    arbitration decisions, and in fact the owners have rejected arbitration 
    as a meaningful point for negotiation).  This business of the players as 
    a collective unit demanding more and more has no basis in fact.  "The 
    System" has remained almost entirely unchanged from the point when it 
    was negotiated in 1976.  Player rights under "The System" peaked before
    1985 when they gave back some of their arbitration eligibility rights.
    Since then, very little change.  I guess owners have just gotten a lot 
    dumber in the last 10 years.  
    
    glenn
    
178.600SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceWed Feb 22 1995 19:3519
     <<< Note 178.599 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Fay Vincent, man of integrity" >>>
                -< That pendulum didn't fall, it was pushed... >-

  
  >  They pulled the original cap system under the authority of the NLRB, 
  >  then banned signings until such time that they impose a new system 
  >  (no one yet knows what this will be).  Actually, they didn't 
  >  completely ban signings, only signings by individual clubs.  Contracts 
  >  _can_ be signed through the Player Relations Committee (the owners' 
  >  union, if you will).  Under what terms and conditions (a league-wide 
  >  secret salary cap?) no one but the owners know...
   
   Is this new? Last I heard, it was the players union who had 
   stated that no more players will sign contract until the strike 
   is resolved. They went on to threaten the agents by telling them 
   they'd pull their certification if they tried to get any player 
   signed to a contract.

    daryll
178.601DZIGN::ROBICHAUDFleet ForumWed Feb 22 1995 20:209
	Hey I'm all for a salary cap as long as it's followed up by a 
ticket price cap.  I was reading an article in last week's TSN that hinted 
Lenny Dykstra's actions were possibly prompted by some of the union leaders 
calling Usery senile.  Guess the 30K a day he could lose has nothing to do 
with talking about crossing the line.  He just couldn't stand seeing 
Usery's good name besmirched.  Hey Glenn given these circumstances how about 
a new P-Name, "Lenny Dykstra - Man of Integrity".

				   /Don
178.602MKFSA::LONGThe Igloo is rockin'!Thu Feb 23 1995 14:5614
    Listenin' to all o' yunz whinin' over the quality of MLB come
    April, if'n those money-grabbin' wusses stay on strike, is like
    making statements about how a movie sucks just because Siskel and
    'Eggbert' gave it two thumbs down.
    
    Fer cripes sake, you haven't even seen it yet.  Am I the only one
    living and breathing who doesn't take every word out of the press
    wannabbes as gospel?
    
    BTW I take the degrading comments towards truck drivers kinda
    personal bein' a decendent of one.
    
    
    billl
178.603SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceThu Feb 23 1995 15:046
Amen Billl, they blast PR and then go out and take hook, line, 
and sinker to what they've been fed by the press.

It's only PR when you don't agree with it.

daryll
178.604MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Thu Feb 23 1995 15:1724
    
  >> Listenin' to all o' yunz whinin' over the quality of MLB come
  >> April, if'n those money-grabbin' wusses stay on strike, is like
  >> making statements about how a movie sucks just because Siskel and
  >> 'Eggbert' gave it two thumbs down.
    
     No, it's more like making statements about how a movie will suck because
     it has Jerry Mathers as Hamlet and Roseanne Barr as Ophelia. It's
     not the advance notices, billl, it's the stanky cast.
     
  >> Fer cripes sake, you haven't even seen it yet.  Am I the only one
  >> living and breathing who doesn't take every word out of the press
  >> wannabbes as gospel?
    
     Yes, you're a martyr in the grand tradition of Jean D'Arc. The rest
     of us are just a bunch of easily misled dolts who actuall believe
     this week's Weekly World Headline "Newt Gingrich Meets with Alien".
    
  >> BTW I take the degrading comments towards truck drivers kinda
  >> personal bein' a decendent of one.
    
     That would go a long way to explaining some things.    
    billl
    
178.605MKFSA::LONGThe Igloo is rockin'!Thu Feb 23 1995 16:1025
>        <<< Note 178.604 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>
>
>    
>  >> Listenin' to all o' yunz whinin' over the quality of MLB come
>  >> April, if'n those money-grabbin' wusses stay on strike, is like
>  >> making statements about how a movie sucks just because Siskel and
>  >> 'Eggbert' gave it two thumbs down.
>    
>     No, it's more like making statements about how a movie will suck because
>     it has Jerry Mathers as Hamlet and Roseanne Barr as Ophelia. It's
>     not the advance notices, billl, it's the stanky cast.
    
    Thanks for proving my point.  Or have you actually seem not only
    the teams working out this year, but the ones in years past to 
    make these judgements?
    
    I'm not saying these guys won't be pitiful.  I'm just trying to
    hold judgement until I see them.  You know, kinda like "innocent
    until proven" stanky.
    
    btw, I agree with Mikey Childs.  Having Tommy trash your note/opinions
    in here is quite the honor.
    
    
    billl
178.606CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Feb 23 1995 16:2099
    Let me ask a question here. If you are a Red Sox fan or a baseball fan in
    the Boston area would you pay 8 bucks for a box seat, 10-15 bucks for
    parking plus consessions to watch the following team introduced as 
    "Your Boston Red Sox?
    
    
    
    
       List of players in Sox camp this spring, from the internet:
    
>Newsgroups: alt.sports.baseball.bos-redsox
>Subject: Re: Need replacement roster...
>Date: 19 Feb 1995 20:08:48 -0500
>Lines: 88

>The rosters aren't set and there has been as of yet no official
>designation of who is and who isn't a replacement player but the folks in
>camp -- according to the Boston Globe today, 2/19/95.  Position noted
>where known.
> 
>Andy Abad, OF
>Ron Allen
>Chad Amos, RHP
>Chris Antoszek
>Marcos Armas, OF
>Mike Baker, INF
>Scott Bakkum, RHP
>Don Barbara, 1B
>Juan Bell, SS
>Pookie Bernstine
>Jason Black
>Kurt Bogott
>Wes Brooks, RHP
>Randy Brown, SS
>Greg Brummett, RHP
>Tim Cain
>Todd Carey
>Mike Carista, RHP
>Glenn Carter, RHP
>Joe Caruso, RHP
>Joe Ciccarella, LHP
>Felix Colon, OF
>Calvin Culberson, RHP
>Kevin Dean, OF
>Eugenio Delgado
>Alex Delgado, C
>Blane Fox
>Jason Friedman, 1B
>Ed Fulton, C
>Dan Gakeler, RHP
>Tim Graham, SS
>Jeff Hammond
>Brent Hansen, RHP
>Sam Hill  
>Steve Hoeme, RHP
>Tim Howard
>Dominic Johnson, RHP
>Joel Johnston, RHP
>Bob Juday, 3B
>Gregg Langbehn, RHP
>Dana Levangie, C
>Ron Mahay, OF
>John Malzone, 3B
>Jeff Martin, C
>David Marzano
>Walt McKeel, C
>Lou Merloni, SS
>Pat Murphy, 2B
>Joel Nies
>Chris Pinder
>Dale Plummer
>Clyde "Pork Chop" Pough 1B
>Hiram Ramirez, RHP
>Lance, Rathmell
>Tony Rodriguez, SS
>Thad Rowland
>Jason Sartre, RHP
>Travis Shaffer
>Matt Stairs, OF
>Scott Wade, OF
>Aubrey Waggoner, OF
>Bill Wengert, P
>Craig White
>John Wilder
>Steve Wojtowski
>Pete Young, RHP
>Jose Zambrano, OF
>Erik Lovdahl
>Matt Brown
>James Larkin, INF
>Steven Munda, RHP
>Rocky Elli, LHP
>Cesar Bernhardt, 2B
>Darryl Robinson
>John Huebner            
>Donald Erickson
>Thomas Kane
>Stan Royer, 3B
> 
178.607CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Thu Feb 23 1995 16:2616
|   I'm not saying these guys won't be pitiful.  I'm just trying to
|   hold judgement until I see them.  You know, kinda like "innocent
|   until proven" stanky.
 
Just what the owners are hoping.  A CNN pole of people claiming to be baseball
fans said 43% of them would not watch replacement baseball, while 41% said they
would.  It boggles my mind that so many people would fall prey to this ploy by
the owners.  Interestingly enough, the remaining 14% said they will not watch
even if the players came back.

I'm not pro-player or pro-owner.  I see the points against each that they are
both being scum.  I just hope that Gammons is right, and that this replacement
scheme is falling apart before it gets off the ground.

=bob= 
 
178.608MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Thu Feb 23 1995 16:3824
    
 > Thanks for proving my point.  Or have you actually seem not only
 > the teams working out this year, but the ones in years past to 
 > make these judgements?
  
   At this point, I'm going to have to ask for a translation because
   I'm not quite sure what you mean. 

 > I'm not saying these guys won't be pitiful.  I'm just trying to
 > hold judgement until I see them.  You know, kinda like "innocent
 > until proven" stanky.
  
   Whether or not these guys are 'pitiful' isn't really even the point.
   They may be quite competitive against each other although I wouldn't
   be at all surprised to see some real stinko games. What *is* the point
   is that they are not anything even approaching Major League calibre 
   and have no business donning Red Sox uniforms and trotting out on the 
   field as Our Towne Team. And for the record, I don't blame a one of 
   them for doing it. If I was asked, I might do it, too. I blame the 
   owners for perpetrating this fraud upon the public and for demeaning 
   and degrading baseball and insulting the intelligence of fans. It's the
   Beatlemania scam taken to new heights (or is it 'lows'?).
   
    
178.609MKFSA::LONGThe Igloo is rockin'!Thu Feb 23 1995 16:4711
    >It boggles my mind that so many people would fall prey to this ploy by
    >the owners.
    
    Is it at all possible that I enjoy watching the game of baseball played
    in Fenway?  As long as the players don't look like the Keystone Kops,
    as many in here would have us believe, (even without seeing them) then
    it is those who turn up their puritanical-sofisticated noses that will
    be 'falling prey to a ploy' by the _players_
    
    
    billl
178.610SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceThu Feb 23 1995 16:5518
What's interesting is that when coaches and managers (and more 
than a couple have said this) have come out and said that the 
reports of over-weight beach-bums are exagerations and that the 
quality of talent is actually not anywhere as bad as it's made out 
to be, it's ignored. If the managers and coaches are truly in 
the middle and are hoping for a settlement, what's their 
motivation for making such remarks?

When Gammons and "respected" baseball writers write that the 
camps are filled with fat slobs that are a travesty to baseball, 
it's taken as gospel. How many interviews would a writer who said 
otherwise get after the strike was settles. I see clear 
motivation to regurgitate Fehr's party line.

You will pardon the rest of us who will wait and see for 
ourselves won't you?

daryll
178.611HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Feb 23 1995 16:5518
RE       <<< Note 178.606 by CSLALL::BRULE "Was there life before ESPN?" >>>

>    Let me ask a question here. If you are a Red Sox fan or a baseball fan in
>    the Boston area would you pay 8 bucks for a box seat, 10-15 bucks for
>    parking plus consessions to watch the following team introduced as 
>    "Your Boston Red Sox?
    
  Well since I live in town and can get to Fenway with a 60 cent bus ride I'll
probably go once just out of curiosity. I figure the place will be half empty
so I'll buy a general admission ticket and pick an empty seat. 

  I might even watch once on TV, again out of curiosity, but I doubt I'll go
again or watch more than one or two games until the real players return. 

  Now if NESN covers the PawSox or if they have Japanese baseball on TV, well
that's something else again. 

  George 
178.612MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Thu Feb 23 1995 16:597
    
      re .610
    
      So the managers have no reason for backing the owner's party
      line (owner :== employer) but writer's have great cause for 
      backing the players'? It's obviously all in what you *want* 
      to believe because I don't buy that spiel for a minute.
178.613CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Thu Feb 23 1995 17:0018
|You will pardon the rest of us who will wait and see for 
|ourselves won't you?

OK, younze guys are right - I should have said that I was
reflecting the way *I* feel about it.

As I stated, I'm not pro-player or pro-owner, and I'm sure that
the media people who portray the iminent disaster of the
replacement player strategy have a pro-player slant.  Gammons
makes a living out of being an "insider", so probably doesn't want
to aliente the players.

I just think the that if there were no replacement teams, the
owners, for one, would be more motivated to settle.  Frankly, I
don't care who "wins" and who "loses", as long as they settle.  No
matter what, the teams will raise ticket prices,

=bob=
178.614CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardThu Feb 23 1995 17:2825
>     No, it's more like making statements about how a movie will suck because
>     it has Jerry Mathers as Hamlet and Roseanne Barr as Ophelia. It's
>     not the advance notices, billl, it's the stanky cast.
     
Wow.  I read this.  Then I read it again.   Then I got the shakes.  
Then I had to make the quick trip up the hall, out the door, across the
atrium lobby, through the door and around the corner into the men's room.

Stanky cast induced diarrhea is a bitch!

But not as much of a bitch as thinking about that cast!  Whew!

Tommy, you have some truly SCARY thoughts...8^)


|  >> BTW I take the degrading comments towards truck drivers kinda
|  >> personal bein' a decendent of one.
|    
|     That would go a long way to explaining some things.    
|    billl
    
Nothin' wrong with truck drivin' dads......



178.615MKFSA::LONGThe Igloo is rockin'!Thu Feb 23 1995 17:485
    Now who was it in here that consistantly portrayed the 'average'
    major leaguer as having a phisique of Kruk and the speed of our
    very own Chainsaw.
    
    So what's so different?
178.616they're just running their business with employees willing to workUSCTR1::GARBARINOThu Feb 23 1995 17:493
The owners aren't trying to pull the wool over anyone's eyes.  They're
offering reduced prices if these games are played.  I think it's you
pro-player guys who are hung-up on this *fraud* kick.
178.617Guys haven't played for years, and it's the writers conning us? OK...EDWIN::WAUGAMANJim Bunning, man of integrityThu Feb 23 1995 17:5922
    Seriously, how good can these players be after a month of workouts 
    when _most_ never got above AA to begin with, are now over 30 and 
    have been sitting around dormant for the last 5-10 years?  You guys 
    can "wait and see" all you want, but any belief that the quality of 
    play will be above high-A Ball at best is hoping for a miracle (a 
    couple of stragglers doesn't change that, either).  If that's 
    acceptable quality for you, fine, but don't try to convince anyone 
    that AAA teams wouldn't drive these guys into the ground.
    
    It's ludicrous to suggest that writers like Peter Gammons, Tom 
    Boswell, Tim Kurkjian etc. who have spent their entire adult lives 
    covering baseball and baseball only, becoming the most respected 
    sportswriters in their field, not only don't have knowledge of 
    the history of this affair but are actually front men for Don Fehr.  
    Peter Gammons in particular is definitely not "pro-player".  Hell, 
    he's even a lifelong friend of the owner of the SF Giants, Peter 
    McGowan.  If Gammons says that this isn't going to be pretty (hardly 
    an outrageous prediction), you can be sure he believes it.
    
    glenn
    
178.618CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardThu Feb 23 1995 18:0218
>    Now who was it in here that consistantly portrayed the 'average'
>    major leaguer as having a phisique of Kruk and the speed of our
>    very own Chainsaw.
>    
>    So what's so different?

Hey, hey, I resemble that remark!

And I'll remind you all of that replacement player for the Dodger who
looked like a 50 year old Kurt Gibson after the Elizabeth Taylor Bon-Bon
Diet, "hustling" down the 1B line...  I'm FASTER than that guy!

Besides, I have a better physique than Kruk!


'Saw


178.619CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Thu Feb 23 1995 18:1517
>    So what's so different?

Uhh, how about the fact that Kruk can hit the ball...

Once and for all - this is my position:

The players are a$$-holes for being unresponsive to negotiation,
and too unswerving in thier demands.

The owners are a$$-holes for putting on a faux-season, with faux
ballplayers, and selling it as major league baseball.

I am not pro-player, or pro-owner, so when *I* feel I was being
objective when I raised my distain for the replacement player
solution.

=bob=
178.620MKFSA::LONGThe Igloo is rockin'!Thu Feb 23 1995 19:209
     >Seriously, how good can these players be after a month of workouts
     >when _most_ never got above AA to begin with, are now over 30 and
     >have been sitting around dormant for the last 5-10 years?  
    
     Glenn, what is the internet address to pull up all these resumes
     you have access to?
    
    
    billl
178.621Really, this is no secret...EDWIN::WAUGAMANJim Bunning, man of integrityThu Feb 23 1995 19:3618
              
>     Glenn, what is the internet address to pull up all these resumes
>     you have access to?
    
    I follow the game fairly closely, billl.  Majors and minors.  The 
    off-season signings and some of their career histories have been recorded 
    and published in Baseball Weekly and elsewhere.  When I said that most of 
    the players never made it above AA I was being generous; it's probably 
    worse if you break it down precisely (I'd ask Joe Huber for his input on 
    this; I know he also follows this stuff and I greatly respect his 
    knowledge on the players).  I'm not sure what it is that you don't 
    believe or what it is that you expect to happen.  There aren't a whole 
    lot of name ex-major leaguers showing up in these camps.  You've got 
    your occasional Oil Can Boyd or Randy Kutcher (not saying much, at their 
    ages) but that's about it.
    
    glenn
    
178.622PTOSS1::JACOBRMy chest is on fire, dammit!!Thu Feb 23 1995 19:4018
    What gets me is all the talk I've heard in here re. "Nobody put a gun
    to the owners haids", and "The owners dug this hole", & "It's all the
    owners faults".
    
    What it comes down to is that assholes like George Steinbrenner,
    dishing out massive contracts to try and create the best teams money
    could buy, along with (mumble) in Oakland in the same time period.
    
    It was a select few that HAD the big local TV contracts, or cable
    contracts, that had the money, and drove salaries up into the
    stratosphere.  The plyers, money grubbing pukes that they are,
    naturally started COMMANDING massive salaries and things sorta got
    outta hand.
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
178.623JMHOPTOSS1::JACOBRMy chest is on fire, dammit!!Thu Feb 23 1995 19:4216
    re back a few
    
    Some of the players have shot off their big fat mouths, but I bet if
    Fehr would get off his fat money grubbing ass and put what the owners
    have offered recently to the players, it'd be voted in by a 3-1 margin.
    
    The more Fehr gets fer the players, the more $$$ he makes.  PERIOD.
    
    The owners have caved in on just about every single issue, and Fehr
    still feels its not enough.
    
    Maybe somebody should introduce Fehr to the single gunman theory, and
    tell him how it would apply in his case.
    
    JaKe
    
178.624CSC32::MACGREGORFri Feb 24 1995 12:317
    
    It was reported this morning that the teamsters will NOT cross the line
    and deliver things like beer and food.  I wonder how this will impact
    the talks...
    
    Marc
    
178.625MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Feb 24 1995 12:3113
    I guess I'm having a problem with seeing this as a clear cut case
    of one group is 100% right and the other is to BLAM.  I kinda feel
    that each have an equal share of guilt in so far as to why the 
    SYSTEM got the way it is.
    
    I just can't see the owners of a business, bringing workers who are
    willing to work in to replace those who refuse to work, as committing
    the heanous(sp) crime against mankind that others see it as.
    
    Call me crazy.
    
    
    billl
178.626HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Feb 24 1995 12:374
  As a friend of mine says, "A pox on both their houses".

  George
178.627CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardFri Feb 24 1995 12:4312
I don't think you can blame a player for wanting more money.

If I go to my boss and say "I want $75K a year" and he's willing to pay
it, then good for me....

Where you can blame players (and I see this more in basketball personally)
is that once they get the big money, they don't have the maturity to realize
that, seeing as they're not golfers or tennis players, and are part of a team,
they have to play a team role - not be an island unto themselves....


'Saw
178.628MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Feb 24 1995 12:479
    >It was reported this morning that the teamsters will NOT cross the
    >line and deliver things like beer and food.
    
    Oh boy!  I can see I better not bother trying to discuss this issue
    with my Dad, the retired Teamster.
    
    
    
    billl
178.629EDWIN::WAUGAMANMinor leaguers, men of integrityFri Feb 24 1995 13:1428
    
>    I just can't see the owners of a business, bringing workers who are
>    willing to work in to replace those who refuse to work, as committing
>    the heanous(sp) crime against mankind that others see it as.
    
    I agree with you in general, billl; however I do think that major
    sports leagues have a bit more of an obligation to try and work through
    their shortterm disputes and to place the highest priority on delivering
    a ML-caliber product.  After all, these same sports leagues have all
    sorts of special non-business rules to ensure "the good of the game", 
    "the integrity of the sport", etc. (whether these rules are routinely 
    trampled or not).  I think this replacement thing falls into this
    category, definitely not for the longterm good of the game.
    
    The sports media editorialists again missed the boat on the Teamsters
    thing, just as they have with the overall support that the minor 
    leaguers are giving the MLBPA.  They think it's about fraternalism and 
    solidarity and that kind of nonsense, and therefore these unions won't
    give support because they've never gotten any.  It isn't about that;
    it's about politics.  They're probably dead wrong, they're probably 
    misguided, but the Teamsters see _any_ publicized worker replacement
    or union-busting as very bad precedent.  Doesn't matter if deep down
    they can't stand these ballplayers, or that this isn't at all a
    conventional management-labor dispute that really affects them; it's 
    politics and public perception...
    
    glenn
    
178.630MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Feb 24 1995 13:3712
>    btw, I agree with Mikey Childs.  Having Tommy trash your note/opinions
>    in here is quite the honor.
>    
>    
>    billl


     I can't understand this view.  It's not like you are one of the few so
     honored.  Getting trashed by Tommy is no honor, it's as commonplace as
     someone saying Hello to you when you see them.  Now, not being trashed
     could be considered to be a great insult, as though you are below every
     other living thing.
178.631MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Feb 24 1995 13:5548
>   <<< Note 178.629 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Minor leaguers, men of integrity" >>>
>
>    
>>    I just can't see the owners of a business, bringing workers who are
>>    willing to work in to replace those who refuse to work, as committing
>>    the heanous(sp) crime against mankind that others see it as.
>    
>    I agree with you in general, billl; however I do think that major
>    sports leagues have a bit more of an obligation to try and work through
>    their shortterm disputes and to place the highest priority on delivering
>    a ML-caliber product.  After all, these same sports leagues have all
>    sorts of special non-business rules to ensure "the good of the game", 
>    "the integrity of the sport", etc. (whether these rules are routinely 
>    trampled or not).  I think this replacement thing falls into this
>    category, definitely not for the longterm good of the game.

     Why do they have this obligation, any more than any other business has
     to try to maintain a good reputation ?  It's your opinion that this is
     not good for the game, but obviously a lot of people disagree.

     In my mind, I am willing to let the owners do whatever they want.  If
     they field replacement teams, they will find that the public won't buy
     the product.  They won't draw at the gate.  The networks won't pay them
     the big bucks (which are tied to advertising revenues that can be
     obtained).
    
     Frankly, MLB has no more obligation to produce a high quality product
     than does GM (maybe even less so).  If people don't want to watch the
     product, they won't, and the owners will have to rethink their position.
     If, on the other hand, the American public really doesn't care one way
     or the other, and the owners are proven right, then a lot of players
     will have lost their jobs, AAA minor leaguers will be promoted late in the
     season and will be paid above normal wages to tkae the "contenders" to
     the world series, and they WILL play at that point.  I think that it's
     great, not a travesty, that the free market allows this kind of
     interaction.  It's a shame we have to sets of dolts who are making these
     decisions, but they have to live with the decisions and the money they
     lose.

>    misguided, but the Teamsters see _any_ publicized worker replacement
>    or union-busting as very bad precedent.  Doesn't matter if deep down
>    they can't stand these ballplayers, or that this isn't at all a
>    conventional management-labor dispute that really affects them; it's 
>    politics and public perception...
>    
>    glenn
    
     Absolutely right on target with these remarks.
178.632It's about the right to organizeMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Feb 24 1995 14:1534
.625:

>   I guess I'm having a problem with seeing this as a clear cut case
>   of one group is 100% right and the other is to BLAM.  I kinda feel
>   that each have an equal share of guilt in so far as to why the 
>   SYSTEM got the way it is.

Billl, I think you're giving the owners too much credit.  The system is
the way it is largely because of Marvin Miller, who recognized two things:

	1. there was a lot more money in baseball than players imagined;
           the top players in the game were making maybe half a million
           a year while the owners pocketed tens of millions;
        2. player movement was much too restricted.

He convinced the players he was right, they struck for what they believed,
and won.  The result:  the most competitive baseball in the history of
the game.
    
>   I just can't see the owners of a business, bringing workers who are
>   willing to work in to replace those who refuse to work, as committing
>   the heanous(sp) crime against mankind that others see it as.

Well, I'm old enough to remember union busting in the real world.  I
believe passionately in the right of labor to organize and bargain
collectively.  It's hard to imagine these days, but I promise you,
without that right, we would return sooner or later to the days of
wage slavery.  Sure, let the owners try whatever tactics they like.
But anybody who assists them is by definition a strikebreaker, also
called a "scab".  It's an ugly word for an ugly activity.

Just ask your Dad, Billl.

Steve
178.633Call me a romantic...EDWIN::WAUGAMANMinor leaguers, men of integrityFri Feb 24 1995 14:1614
    
>     Frankly, MLB has no more obligation to produce a high quality product
>     than does GM (maybe even less so). 
                      
    It _is_ only my opinion, of course.  The obligation is mostly ethical, 
    not necessarily legal.  The owners enjoy a special position with pseudo-
    monopolistic status, and I think they should respect that (just as I
    said that the players should have respected their unique status before 
    they made a poor decision to strike when they did-- I just don't see 
    any reason to completely destroy whatever good feeling towards the game
    that might be left).
    
    glenn
    
178.634MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Feb 24 1995 14:4127
	>1. there was a lot more money in baseball than players imagined;
        >   the top players in the game were making maybe half a million
        >   a year while the owners pocketed tens of millions;
        
    	This is what I see as the philosophical difference.  You, along
    	with many others, believe that because the owners make "tens of 
    	millions" then by some leap of justice the players should get 
    	an even share of the profits.  I don't recall ever hearing of a 
    	baseball player, or the MLBPA, putting up any portion of the 
    	"hundreds of millions" to purchase a team.  Why then should they 
    	be guarentteed an equal share of the profits?
    
    	>2. player movement was much too restricted.
    
    	On this we agree.  As I said, I'm all for abolishing the 
    	anti-trust exemption that MLB enjoys.  Make it a true free
    	enterprise system.  Then if a group of people, be they players
    	or fans, could start up a better and more equal league if they
    	choose.  Then they can compete with MLB in the open market.
    
    	As far as strikebreaking goes...see several notes back where
    	I said there is a _world_ of difference between a group of 
    	sweatshop workers from the 30's and these entertainers who
    	make up the MLBPA.
    
    
    	billl
178.635PTOSS1::JACOBRMy chest is on fire, dammit!!Fri Feb 24 1995 19:0419
    Lessee, 
    
    The peoples who carry the beer and peanuts and popcorn and hot dogs all
    around the stadiums are going to honor the players picket
    lines(although the players won't be manning them, they'll have
    surrogate pickets) but when these same unions have been on strike, the
    players have basically said "F_CK YOU" and crossed their lines and
    played.
    
    So, the people who have to work 2 jobs to make it are going to forego
    their cash in order to "honor" the plyers strike????
    
    If I worked at one of the stadiums, I'd p_ss on theplayers picket lines
    from above and tell them where to shove it.
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
178.636Meanwhile, a bomb is tickingMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRMon Feb 27 1995 10:3235
Regardless of how the strike is resolved, events on another front may throw
an even heavier monkey wrench into the works.

Some of you will already know the name Jason Varitek.  He was a catcher at
Georgia Tech, a college baseball player of the year, and a two-time first
round draftee.  In 1993, he declined an offer from the Twins, and returned to
school for his senior year.  He was drafted in 1994 by the Mariners, who,
arguing that his bargaining power was limited by no longer having the option
of returning to school, offered him a signing bonus of $400,000.  Varitek
has declined the offer, saying that his position in the draft should command
a bonus of around $800,000.

Varitek, it should be noted, is represented by Scott Boras, an agent known
for his hard line negotiating tactics, who (IMO) has probably cost at least
some of his draftees money by delaying their entry into professional baseball
and thus their development into major leaguers.

Varitek has now signed with a team in the independent Northern League, which
is not a member of the National Association.  The Mariners claim they retain
Varitek's rights until one week before the next draft.  Varitek claims that
he is no longer subject to the amateur draft, as he is now a professional.
His Northern League contract contains an escape clause in case of his signing
with a major league club, and he claims free agent status and negotiability.
MLB responds that signing with a non-NA league does not, by its definition,
make Varitek a professional.  The matter will likely be settled by the MLB
arbitrator.

For those of you who haven't already figured it out, this could slice the
throat of the draft.  Any player who didn't like the team that drafted
him could sign with an independent league, claim professional status, and
negotiate with any major league organization.  Scott Boras was never
popular with management to begin with, but if he wins this one, he'll
make Marvin Miller look like a minor irritant.

Steve
178.637MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Mon Feb 27 1995 14:2410

  >> I can't understand this view.  It's not like you are one of the few so
  >> honored.  Getting trashed by Tommy is no honor, it's as commonplace as
  >> someone saying Hello to you when you see them.  Now, not being trashed
  >> could be considered to be a great insult, as though you are below every
  >> other living thing.
    
     I don't remember ever giving you the time of day much less 'trashing'
     one of your notes.
178.638MIMS::ROLLINS_RMon Feb 27 1995 14:254
>     I don't remember ever giving you the time of day much less 'trashing'
>     one of your notes.

      See, he doesn't even have a very good memory.
178.639Only the devil knowsAKOCOA::BREENThat is enough for me and for theeMon Feb 27 1995 14:433
    Well I've heard of "Damnation by faint praise" (quote-Churchill???) but do 
    we have now have "Praise by faint damnation" ?  And great praise via
    total damnation.
178.640MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Feb 28 1995 16:085
    
      The Reds have signed 48 year old Pedro Borbon as their first
     replacement player. Borbon hasn't played in the majors in 15 years.
     You really don't have to be Kreskin to see that replacement
     ball will suck.
178.641ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsTue Feb 28 1995 16:1512
    
    I just got (from my parents) an Akron Beacon Journal article about
    the replacement pitchers & catchers for the tribe.  And you know what -
    some of these guys can play.  Not at the major league level, maybe not
    even at AAA, but frequently at AA, and some of these guys could have
    (with the right breaks) had 3-4 year major league careers in small
    roles.
    
    It's not going to be major league ball, but some of these guys can
    play...
    
    Joe
178.642CAMONE::WAYStrokin' my Ito beardTue Feb 28 1995 16:2218
>    It's not going to be major league ball, but some of these guys can
>    play...
    
But to me, that's the problem.

If I'm going to go into Fenway this season, I want to see major league
ball.

If I want to see AA ball, I can get in my truck, drive 6 miles up
CT 372, pay about $5 at Beehive Field, and about $2 for a nice Samuel
Adams, and sit and watch some AA ball in the summer heat....

If I get bored at Beehive, I can drive 30 minutes down to Yale Field
and see the Ravens, and if'n any Yankee fans come to visit, I can
drive an 45-50 minutes to Norwich to see them play....


'Saw
178.643DZIGN::ROBICHAUDFleet &lt;fill in the blank&gt;Tue Feb 28 1995 16:2312
	Thomas, Thomas, Thomas.  I think it is extremely narrow minded to 
assume that just because Borbon is 48 years old and hasn't played MAJOR 
league baseball in 15 years (he may have kept in shape by playing in beer 
leagues), he can't compete at this level and provide a modicum of 
entertainment value to boot.  Baseball is still baseball whether played by 
21 year olds or 48 year olds.  Stop believing that commie claptrap eminating 
from the liberal, union loving press.

				   /Don

	P.S.  I will concede however that getting those baseball pants
	      over the depends could be a trifle difficult.
178.644where the rubber hits the roadOUTSRC::HEISERGrace changes everythingTue Feb 28 1995 16:563
178.645USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Feb 28 1995 17:0023
Cincinnati mgmt admitted that Borbon may not even pass the physical.
Isn't it possible that ML clubs are signing these former players as
a slap to the current players ?


From today's USA Today:

	Dallas Green on how he'd bargain with the union:

		"I'd grab Don Fehr by the throat and his buddy
		 Gene Orza and Mark Belanger along with him."


	From a Strikeback (NY-based fan group) survey:

		58% (of 4,000 surveyed) support replacement baseball...
		only 13% supported it in January

		Reasons cited for the increase:  1) these guys embody
		what the fan wishes the ML player would be more like;
		2)  if the ML players don't want to play, let's find
		someone who does...the game is bigger than them, they
		don't want to play, it's time to move on.
178.646Well, you see, son, Pedro's beer gut symbolizes union greed...NAC::G_WAUGAMANTue Feb 28 1995 17:4510
> Cincinnati mgmt admitted that Borbon may not even pass the physical.
> Isn't it possible that ML clubs are signing these former players as
> a slap to the current players ?
    
    Is that supposed to make us more or less tolerant of the low caliber
    of play?
    
    glenn
    
178.647USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Feb 28 1995 18:197
>> Isn't it possible that ML clubs are signing these former players as
>> a slap to the current players ?
    
>    Is that supposed to make us more or less tolerant of the low caliber
>    of play?

No, but a statement that former players don't support the current set.
178.648MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Feb 28 1995 19:0010
  >> No, but a statement that former players don't support the current set.

     I tend to seriously doubt that Pedro Borbon is doing anything but 
     trying to make some cash. If he doesn't support the current player
     stance he could better illustrate that by simply stepping forward
     and saying so than by risking embarassment or even a heart attack 
     in spring training.
    
    
178.649HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Feb 28 1995 19:0920
RE        <<< Note 178.644 by OUTSRC::HEISER "Grace changes everything" >>>

>    Those who have always touted their love of the game and pushed the
>    quality of AAA play will have a huge helping of Crow to eat if they do
>    anything but buy season tickets and attend the scab games.

  Well, it depends.

  I've always found that the fun of watching the minor leagues was trying to
figure out who was going to make it and who would just be a career minor
leaguer.

  If I just want to see the game played, I can stop about a mile south of where
I work just about any night of the week and watch guys with team names like
ACME tubing or Squiggie's Diner play the game while making the occasional
detours to the ice box behind the bench. 

  Heck, it's free and you know what? Some of those games are fun to watch.

  George
178.650Show a true love of baseball - watch it at grass roots levelTNPUBS::NAZZAROUMass to the Final Four!Wed Mar 01 1995 16:0712
    I am SO sick and tired of people who say they will watch replacement
    baseball out of "a love for the game."  That is so much bull.  If these
    folks really had a love for the game, they'd be at their town park
    watching the local high school, or at a little league field on
    weekends, or catching a Park League game or some other semi-pro outfit
    where the motivation is indeed pure and the game is played for the love
    of it.
    
    I guarantee you that you'll see batter baseball within 15-20 miles of
    your home than you will at any replacement game.
    
    NAZZ
178.651One way not to get divorced.CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Mar 01 1995 16:4310
    NAZZ,
    I couldn't agree more. I've been to 3 Red Sox games the past 5 years
    and every year I'll watch or coach a total of 75-100 Little League, Babe
    Ruth or High School games. 3-4 nights a week and Sundays I'm at a game.
    and the way our Little Leagues fields are structured I get to watch 3
    games at once. The caliber is no where near Major Leagues but it's just
    as exciting.
    
    Mike
     
178.652ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsWed Mar 01 1995 17:2613
    
>    I guarantee you that you'll see batter baseball within 15-20 miles of
>    your home than you will at any replacement game.
    
    Well, the reason you gave isn't why I'll be going, but I found this
    statement particularly interesting...
    
    Critics of replacement-ball, as well as many of its supporters, have
    generally been in agrement that the level of ball will be around A-ball
    level.  There's a lot of places around this country without A-ball or
    better level baseball within 20 miles...
    
    Joe
178.653send a notice to the ownersOUTSRC::HEISERGrace changes everythingWed Mar 01 1995 18:031
178.654It could happenPOBOX::WIERSBECKWed Mar 01 1995 19:576
    Wouldn't it be funny if ASU got KICKED?!
    
    :*)
    
    
    Spud
178.655Level the playing field! ;-)EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityWed Mar 01 1995 20:0312
                                                                        
>    Wouldn't it be funny if ASU got KICKED?!
    
    It's a pretty sad state of affairs when a college baseball team is
    regarded as a favorite over a ML team under any circumstances, but 
    I guess that might be the case with a squad like Arizona St that's 
    already got a dozen-plus games under their belts.  Perhaps some better 
    tests will be the games the following two days, Kansas City Royals vs
    Stetson (College) Hatters, Boston vs Boston (Red Sox vs. College).
    
    glenn
    
178.656Silver Bullets - that's the ticketAKOCOA::BREENAshes to ashes, dust to dustWed Mar 01 1995 20:134
    Has that Coors women's team scheduled any games against the replacement
    ilk? In fact why didn't Duquette think of that in the first place; he'd
    have big crowds, lots of fun, Jake in from Pitt, Way from the sticks,
    maybe me...
178.657ASU loses to scabs!TNPUBS::NAZZAROUMass to the Final Four!Thu Mar 02 1995 13:264
    ASU got trounced 13-5!  Was this the real ASU team, or were they
    replacement students recruited from an intramural league on campus?
    
    NAZZ
178.658CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Thu Mar 02 1995 13:534
re: ASU vs. Angelscabs

While 2100 (2400?) tickets were sold, actual attendance was
reported to be 350.
178.659Gotta LOVE it!POBOX::WIERSBECKThu Mar 02 1995 13:587
    Guess these replacement players ARE just a tad better than the
    beerbellies down the street.  
    
    Let da bums sit the whole year for all I care.  
    
    
    Spud
178.660HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Mar 02 1995 14:158
  I've heard different opinions on this but just how well were the football
scab games attended?

  What size crowds did they draw?

  Should this be any different?

  George
178.661OUTSRC::HEISERGrace changes everythingThu Mar 02 1995 14:391
178.662:^)USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemThu Mar 02 1995 14:463
>    just imagine if ASU had their best pitcher out there!

But, did the Angels have their best replacement pitcher on the hill ???
178.663my MAN Spud !USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemThu Mar 02 1995 14:479
>                              -< Gotta LOVE it! >-

>    Guess these replacement players ARE just a tad better than the
>    beerbellies down the street.  
    
>    Let da bums sit the whole year for all I care.  


YEAH !!!  Spud for President !!
178.664CNTROL::CHILDSMelrose Place &gt; FriendsThu Mar 02 1995 15:084
 the owners probably paid ASU off............

 mike
178.665CSC32::MACGREGORThu Mar 02 1995 15:3133
    
    re: NAZZ
    
    >where the motivation is indeed pure and the game is played for the
    >love of it.
    
    Hold on a minute.  Just because they get paid does not mean the
    motivation isn't pure.  I thought about heading up to Denver for a try
    out, but not for the money (when you include travel costs, I would make
    less money playing baseball) rather for the competitive nature that I
    have.
    
    A lot of these replacement players are getting "one last chance" or "a
    once in a lifetime chance" to play in a major league park.  Anybody can
    play a game in the sand lot, but a change to play in Fenway, Tiger
    Stadium, Coors field against other players of your skill level with the
    opportunity to be great, if only for one play.  Isn't that a large part
    of what playing the game is all about?
    
    I mean really, how many people think that these players are in camp for
    the $35,000?  How many think it is because of the desire to play the
    game?  Seems to *me* that the majority of the players are there to
    "play" and that is the purest motivation I can think of.
    
    Anybody who says the games will be boring probably isn't in touch with
    reality anyways.  The games were already boring and regardless of your
    skill level you are going to have blowouts and great games.  Okay, so
    we probably won't see the homeruns, but I bet we see a whole lot more
    steal attempts, suicide squeezes, and trick plays that make the game
    more interesting for *me*.
    
    Marc
    
178.666Replacement fever, catch it...EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityThu Mar 02 1995 15:4231
>    A lot of these replacement players are getting "one last chance" or "a
>    once in a lifetime chance" to play in a major league park.  Anybody can
>    play a game in the sand lot, but a change to play in Fenway, Tiger
>    Stadium, Coors field against other players of your skill level with the
>    opportunity to be great, if only for one play.  Isn't that a large part
>    of what playing the game is all about?
    
    If it's against the best players in the world, the real thing, it's one 
    hell of a goal and accomplishment.  What is this, though?  If you can
    prove you're one of the 700 best players fortunate (or desperate, take 
    your pick) to try this, you get to be a "major-leaguer".  I'm not saying 
    that this isn't what motivates some of these guys (many are motivated by 
    the very good money-- $110K, annual) but the real accomplishment of it 
    seems illusory to me.
    
>    Anybody who says the games will be boring probably isn't in touch with
>    reality anyways.  The games were already boring and regardless of your
>    skill level you are going to have blowouts and great games.  Okay, so
>    we probably won't see the homeruns, but I bet we see a whole lot more
>    steal attempts, suicide squeezes, and trick plays that make the game
>    more interesting for *me*.
    
    That's great; so much the better for you.  Like the man (who was that?) 
    said though, make sure to get out and buy lots and lots of tickets to
    support this game that you prefer.  Somehow I doubt that the actual
    demonstrated support will be proportionate to the measure of emotion 
    reflected in these fan polls, man-on-the-street interviews, etc.
     
    glenn
    
178.667PTOSS1::JACOBRLernin' me agin!Thu Mar 02 1995 15:4412
    the Pirates have a better chance of winning their division with
    replacements than they do with their regular roster.
    
    Personally, if baseball vanishes from the planet, I doubt I'll miss it
    much.  I never woulda said this 5 years ago, but the whole game is
    nothing but freakin' multi-millionaires playing for multi-millionaires
    and bitching that they're piece f the enchilada ain't big enough.
    
    JMHO
    
    JaKe
    
178.668BSS::MENDEZThu Mar 02 1995 18:267
    re: .666
    
    What about Michael Jordan and his faux pas attempt at the majors???
    He is no better than a "A" maybe "AA", yet his attempt at baseball
    is considered romantic.  You know a guy with a dream...  That is
    exactly what alot of the replacement baseball players are doing...
    
178.669Michael Jordan, man of some integrityEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityThu Mar 02 1995 18:4912
                                                   
>    What about Michael Jordan and his faux pas attempt at the majors???
>    He is no better than a "A" maybe "AA", yet his attempt at baseball
>    is considered romantic.  You know a guy with a dream...
    
    Not by me it wasn't.  Jordan wasn't there on merit, and still isn't
    there on merit.  But even at that, he still didn't make the major 
    leagues, and to his credit will not play in the replacement "major
    leagues", because he knows it doesn't mean much...
    
    glenn
    
178.670He got his first hit alreadyPOBOX::WIERSBECKThu Mar 02 1995 20:177
    It is beyond me that the White Sox can actually come out and say they
    are hopeful that Michael will be ready to be called up in September.
    Whether this is strictly feeding the marketing ploy is one thing, but
    he's (by the Sox' own admission) not even ready for AAA yet.
    
    
    Spud
178.671DELNI::FORGETFri Mar 03 1995 10:458
    
    
    Michael Jordan as a baseball player is a joke.  he's got tons of
    basketball talent.  The White Sox keep him on the team cause he sells
    tickets.  Not to mentions the same owner owns the Bulls.  Replacement
    players have said their has been physical threats.  It's all about
    money.  Soon enough the regular players will comeback.  I can't see how
    some of them can afford not too.      
178.672Jordan walks outCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 03 1995 11:232
    Jordan walked out of camp yesterday. No reason given.
    
178.673MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 11:4810
    Glenn, I'm wondering why some one who admits that he feels that 
    both the owners and the players are to BLAM for this ridiculous
    labor action would flash such generalizing dribble as:
    
     "Baseball owners, den of inequity"
    
    for a p-name.  Sounds a little predjudicial to me.
    
    
    billl
178.674It was expectedPOBOX::WIERSBECKFri Mar 03 1995 12:155
    No surprise about Jordan leaving.  He had said all along that he wasn't
    going to play in replacement games.  
    
    
    Spud
178.675Founded in history...EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 12:2013
>     "Baseball owners, den of inequity"
>    
>    for a p-name.  Sounds a little predjudicial to me.
    
    Nothing prejudicial about it.  It's post-judicial.  It's my opinion
    based on the long sequence of events put in place by the baseball
    owners, starting with the firing of Fay Vincent in September 1992.
    Since then everything points to an uncompromised collective (minus a
    few dissenters) attempt to drive the players into the ground...
    
    glenn
    
178.676MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 12:4911
    I prefer to think of it as a correcting move.  Kinda like the force
    needed to get the pendulum swinging in the other direction.
    
    But even still, to say that most baseball owners fall into a group
    that could care less about the game/institution is the same as 
    grouping all, or most, of the players in any ONE particular group.
    Nothing, especially in this discussion, is black-and-white.  There
    are innumerable shades of grey.
    
    
    billl
178.677PTOSS1::JACOBRLernin' me agin!Fri Mar 03 1995 12:5910
    
    
    
    >>									There
    >>are innumerable shades of grey.                              
    
    Sounds like the making fer a Grateful Daid song, there.
    
    JaKe
    
178.678They have ruined the gameCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 03 1995 13:1514
    Correcting move? They have tried to break the union for years, have
    been found guilty of collusion at least twice, they have an umpire's
    strike going on and they have tried to strong arm the Minor leagues a
    couple of years ago into giving them more money. They have numerous
    NLRB rulings against them for not negotiating in good faith
    They are the onlyb major professional sport to have an antitrust exemption 
    and they have more work stoppages then all of the sports put together.
    They want the players to try and control an owners urge, need to spend 
    big bucks. It is pointed out that the players went on strike but what
    some of the pro owners do not point out is that it was the owners who 
    called for the existing agreement with the players to be reopened. 
    The owners are the ones who decidec to spend huge dollars on free
    agents and the Bagwell signing shows they are still willing to over
    spend. 
178.679It's a generalization I believe to be true...EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 13:1615
              
>    But even still, to say that most baseball owners fall into a group
>    that could care less about the game/institution 
    
    I am saying that.  If the truth hurts, so be it.  Today's baseball
    owners aren't like those of 25 years ago.  The old owners may have 
    been cheap and shortsighted in many ways but there was no denying 
    that for most of them baseball was their life's work.  Not these guys.
    For many, owning a baseball team is something they've got going on the
    side, and if for some greater future gain it can be run into the 
    crapper for a while, denigrated with subpar quality, then that's just 
    a small price to pay.
    
    glenn
    
178.680USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemFri Mar 03 1995 13:4319
>    I prefer to think of it as a correcting move.

Absolutely.  The Sports industry has long been out-of-control, both sides
are too greedy, and making too much money.  Even before the strike, adjust-
ments were coming in TV and radio contracts.  The strike (no matter who
wins) will adjust the money available for distribution even further (IMO).

But for Glenn and Mike, what the owners are doing is criminal.  I see
it as getting control of THEIR business.  This crap about no commissioner,
and NLRB rulings (do you really think they'd rule for ownership ??) is just
that.  Maybe this monster called the MLBPA is more the reason for 8 work
stoppages in the last 20 years.  Along with blue-sky idealists like Fay
Vincent...hiding behind 'in the best interests of the game'...losing sight
of their job description and who signs their paycheck.

It's easy to look at the heros on the field as innocent victims of greedy,
Scrooge-like misers who control everything from a boardroom.  The they're
equally to blame for this mess, and unfortunately for them, they're going
to have to give something up before they'll play ball again.
178.681Keep them home fires burning...MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 13:476
    Ahh, it's nice to see the embers haven't cooled off too far.
    Nothing worse than throwing a bucket of gasoline on a dead 
    cold pile of ashes.
    
    
    billl
178.682I apologize; I have respect for the law, and for capitalismEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 14:0727
    
> But for Glenn and Mike, what the owners are doing is criminal.  I see
> it as getting control of THEIR business.  This crap about no commissioner,
> and NLRB rulings (do you really think they'd rule for ownership ??) is just
> that. 
    
    Since when is an NLRB ruling (or an arbitrator's ruling on collusion)
    "crap"?  The NLRB is a government-sanctioned legal review board.  They're
    somewhat familiar with trivial things like the labor laws of the
    country.  The NLRB is not set up to rule in favor of the players (it's
    ruled in favor of management before, even baseball management, and may
    yet do so again in this next go-round).  This attitude of the owners 
    of "pay no attention to the NLRB and the courts, we're the baseball 
    owners; we know better" is nothing short of arrogant.
    
    What I'm hearing (like with this stuff about athletes not
    being comparable to actors, with neither comparable to pro wrasslers
    for pure entertainment value-- who cares?) is that things like 
    economic theory and the law are meaningless; that this matter should 
    be subject only to some kind of gut-feel morality.  I don't care who 
    is "greedy" and who isn't; I really don't.  The players are greedy.  
    So what?  The fact remains that only one side has continually flouted 
    the law, their contract in the form of the general agreement, and any 
    rational position to their own _voluntary_ cost problems.  Guess who?
    
    glenn
     
178.683CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 03 1995 14:2130
    re.680
       The owners filed a complaint against the players with the NLRB last
    year and it was rejected. 
       As far as what the owners doing is criminal, if stupidity is criminal
    then they are guilty. They don't need a salary cap, luxury tax. They
    need self control. They need to play by the rules that you and I and
    everybody else play by. And I would applaud moves like the elimination
    of arbitration if they lowered the # of years of eligibility for free
    agency because I believe that flooding the market every year would slow
    down the salaries and players would find their true market value. When
    the players see that the money isn't out there, and I believe that it
    isn't there like it was 2 years ago, then reality will set in. 
       I also don't think that weak teams should be helped (just like a player
    who cann't compete should be helped). There are plenty of areas that
    would be willing to support teams. I think if Selig, Brochu or
    Pittsburgh's owner of the year have the right (and if they are a
    corporation the legal responsibility) to move. 
       My view is simply this. Some owners have screwed this league up. The
    Red Sox, Mets, and Dodgers all have shown that you cann't replace good
    managment in favor of deep pockets and win. When these owners stop
    spending big money foolishly, and the Sox and the Mets have from what
    I've seen, then the salaries will drag down or at least slow down. With
    a flooded Free Agent market and sound financial managment on the part
    of every owner, the owners do not need to change the current agreement
    anywhere but the arbitration and free agency that I have brought up.
       And if they want to expand markets and increase revenues they should
    start working with the players like the NBA does abd promote it's
    product.
    
    Mike  
178.684USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemFri Mar 03 1995 14:3940
>    Since when is an NLRB ruling (or an arbitrator's ruling on collusion)
>    "crap"?  The NLRB is a government-sanctioned legal review board.

"Government-sanctioned", that makes it pure ???  Right.  Their name
isn't National Business-Labor Review Board, is it ?  And I'd love to
know the % of decisions which fall in business' favor.


>    is that things like 
>    economic theory and the law are meaningless;

Which economic theory or law are we talking about ?  Economic theories
that hold that labor should be guaranteed x% of an owner's revenue, and
have guaranteed contracts ?  Laws like the one proposed this week that
says that no games should be allowed if 75% of last year's roster is
not on this year's team ?  I'm having a hard time finding 'freedom'
and 'equity' and 'capitalism' here.

Like Bob Costas said yesterday in an interview on WFAN, the players
have confused "moral, absolute rights" and "negotiated rights".  This
fight is about "negotiated rights", and in his opinion, Fehr is NOT
a negotiator ("he doesn't have a 'Yes' gene") and that's why this
thing is going nowhere.  (Which was echoed by McMorris last night,
when he said his experience in negotiations is both parties declare
their starting position, and you BARGAIN from there, but in this
situation, the owners don't know what labor's starting position
is 'cause they won't declare one.)


BTW, Stan Kasten was also on and he said that it doesn't matter what
the NLRB rules by 3/15, the current striking MLB players won't be
allowed to play until there is a negotiated settlement.


re:  ReplacementBall

What happens if daily highlight clips don't show bungling fielding
plays, or fat, slow baserunners, but do show routine plays being made,
line-drive basehits, and a HR here-and-there ?  You think fans may
give it a shot ?
178.685MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Mar 03 1995 14:3920
>    What I'm hearing (like with this stuff about athletes not
>    being comparable to actors, with neither comparable to pro wrasslers
>    for pure entertainment value-- who cares?) is that things like 
>    economic theory and the law are meaningless; that this matter should 
>    be subject only to some kind of gut-feel morality.  
>    
>    glenn
>     

     I agree about this appeal to the law; baseball should be treated the same
     as any other business venture regarding the law, and they aren't.  It
     would be interesting to see what would happen in the courts.

     However, no one here should be talking about economic theory, as though
     the standard "free market" that every one talks about applies.  This
     situation isn't a standard business enterprise, it's an oligopoly, and
     an appeal to the free market theory doesn't necessarily benefit either
     side.  [It possibly could favor moderate government intervention; but
     what baseball owner or player is going to let some regulatory board control
     age and price factors ?]
178.686MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Mar 03 1995 14:4210
     However, no one here should be talking about economic theory, as though
     the standard "free market" that every one talks about applies.  This
     situation isn't a standard business enterprise, it's an oligopoly, and
     an appeal to the free market theory doesn't necessarily benefit either
     side.  [It possibly could favor moderate government intervention; but
     what baseball owner or player is going to let some regulatory board control
     age and price factors ?]
     ---

     That should be "wage"
178.687How many players would favor dumping Fehr?POBOX::WIERSBECKFri Mar 03 1995 15:0712
    The longer this goes, the less we'll miss the former players.  If this
    takes a prolonged time to resolve, many may not even care when the
    former players come back.  Some of these former players, the veterans,
    are pretty well set for life - if they manage their money
    intelligently.  But what about the younger or former reserve players?
    Will they have to (oh my God!) have to find a "real" job?  What would
    they do?  Many of them don't have the training or skills to do anything
    other than play baseball.  Then the real world sets in.  I'd like to
    see what their union will do for them then.
    
    
    Spud
178.688I go along with Glenn's p-nameAKOCOA::BREENAshes to ashes, dust to dustFri Mar 03 1995 15:2114
    I don't think it that's complicated.  The owners devised a plan and
    tried to stuff it down the player's throats.  It the players are tough
    enough to prevent it from happening then that's what they have to do.
    
    The nfl-players weren't united enough, nhl not rich enough, nba players
    didn't seem to need (a non-cap environment).
    
    I doubt that anything would get the players to agree to a cap or
    serious tax at this point, at least in '95.  I think that the owners
    will want to run without a payroll until the end of may and then settle
    and try again in seven years.
    
    I was going to compare mlb owners with Saddam Hussein or Hitler but
    would unfair to the latter two.
178.689being a little tough on the Beav, WardMKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 15:399
    >>I was going to compare mlb owners with Saddam Hussein or Hitler but
    >>would unfair to the latter two.
    
    Wow!  Bill, I think you are way overdue for your stress-releiving
    massage.
    
    
    
    billl
178.690PTOSS1::JACOBRLernin' me agin!Fri Mar 03 1995 15:5213
    
    
    
    >>							nba players
    >>didn't seem to need (a non-cap environment).                    
    
    Methinks that, with the signing a few months back of (mumble-mumble) to
    the, what, $70 million GUARANTEED contract in the NBA(cain't remember
    the rookie's name), that the NBA owners cap is set sorta high, or that
    they've mastered the circumvention of said cap.
    
    JaKe
    
178.691Turn that claim on its head, and you've got it rightEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 16:0934
                                                  
> "Government-sanctioned", that makes it pure ??? 
    
    No, that makes it the law.  The government makes our laws. 
    Unfortunate, perhaps, but a reality.
    
> Which economic theory or law are we talking about ?  Economic theories
> that hold that labor should be guaranteed x% of an owner's revenue
    
    Why do I keep hearing that this is a players' demand?  It isn't.  
    The guaranteed % of revenues is the _owners'_ proposal.  It's
    called a salary cap and the original number was 50%.  There are
    no monetary guarantees in the current system beyond the minimum 
    salary.  This is a fundamental truth that cannot be erased by 
    any amount of owner propaganda.  
    
    The position that player salaries are actually out of control because 
    of monetary guarantees bargained away to the players has no basis in 
    fact.  The rights bargained to the players are so simple that they can be 
    described in one paragraph.  No complicated revenue formulas, no luxury
    tax schemes, none of that garbage.  Player salaries were driven up by 
    the freedoms they have in the talent market. 
    
> BTW, Stan Kasten was also on and he said that it doesn't matter what
> the NLRB rules by 3/15, the current striking MLB players won't be
> allowed to play until there is a negotiated settlement.
    
    That's understood.  It's called a "lockout".  What it means is that 
    if the courts grant an injunction in a ruling that the owners didn't
    bargain in good faith, there'll be no baseball, replacement or 
    otherwise.
    
    glenn
    
178.692Why not? There are degrees of freedom; subject to debateEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 16:2227
>     However, no one here should be talking about economic theory, as though
>     the standard "free market" that every one talks about applies.  This
>     situation isn't a standard business enterprise, it's an oligopoly, and
>     an appeal to the free market theory doesn't necessarily benefit either
>     side.  [It possibly could favor moderate government intervention; but
>     what baseball owner or player is going to let some regulatory board control
>     age and price factors ?]
    
    There is no such thing as a "standard" free market.  That much I agree
    with.  However, wherever there is an impasse, I'll favor the direction
    that says "let the market decide it".  In this case, far and away that
    direction rests with the players' position.  Remove salary arbitration
    (already offered by the players), allow them their freedom after 1, 2, 
    3, 4 years, whatever you want, and let the chips fall.  Very simple.
    
    I am not even pro-player per se, but pro-player-position, because I
    think it is fundamentally defensible in the American tradition. 
    Because of the destruction that has already been caused, under the
    players' desired system I would have absolutely no problem with any 
    _individual_ owner deciding that it is in his best interests to stick 
    it to his players (at the payroll, I mean).  Some teams like the Padres 
    got a jump on that before the strike.  No problem.  Do what you have to
    on the money side and let's just play ball.  
    
    glenn
    
178.693USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemFri Mar 03 1995 16:5013
>    That's understood.  It's called a "lockout".  What it means is that 
>    if the courts grant an injunction in a ruling that the owners didn't
>    bargain in good faith, there'll be no baseball, replacement or 
>    otherwise.

During the Kasten interview it was stated that the owners can lockout the
MLBPA guys and play replacements...that it's allowed in US labor law.


re:  law of the land

So Glenn, based on reports we've seen, the owners clearly have NOT
bargained in good faith, and the players have ?
178.694EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 03 1995 17:0227
    
> During the Kasten interview it was stated that the owners can lockout the
> MLBPA guys and play replacements...that it's allowed in US labor law.
    
    That's not what I've heard, but who knows.  Maybe there are some
    conditions under which that can be done, maybe that's just Kasten's
    opinion.  If the old system is re-imposed per the injunction, there
    are some 800+ 40-man-roster players without contracts; I don't know
    how you distinguish those guys from anyone else if they sign a contract
    and want to play.  Union membership, believe it or not, has always been 
    determined by ownership: if you're on the 40-man you're in the MLBPA, 
    if you're not you're not.  One day to the next...
    
> So Glenn, based on reports we've seen, the owners clearly have NOT
> bargained in good faith, and the players have ?
    
    Haven't said that, and I don't know (as of a month ago that was NLRB's
    opinion; it might have changed since).  There are legal definitions of 
    such and apparently that's how it's going to be decided.  It is still
    my opinion (and my opinion only) that the owners should just accept
    maximum market freedoms, and do what they have to do to right what is 
    theirs.  That seems to be the only way out at this point, and by the
    same token it gives the owners maximum freedom and flexibility
    themselves (normally something businesses want, but not always).
    
    glenn
    
178.695don't get me wrong, Fehr is no ChurchillAKOCOA::BREENAshes to ashes, dust to dustFri Mar 03 1995 17:107
    Well billl I wasn't serious of course except the Adolf and Saddam went
    off and just did it (invade eg Impose) and dared anyone to stop them.
    
    That's all mlb is doing, imposing the cap and daring the players to
    stop them.  When this is over the owners will have the satisfaction of
    not having paid millions of dollars out while knowing they can write
    off their own losses.
178.696I doubt either side would bite on thisMKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 17:1716
    How's this for an extreme...
    
    Do away with salary arbitration, free agency, anti-trust exemption
    and the union.  Have each ball player sit down with the owner and
    negotiate a deal on his own.  Contract is then signed and must be
    honored by both parties.  That way if after my first one year
    contract is up I can approach the owner asking for a raise based
    on my performance or I can search elsewhere.
    
    If a team wants a particular player let them call him in for an
    interview.  the same holds true if a player wants to play on a
    given team, let him apply for the job.
    
    
    
    billl
178.697CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 03 1995 17:279
    Billl,
    This is exactly how the NFLPA was able to sue the NFL and win big
    bucks. They decertified as a union and went after the NFL on the
    anti-trust laws. If they didn't turn around and reach an agreement with
    the players the draft would have been history and all players would have
    had Free Agency after their contract was expired. The 2 sides worked
    out a settlement with a cap which seems to have worked. 
    
    Mike  
178.698Better for the playersMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFRFri Mar 03 1995 17:3011
If anybody would accept such a system, it would be the players.  But I
don't think either side should, because it means there is no longer any
benefit to a franchise in investing in player development.  The reason
that nobody is for instant free agency and almost nobody is against the
amateur draft is that it gives teams a stake in finding and teaching the
best young talent, secure in the knowledge that it will be able to put
that talent on the field for (currently) six years.  The Cleveland
Indians and Chicago White Sox produced a brilliant division race in
1994 because both franchises developed so much good young talent.

Steve
178.699MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Fri Mar 03 1995 17:3410
    Oh yeah, I forgot the draft.  Do away with that, too.
    
    The med students don't need one when they graduate.  They go job
    hunting.  Let baseball, along with basketball and football, players
    do the same.  Then we'd see a true "survival of the fittest" spirit
    overtake the business.  Afterall that's what it is, a business.
    
    
    
    billl
178.700USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemFri Mar 03 1995 17:414
>    Oh yeah, I forgot the draft.  Do away with that, too.

The minor leagues would get killed.  Without incentive to develop
players, MLB wouldn't give much, if anything to the minors.
178.7015 player Trade 5 for noneCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 03 1995 18:138
    Oh I knew I forgot something about this year's Major league replacment
    ball happening. 
    The Indians traded 5 players yesterday to the Reds for future
    considerations. It seems that the Reds were short a few players for
    yesterday's game against the Indians and in order to be able to play
    the game they made this "deal."
    Mike
    Also about half of the Expos replacment team is about to walk out.
178.702one to watch...USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemFri Mar 03 1995 18:444
>    Also about half of the Expos replacment team is about to walk out.

Will *striking* replacement players stay away when MLB players start to
break ranks and cross *the picket lines* ???
178.703Only for the TribeSUBPAC::WHITEHAIRCleveland Cavs = best NBA defenseFri Mar 03 1995 20:446
    
    Everyone wants to play for the Indians!!!
    
    
    	WaHooooo!
    
178.704WaHHHHhhhh.LUDWIG::RPETERSONMon Mar 06 1995 07:3223
    It is so funny to hear everyone whine that the ballplayers are being
    wronged by the owners. Give me a break there will evntually be new
    players in the league some will suck some will be stars. Who cares if
    you don't know there names yet. Are you saying that Pena' not playing
    is terrible, and if Mike Piazza wants to cry that it makes him sick
    that these guys are playing for the love of it and that's wrong well he
    should listen to himself and remember Mickey Mantle:
    
       I've got three books with quotes from Ford, Houk, and Rizzutto- they
    all say that Mantle was told he'd never make more than Dimaggio
    because. That's it just because. And as good as Mantle was he played
    for the Yanks for the honor, if he was a money hound like these losers
    today - who knows where he would of went or what it would have been
    like.
    
    
    Bottom line, screw em' they are hired and the owners do the hiring if
    they don't like it, go find a job somewhere else. Baseball is just
    entertainment and when they work hard and love the game they become
    good at it and those that were born with it will still find their way
    up. 
    
    Stop crying 
178.705I'm too young to remember Micky MantleCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 06 1995 11:3814
    RPETERSON
    Give us a break. The owners are the ones who have screwed up this game.
    If they keep down the salaries would they keep down the ticket prices
    and the concession prices? Mickey Mantle played in a time when teams
    were owned by owners whose life was baseball. They weren't many
    multimillionaires that only cared about tax shelters, contract
    depreciations and the publicity of having their name associated with a
    Major League Team. 
    Yeah a lot of the players today are a__holes but you don't have to
    idolize them. (I sure as hell don't). It's just that the owners can not
    control the other owners so they want the players to. If they want to
    control salaries they already have the power to.
    
    Mike
178.706Power Ball winners foundCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 06 1995 16:1929
    A report out of Arizona states that the winning ticket for the 100
    million dollars Power Ball lottery was purchased jointly by Donald Fehr
    and Bud Selig representing the MLPBA and ML baseball respectivly. 
    According to sources connected to the 2 men they can not reach an
    agreement on how the money is to be split. Fehr wants the players to
    receive the money now and is suing the Lottery Commission claiming
    Antitrust laws were violated. He also claims that the players should
    receive 60 % of the revenues because Bobby Bonilla took the time to go
    and buy the ticket and because he hasn't received a paycheck in 7
    months he was risking his money and not the owners. Bonilla has also
    threatened to punch out a person who dared to try and cut in front of 
    him in the ticket line but cooler heads prevailed.
    Selig on the other hand is claiming that the small market teams only
    should share in the winnings saying that Steinbrenner, Angelos and the
    rest of the big market teams "have already won the cable TV lottery
    and they didn't share it with us". Selig initially also wanted a luxury 
    tax imposed on the players winning claiming that their shares should
    not rise more then 10 % per year to help keep a drag on the
    distribution of the winnings but he was informed that the 100 mill
    would be awarded evenly over 20 years.
    William Usery released a statement stating "How the hell can I get the
    2 sides to agree on splitting the 2 billion dollars per year in revenue
    that baseball takes in when they cann't even agree how to split 100
    million dollars? Oh and by the way what's a lottery" 
    
    Mike
    Who cannot confirm the story with any of my sources.
    
    :^)
178.707HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Mar 07 1995 12:3228
  ... moved to where it belongs. -GM

                <<< CAM::$1$DUA5:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SPORTS.NOTE;1 >>>
                                  -< SPORTS >-
================================================================================
Note 209.41                     1995 Calendar....                       41 of 42
HELIX::MAIEWSKI                                      20 lines   7-MAR-1995 09:03
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE                     <<< Note 209.40 by POBOX::WIERSBECK >>>

>    The fact is, they made the first move.  Are you saying the owners would
>    have imposed a lockout prior to the end of last season?
    
  No, what I'm saying is that I see a lot of people who are obviously pro
owner talking about how the players made the 1st move. I believe that if the
situation had been different and the owners had locked the players out, many
of those people would be pro-owner anyway and suddenly it wouldn't matter who
had gone 1st.

  For example, if they had not settled the hockey strike and the season were
lost, would you be against the owners because that was a lockout or would you
still be pro owner?

  My guess is that very few people would be for the baseball owners but for
the hockey players on the grounds that it was the baseball players and hockey
owners who started those two actions.

  George
178.708MIMS::ROLLINS_RTue Mar 07 1995 12:4710
>  My guess is that very few people would be for the baseball owners but for
>the hockey players on the grounds that it was the baseball players and hockey
>owners who started those two actions.
>
>  George


   My guess is that the majority of people think both sides are a complete
 waste of money, and would like both groups to jump off a cliff.  The strike
 is baseball's answer to O.J.  
178.709HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Mar 07 1995 12:589
RE                     <<< Note 178.708 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R >>>

>   My guess is that the majority of people think both sides are a complete
> waste of money, and would like both groups to jump off a cliff.  The strike
> is baseball's answer to O.J.  

  Hear! Hear! as my friend says "A Pox on both their houses".

  George
178.710MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Tue Mar 07 1995 13:0314
>  My guess is that very few people would be for the baseball owners but for
>the hockey players on the grounds that it was the baseball players and hockey
>owners who started those two actions.
>
>  George
    
    Hate to disappoint you, but I happen to fall into that group of
    "very few people".  Can't, and won't, speak for others, but I 
    feel the NHL owners were to BLAM for the shortened season.
    
    
    
    billl
178.711Had NHL owners declared impasse, was repl. hokey OK?NAC::G_WAUGAMANTue Mar 07 1995 14:0222
>    Hate to disappoint you, but I happen to fall into that group of
>    "very few people".  Can't, and won't, speak for others, but I 
>    feel the NHL owners were to BLAM for the shortened season.
    
    Yes, but fundamentally the situations were not all that different.
    There's more money involved in baseball, but that's relative; to the
    average person the money is enormous in any case.  In both cases the 
    dispute was about ownership demanding absolute controls on labor costs. 
    As it turned out, the NHL players ended up accepting even less than 
    they were originally offered, after they were _locked_ out.   But at 
    least the NHL owners had the decency and/or common sense not to 
    unilaterally impose unacceptably restrictive terms (they never did get 
    their salary cap), forcing a "strike" knowing that they could send 
    semipro replacement players out as the real thing.  Had they done so, 
    would hockey fans have welcomed this?  (Now, because they didn't and 
    instead at great financial risk played it straight up, millions of NHL 
    fans weren't insulted, and even with the missing games the NHL season 
    was not irreparably damaged).
    
    glenn
    
178.712USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemTue Mar 07 1995 14:3625
>    Yes, but fundamentally the situations were not all that different.

>    at least the NHL owners had the decency and/or common sense not to 
>    unilaterally impose unacceptably restrictive terms (they never did get 
>    their salary cap), forcing a "strike" knowing that they could send 
>    semipro replacement players out as the real thing.  Had they done so, 
>    would hockey fans have welcomed this?  (Now, because they didn't and 
>    instead at great financial risk played it straight up, millions of NHL 
>    fans weren't insulted, and even with the missing games the NHL season 
>    was not irreparably damaged).

The situations are different.  MLB owners are up against a union that has
beaten them like a drum EVERY time.  It's sports strongest union.  If MLB
owners want significant change, they knew that drastic tactics would need
to be taken.

And I still don't know what MLB owners have unilaterally imposed.
They implemented their own new system back in Dec, after declaring
an impasse, but that could be expected based on the "normal" course
of events that follow in these situations.  But they pulled that
system back.

And whether there are MILLIONS of baseball fans who will be insulted
is yet to be seen.  The poll #s (more than half will watch games played
by replacements) aren't there to support you.
178.713MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Tue Mar 07 1995 14:4014
    Glenn,  I know this is hard for you to swallow, but I owe absolutly
    NO allegiance to NO professional sports figure, be that an owner
    or an player.  I really do look at the sports as a form of 
    entertainment.   If I find the level of entertainment equal
    compensation for my cost I attend/watch the games.  If not, I don't.
    It's really that simple.  That's one reason why you'll never see
    me pay for a NBA/WWF ticket.
    
    To answer your question, had there been replacement hockey players
    that I felt were an equal compensation for my paying to see them,
    you bet your bippy I'd have gone.
    
    
    billl
178.714I won't even call you an ostrich! ;-)EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityTue Mar 07 1995 15:4010
    
>        Glenn,  I know this is hard for you to swallow
    
    No, actually I don't care.  I have only defended my own position, and
    have backed it up by cashing in my tickets.  I looked at the same
    proposition, and decided that it is not close to being worth it...
    
    glenn
    
       
178.715forgot to bring this up yesterdayUSCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemTue Mar 07 1995 16:075
Any comments on Gammons' Sunday column calling Angelos the "biggest fraud
of the strike", and Fehr its "biggest criminal" (or something like that).

I'm not saying Gammons said these things himself, but that he quoted others
as saying it.
178.716MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Tue Mar 07 1995 16:136
       >            -< I won't even call you an ostrich! ;-) >-
    
    Gee you're no fun at all today!
    
    
    billl
178.717Gammons has blasted all sidesCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Mar 07 1995 17:5214
    Re .715
    Gammons said that about Angelos because in his view he hadn't done one
    thing to help end the strike. Gammons has always questioned Fehr's
    ability to negotiate a settlement. Gammons also blasted the owners last
    night on ESPN for laying off secretaries and other low salaried
    personnel and having the owners meeting at the very posh Breakers
    Hotel. ( prices starting at 250$/night)
    I think that if there is one person in this country who understands all
    sides of this agreement it's Gammons. He has blasted all sides and is
    probably the first writer to realize that it's not just player vs
    owners but Players vs Small market owners vs large market owners. He's
    blasted Fehr and some of the older players, called Marge Schott cheap
    and realizes how much each side dislikes each other.
    
178.718Players=Mel Ott; Owners = DurocherAKOCOA::BREENThe roar of the paintTue Mar 07 1995 18:3915
    I had earlier guessed that the owners want to take a few paychecks away
    from the players prior to finally settling.  Why they're not being
    called on this I don't know.  The settlement parameters are in place
    and ready for final, serious negotiation: Glavine was aware of this and
    had (naive) hope that settlement time was here but he doesn't know the
    ownership type of brain.
    
    The main point the owners now want to register is how costly it will be
    next time to strike.  Ironically in view of common opinion the players
    have been too much Mr. Nice-Guy in this whole affair, too willing to
    play by the rules.
    
    After settling they should pull a no-show at the all-star game or
    something knee-in-the-crotch kind of thing to just get the owners
    respect.
178.719Who doesn't want to compromise? Part of the master planEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityTue Mar 07 1995 20:0718
>    The main point the owners now want to register is how costly it will be
>    next time to strike.  Ironically in view of common opinion the players
>    have been too much Mr. Nice-Guy in this whole affair, too willing to
>    play by the rules.
    
    Look at what happened this past weekend (not that most care about the 
    details-- apparently many fans _are_ content with the idea that the 
    players should be shown who is boss, bring on the replacements, issues 
    be damned).  Players agree to 25% luxury tax in principle, say let's 
    negotiate the point where it kicks in.  After making a big deal out of 
    the fact that they would not allow the players to choose piecemeal from
    the Usery proposal, the owners themselves put on the table the Usery 
    proposal _minus several key points_.  A big step backwards, talks break 
    off, players too blam.
    
    glenn
    
178.720Which is fine with me ...MIMS::ROLLINS_RTue Mar 07 1995 20:238
>   <<< Note 178.719 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN "Baseball owners, den of inequity" >>>
>          -< Who doesn't want to compromise? Part of the master plan >-


     Neither side wants to compromise, and neither side is compromising.
     Frankly, I think it will be a while before either side starts to think
     about compromising.  IMO, this will be going on until around the
     all-star game in July.
178.721I'd go for itPOBOX::WIERSBECKWed Mar 08 1995 14:339
    I wonder what would happen if the owners set a deadline for a
    settlement?  If an agreement wasn't reached by X date, the former
    players would then sit the whole season and they could try again next
    year.  Let the subs play the whole year through.
    
    That'd be interesting.
    
    
    Spud
178.722You'll take what we give you and like it!EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityWed Mar 08 1995 14:5627
>    I wonder what would happen if the owners set a deadline for a
>    settlement?  If an agreement wasn't reached by X date, the former
>    players would then sit the whole season and they could try again next
>    year.  Let the subs play the whole year through.
    
    What would be the point?  The owners could do this at any time, but
    the real goal of all of this is the total capitulation of the players.
    They could delay the possibility of such a collapse for one year but 
    why remove the hammer for any period of time?  Based on poor spring 
    training attendances and rumblings from sponsors I seriously doubt that
    the owners _want_ to pull that trigger and commit to the replacements for 
    a full season.  They may ultimately have to do it to get what they want, 
    but I don't think they'd want to limit their options.  If the replacement
    scheme were to fail financially they could even be worse off in a year 
    than they are now, to the goal of maximizing profit. 
    
    With that said, if the season starts with replacements and the games 
    count, they might as well play 'em all because personally I won't
    care about a lost season.  Part of this sham is the loss of ticket 
    privileges if the customer refuses to play ball.  Fine, whatever, 
    they're the owners and as I've heard it's their right to do whatever 
    they want, but as far as I'm concerned it's just a legalized form of 
    extortion.  
    
    glenn
    
178.723CAMONE::WAYUSS Grampus, SS-206, In MemoriamWed Mar 08 1995 15:0324
Well, bottom line, I think some folks will go to replacement games.
I don't think a lot of folks will go, but some will.

They had a piece on WFAN a few nights ago about how this year's ads are
so different from last.  Last year the teams would be shilling the players
that they had....This year, they're trying to appeal to the fans by
extoling (two l's in extoling?  I don't know...maybe) by extoling baseball
itself and the aura of the game.


I'm sorry, but these stiffs aren't playing 'Show' caliber ball. 

IMO, the owners are money-hungry spoiled people, and the players are
spoiled too.

In fact, both sides remind me of a bunch of kindergarten kids acting up
in church.  They wanna fight, they wanna throw tantrums, regardless of
how disturbing it is to the other folks who wanna be there....


Pencil me in for some New Britain games.....


'Saw
178.724High School chickenCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Mar 08 1995 15:1516
    Saw,
    This whole thing is like 2 teenagers who go and play chicken with cars.
    Both sides are waiting for the other side to pull to the side. The
    problem is that within 3 weeks neither side will have pulled to the
    side and the cars will collide when scabball becomes a reality. The
    damage that will occur will be huge. Gillette Co. who is one of the
    largest sponsers of MLB will pull out. Some players will cross the
    line, more won't managers will start to balk, Toronto will play home
    games in Florida, Baltimore won't play and in the end the team that
    will be hurt most of all will be Montreal which is one of the teams
    that this strike is suppose to help. And the sad part is that the
    owners really don't legally need anymore power to control salaries then
    what they already have. And the players will still have Donald Fehr as
    their leader who still looks to settle this in the courts. 
    And more and more fans will start paying more attention to hockey and
    football and basketball.  
178.725Now they've pissed me off!MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Wed Mar 08 1995 15:5912
    Found out Sunday a little side note to this labor dispute.  In the past
    MLB (I'm not sure whether it was the MLBPA or the owners) donated about
    $100K to the American Legion baseball program.  This year, because of
    the strike, the amount will be $25K.  To someone who devotes his entire
    summer, and a good part of the winter and spring, to American Legion
    baseball, I am extremely disappointed (to say the least).
    
    Like I said, I don't know which group has made this decision, but when
    I find out I'll be sure and let yunz know.
    
    
    billl
178.726HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 08 1995 16:0214
RE                    <<< Note 178.721 by POBOX::WIERSBECK >>>

>    I wonder what would happen if the owners set a deadline for a
>    settlement?  If an agreement wasn't reached by X date, the former
>    players would then sit the whole season and they could try again next
>    year.  Let the subs play the whole year through.
    
  Wouldn't work.

  If a player under contract decided to cross the picket line and play after
the date they had set and if they then refused to pay him they would be in
breach of contract. 

  George
178.727MIMS::ROLLINS_RWed Mar 08 1995 16:409
>   If a player under contract decided to cross the picket line and play after
> the date they had set and if they then refused to pay him they would be in
> breach of contract. 
> 
>   George

  I believe the player has already failed to meet the contract stipulations;
  I think he would have very little legal standing in a claim that the owner
  was in breach of contract.
178.728USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemWed Mar 08 1995 16:476
We, the fans, cry about not having any control over this situation...that
the real people hurt by this are the fans.  Yet, when replacements start this
season, the fans' voice will ultimately decide this thing.  If the owners
take in more money than they spend on replacement ball, they will not be
pressed to change their position...the players will have to decide when
they want to play again.
178.729HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 08 1995 16:5519
RE                     <<< Note 178.727 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R >>>

>  I believe the player has already failed to meet the contract stipulations;
>  I think he would have very little legal standing in a claim that the owner
>  was in breach of contract.

  In what way? A player agrees not to accept money from anyone else to play
baseball and in return the team agrees to pay him if he plays. That's the way
most contracts seem to work.

  If teams could void contracts when players strike then owners would see every
strike as an opportunity to drop players who's performance had fallen off. Yet
they never do this. They always honor all contracts when a strike ends.

  Now maybe they do that out of their own generosity and the goodness of their
hearts but somehow I doubt it. If someone under contract wants to play I don't
believe they would have a shot at not paying them. 

  George
178.730MIMS::ROLLINS_RThu Mar 09 1995 13:0727
>   In what way? A player agrees not to accept money from anyone else to play
> baseball and in return the team agrees to pay him if he plays. That's the way
> most contracts seem to work.

  How many baseball contract have you seen ?  What makes you think that
  there isn't a clause that obligates them to play where assigned when healthy;
  otherwise, the entire contract is null and void ?  Is your observation based
  on generalization of contracts in general, or baseball contracts in
  particular ?

>  If teams could void contracts when players strike then owners would see every
> strike as an opportunity to drop players who's performance had fallen off. Yet
> they never do this. They always honor all contracts when a strike ends.
> 
>   Now maybe they do that out of their own generosity and the goodness of their
> hearts but somehow I doubt it. If someone under contract wants to play I don't
> believe they would have a shot at not paying them. 

  I doubt it has anything to do with the goodness of their hearts, either.  I
  suspect its a negotiation during the settlement of the strike, that players
  are not penalized regarding their existing contracts due to any strike
  events.

  I think they would have an excellent shot at not paying them, if they chose
  to lock out strikers who wanted to cross.  I don't think they would do this,
  but they could if they wanted to.

178.731George Steinbrenner: Next MLB Commissioner !USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemThu Mar 09 1995 13:130
178.732HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 10 1995 12:2419
RE                     <<< Note 178.730 by MIMS::ROLLINS_R >>>

>  How many baseball contract have you seen ?  What makes you think that
>  there isn't a clause that obligates them to play where assigned when healthy;
>  otherwise, the entire contract is null and void ?  Is your observation based
>  on generalization of contracts in general, or baseball contracts in
>  particular ?

  Just a hunch. Maybe I'm wrong but I doubt it. Now the same question to you,
Is your observation based on generalization of contracts in general, or
baseball contracts in particular ? 

>  I think they would have an excellent shot at not paying them, if they chose
>  to lock out strikers who wanted to cross.  I don't think they would do this,
>  but they could if they wanted to.

  Remember, during lockouts in the past there were no games.

  George
178.733MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Mar 10 1995 14:408
>   Just a hunch. Maybe I'm wrong but I doubt it. Now the same question to you,
> Is your observation based on generalization of contracts in general, or
> baseball contracts in particular ? 

  Mine is just a guess as well.  I admit I could be wrong, but I also doubt it.
  I don't think it will be tested, however, because I think the owners will
  encourage players to walk out, thereby destabilizing the union, rather than
  keep players from crossing over.
178.734Contracts valid, strike/lockout with no CBA is legal rightEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityFri Mar 10 1995 15:0121
    
    If the timeframe of the return is reasonable (not July or something
    like that) I believe that George is generally correct, the individual
    contract must be honored.  It's possible that the owners could try 
    to void them (they can _try_ anything) but they'd likely have 250 
    lawsuits on their hands in a hurry.  The matter of the expired CBA 
    supersedes the individual contracts, but when a system is put in place
    the individual contracts of players willing to play must be honored.
    When the CBA has expired, believe it or not, the players have a legal
    _right_ to strike and the owners have a legal right to lock them out.
    That works both ways.  However, I don't believe that the owners can 
    pick and choose which contracts they'll honor once they implement a 
    system after an impasse.  
    
    This is also the reason I expect a full lockout and no baseball if the
    players get an injunction putting the old system back in place, when
    they try to return.  Otherwise the owners would be flirting with a
    barrage of individual contract lawsuits...
    
    glenn
     
178.735Just some thoughtsBSS::MENDEZFri Mar 10 1995 16:287
    What is the status of AAA ball?  Will they be playing?  If they
    are playing then the attendance of those games could bring an end
    to the strike.  I remember during Hokey strike that the IHL was getting
    great attendance here in Colorado.  Also,  Rockies have sold out their
    first few games of this season.  That is probably due to the opening of
    Coors Field.
    
178.736They'll be playing, and better than everMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Fri Mar 10 1995 16:4117
The minor league seasons will start on schedule.  The minors are not on
strike--they can't be, they aren't unionized.  Minor leaguers are the
property of the team that drafted them (or to whom they were traded)
until either 1) they play long enough in the majors to become free
agents, or 2) they play six full minor league seasons and become
minor league free agents.  The latter provision offers a player whose
advancement is blocked by someone in the majors to try to sell his
services to an organization that needs someone at his position in
the major leagues.

If the strike continues past opening day, a number of minor leaguers
who were expected to make major league teams will open in AAA, so the
quality of AAA ball will probably achieve an all-time high.  As I've
said to you New Englanders before:  Pawtucket will be offering one of
the best bargains in professional sports.

Steve
178.737No Major League Baseball, how about Professional BaseballMARIN::DODGEFri Mar 10 1995 17:3418
	Why don't the owners just play the minor league games in the major league
stadiums ?  Keep the same minor league team names, players, contracts, etc.  Just
play the games in the major league parks.

	This would get around the Canadian rules against using replacements.
Since they are not using replacements, they are bringing in a different team.
The owners would not be playing a charade that these are the real MLB teams.
They could just say that until the MLB players come back they will offer
minor league games for our entertainment.

	I have always thought that fans go to baseball games for the nostalga,
the park atmosphere, and the community loyalty.  These could all be satisfied
with minor league teams in the major league park setting.

	The minor leaguers would not be violating any union rules that I am
aware of.  I think this would be a much better option than replacement players.

What do you think ?
178.738The minor league owners will not be delightedMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Fri Mar 10 1995 17:487
Most minor league teams are not owned by major league teams, but are
independent franchises that acquire players from the major league
organizations under the terms of the National Association agreement.
I doubt that the owner of the Pawsox would enjoy seeing his ballpark
stand empty while his team plays in Fenway.

Steve
178.739HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 10 1995 18:379
  Another problem is that some AAA teams are not located near their parent
club. For example the Florida Marlins AAA team is in Edmonton of the Pacific
League. Both Edmonton and their Pacific league opponent would have to be flown
to Florida for the games. 

  However it might work if each minor league franchised played a few of their
games in the parent teams park. I'd rather watch that then scab ball.

  George
178.740Lords Of The RealmAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksMon Mar 13 1995 03:4522
I think you all participants in this string should read "Lords of the 
Realm", a book about baseball and labor s#%*.  This book is by the same
author who wrote "Barbarians at the Gate" about the RJR takeover.  In
"Lords" you see the average salary go from 20K to 1M.  The screwups the 
owners make during this are crazy.  

It starts with the Curt Flood incident, then goes from the Charlie Finley 
era,to collusion, and then to what is going on now.  In between alot of 
things happen, but basically the owners got burned every time.

The importent thing here is too realize that I think the "Lords" are 
serious this time.  The owners got their asses burned for over twenty years, 
they aren't going to take it anymore.   However, they still are a little 
bit schitzo.   What the hell are they doing giving Bagwell 7m a year if
they want to bust the union?  Why are they expanding?  Read "Lords of the 
Realm", you will see why.  The owners, the lords, are out of control.  

This folks, is going to be one long strike. 

Paul

178.741USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemMon Mar 13 1995 12:5615
>The importent thing here is too realize that I think the "Lords" are 
>serious this time.  The owners got their asses burned for over twenty years, 
>they aren't going to take it anymore.

Gammons' column yesterday says the same thing.  He wrote that there have
been 5 work stoppages during the careers of two middle-piddle pitchers
(can't remember their names) who have losing career records but are
scheduled to make over $6M this season.  The point being, the owners
have gotten their clocks cleaned in these work-stoppage situations, and
it's costing them huge $$$$.  They're determined to win some back.

He also reported that some players and agents are making back-door
proposals and suggestions, trying to get this thing resolved.  This
has owners believing that time is on their side, and the players union
will buckle.
178.742CAMONE::WAYUSS Triton, SS-201, On Eternal PatrolMon Mar 13 1995 12:5818
Saw a presentation yesterday on the use of Tomahawk missiles by US
fast attack subs.

One of the slides that the officer showed was one that he used in a 
presentation to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Sec'y of Defense on 
the accuracy of sub-launched Tomahawk missiles.

While the exact range was classified, his graphical analogy representing
the results of 85 test firings was so appropriate to this discussion.

Of 85 Tomahawks test fired, assuming the target was the pitchers mound,
all of them fell within the boundries of the basepaths.

I couldn't help but think that it'd be a great way to end the baseball
strike.....8^)


'Saw
178.743CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 13 1995 13:1418
    Maybe it's me but the last 2 contracts the players have given back 1
    year of arbitration and everything else has just about the same. What
    SOME owners have done is spend foolishly on players who haven't
    produced or who are on their way down. They also have foolishly gone to
    arbitration on average players who weren't worth the money when they could
    have released them and resigned another average player. 
    I believe that the owners current proposal is a 25% tax on any payroll
    over 40 mill/year. The players better wake up and realize they aren't
    going to get a much better deal. Neither side can claim to be a winner
    this time because both sides have suffered huge monetary losses and
    they have badly tarnished this game. I'm willing to bet if this strike
    is settled in time for real players to play that on APril 23rd more
    people will be wondering or watching who the Patriots get in the draft
    then if the Red Sox win that day's game. 
    Also according to USA today The regular season could be pushed back 1
    week if a settlement is reached this week.
    
    Mike
178.744Owners could end strike in a minute, don't want toAKOCOA::BREENThe roar of the paintMon Mar 13 1995 13:4011
    The owners are offering a 50% tax, the players 25% - that could be
    easily compromised by parties willing.
    
    Owners want to take away some paydays from the players in revenge and
    could care less about anything else.  Normal people cannot comprehend
    the greed and rapacity of the types that run baseball.
    
    More and more I am coming to admire the players for their stand which
    is principled, fair and show loyalty to those who sacrificed for them
    and those to follow.  Hopefully the younger ones for whom the sacrifice
    is to benefit will stand tall.
178.745USCTR1::GARBARINODean &gt; BumhiemMon Mar 13 1995 13:4715
>    Owners want to take away some paydays from the players in revenge and
>    could care less about anything else.  Normal people cannot comprehend
>    the greed and rapacity of the types that run baseball.
         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

...and play it.


>    More and more I am coming to admire the players for their stand which


So the owners are evil because their demands will likely result in the
opening of the regular season without the *real* players.  But the players
are to be admired, even though it was their job action that cancelled
the World Series.  That's beautiful.....
178.746Both sides equally at faultCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 13 1995 13:597
    As an anti-owner fan I think both sides share equally in the killing of
    the game. Remember it was the OWNERS who reopened the existing contract
    and not the players. The players struck because they knew the owners
    would declare an impasse during the winter and try and ram their plan
    down the players throat. THE NLRB however stopped that. The players
    have shown an inability to negotiaite and until BOTH sides start
    working together this game is toast. 
178.747As Billte sees itAKOCOA::BREENThe roar of the paintMon Mar 13 1995 14:2921
    Remember last year when the players struck they had received 2/3 of
    their pay because they get paid on the basis of the regular season.  By
    electing to forfeit the post season tv money the owners in effect had
    paid the players from their own pocket.
    
    The owners could have forestalled that by simply agreeing to not
    lockout the players and conduct real negotiations but this was against
    their timetable having to do with expansion money and franchise fees
    and bank leverage which depended on a contract being in place which
    protected the weak franchises.  In effect they elected plan B; break
    the union.
    
    Now apparently the owners have given up on any big victories and (imo)
    have settled on a compromise set of metrics with the players.  But in
    order to recoup their '94 losses they to take (guessing) 3-5 paydays
    from the players.  This doesn't affect them since their payroll money
    comes from the postseason tv revenue.
    
    Who was never included in this strategy?  Fans, stadium personnel etc;
    not to speak of the players who have been completely consistent in
    bargaining for a free market which they already won in the past.
178.748SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Mar 13 1995 15:2022
                       <<< Note 178.735 by BSS::MENDEZ >>>
                            -< Just some thoughts >-

>    What is the status of AAA ball?  Will they be playing? 

The talk is that if the strike continues into the 
regular season, all funding will be pulled for all but AAA. 
Everything else will get shutdown. Those plans were being 
finalized last Wed, at least for the Rangers. I'd assume that the 
other teams are following suit.

One last comment of George Anderson:

Mr. "Integrity" accepted at least 200k in salary for this 
season after he decided 2 months ago that he wouldn't manage 
replacement players. But he didn't tell any club official about 
his decision until 3 days before he was supposed to report to 
camp. He had been paid 500K sinec the August 12 strike including 
350K since Nov 1. So, Anderson took the money in advance for a 
job he didn't do but he says he didn't do anything wrong...

daryll
178.749CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 13 1995 15:4113
    Re -1,
    that is the first I have heard of the Minor Leagues being shut down. If
    it's true, and I seriously doubt that it is, That would put one more
    stake in baseball's heart.
    As far as Anderson is concerned I realize that to some people Jerry
    Rheisendorf, George Steinbrenner, Jackie Autry and some of the other high 
    quality people that populate baseball owners today are gods and
    goddesses but I'll stick with Anderson. His contract probably called
    for him to be paid year round, and for him to work with the GM during
    the offseason to prepare for the coming year in addition to managing
    duties. Since he is not working now he's not getting paid. What's the
    matter with that? Jealousy? He knows baseball with replacment is a
    travesty. He's making a stand on his beliefs. 
178.750MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Mon Mar 13 1995 15:5512
    >>...to some people Jerry Rheisendorf, George Steinbrenner, 
    >>Jackie Autry and some of the other high quality people that 
    >>populate baseball owners today are gods and goddesses...
    
    (Here we go again)
    Is it not possible that they are neither "gods and goddesses" or 
    a group of anti-Christs?  Agree with everything the MLBPA has 
    done, and will continue to do, to the game if you will, but try
    and believe that others may not agree with your opinions 100%.
    
    
    billl
178.751SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Mar 13 1995 16:0231
The talk on shutting down everything below AAA came from Brad 
Arnsberg who is in the Rangers front office. He didn't say it 
would happen, but it's being seriously discussed right now and 
plans are being made.

You can assume anything you like about George's contract. The 
fact the TSN published that little tidbit and precluded it with, 
"Before this gets out of hand and someone nominates Sparky 
Anderson for the Nobel Peace Prize." leads me to believe 
otherwise. 

I went to a few replacement games last week. Caught the Red Sox 
playing the Twins, Rangers and Yankees in Ft. Myers. Those were weekday 
games and the Twins and Rangers drew between 1500-2000. I'd say that's 
less than half full. The NY-BOS game was a weekday game as well 
and was packed. The Yankees come down from Lauterdale and they 
don't come that often so that could be why. It was close to a sell-out 
I'd guess. I also caught a inter-squad minors game 
and managed to see Nomar Garciaparra and Trot Nixon. The quality 
of play between the replacement games and the intersquad games 
was about the same. Nobody embarrassed themselves, not even Pork 
Chop. Barberra and Pookie Richardson seemed to be the crowd 
favorite. Rangers minor league camp opens today and it's a good 
thing, couple of those guys walked out 2 weeks ago and have 
WAY too much time on their hands. Spend most every waking moment 
fishing, eating or uh, drinking with John Barfield. I got the 
players side of it. Contrary to what others think, I do not 
think that the owners are without blame here. I think both sides 
are, but I think Fehr is the problem and must go. 

daryll
178.752Unscrupulous owners admit it: no intention of negotiatingEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityMon Mar 13 1995 16:0733
    
    The thing that struck me the most from Gammons' column is that for the
    first time he had _direct quotes_ from an ownership party stating 
    that the goal of some 20 clubs is simply to wait for the players to break.  
    In other words, as I've said all along, serious negotiation is not and
    has not been in the cards (in my opinion dating back to 1992 and all 
    events succeeding, including those before the players took the bait and
    struck-- which was unwise).  Gammons described a "smug" attitude within 
    ownership focused on busting the union.  In a nutshell, this cavalier
    attitude towards the future of MLB only continues to sicken me.  No, I 
    do not believe that both sides are "equally to blame".  There is plenty 
    of blame to go around, to be sure, but I do not believe it to be equal.  
    Personally, I hold those who run the game responsible for this war
    rooted in their own incompetence and mismanagement, and if they
    proceed with their cynical plan it will not be forgotten.
    
    Re. Sparky:  Sparky addressed this issue directly.  He claims that he
    has been paid by the month under season-long contracts since he joined
    the Tigers almost 20 years ago.  He felt he was under no obligation to 
    forego offseason pay (as much for last year's work as for this) when no 
    definitive replacement plan was in place and where his offseason plans 
    centered around the regulars, and considers the matter nothing more
    than a smear campaign designed by Tigers' management.  Basically, 
    Sparky had no more idea what was going to happen than season-ticket 
    holders asked to put up full payment in advance.  I don't blame him 
    for not going out of his way to play a mind-reading game with onerous 
    MLB ownership types.  That he went a step further and called them on
    it, at the price of the rest of his career (almost assured now based 
    on reports from the Tigers) just re-inforces the Integrity of his
    decision.
    
    glenn
     
178.753Fehr great media target, but not the issue...EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityMon Mar 13 1995 16:2719
               
> I think both sides 
> are, but I think Fehr is the problem and must go. 
  
    Daryll, I sincerely believe that this is the biggest misconception of
    all.  Time and again the players state that Fehr is not the issue, that
    _they_ understand the issues and will _not_ give away their hard-earned
    gains in a large-scale rollback that includes a salary cap (in whatever
    form), but no one believes them.  It's like saying that Bud Selig is the
    problem with the owners (when in reality if nothing else he's one of the
    more decent owners) when it should be well understood by now that there is 
    majority resolve on their end regardless of whom their spokesperson or
    chief negotiator is.  Fehr has a very poor public demeanor but I think
    it's naive to believe that with both sides fundamentally divided by a 
    significant matter like the salary cap, that Fehr is actually the issue.
    
    glenn
    
                                                
178.754SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Mar 13 1995 16:4014
Glenn,

I never liked Fehr. I don't care for Selig either. 
There is a alot of discontentment in the players ranks 
right now. Behind closed doors, Dykstra and Swindell were 
pummelled to toe the line and shut-up. 
There is true solidarity among the millionaires. It 
starts to break down the lower you get in the salary rankings.
Who do you think will win a struggle between a couple dozen 
Barfields, Sassers, and Ballards and two or three Clemens' and 
Cones? Those are the guys that are running this union right now 
and are calling the shots.

daryll
178.755MLB has a contractual commitment to the NAMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Mon Mar 13 1995 16:4019
.748:

>The talk is that if the strike continues into the 
>regular season, all funding will be pulled for all but AAA. 
>Everything else will get shutdown. Those plans were being 
>finalized last Wed, at least for the Rangers. I'd assume that the 
>other teams are following suit.

They can't be.  They have a contractual obligation, called (imaginatively)
The Baseball Agreement, to supply franchises that are members of the
National Association with players, managers, and coaches.  If I were a
minor league owner, and the team with which I had a working agreement
failed to live up to that obligation, I'd them sue for breach of contract
for the amount of my expected revenues plus triple damages.  And I'd win.

But hey, no one here really thinks MLB would even *consider* breaching a
valid contract, do they?  Do they?

Steve
178.756It's not a pretty historyEDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityMon Mar 13 1995 16:5315
> The importent thing here is too realize that I think the "Lords" are 
> serious this time.  The owners got their asses burned for over twenty years, 
> they aren't going to take it anymore. 
    
    I read "Lords of the Realm" a while back (good book, but probably only
    if you're interested in another historical perspective to baseball).
    While it's true that time and again the baseball owners were burned,
    you most definitely are _not_ left with the impression that they
    now "deserve" a win.  Hardly.  It's much more a case of you made your
    bed, now lie in it.  On any issue under the category of "fairness",
    they take a pretty good beating (in this book at least).
    
    glenn
    
178.757CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Mar 13 1995 18:0710
    billl,
    I have never stated that I agree with 100% of the MLPA. All I have said
    is that the owners are the people who have offered the millions of
    dollars to the players and now want the players to help them stop
    themselves. Darryl took some shots at Sparky Anderson, a man who has
    done more to promote baseball then any owner has. He's Po'd because he
    doesn't toe the line like everyone else. He's not the one who has
    screwed up baseball. 
    
    Mike  
178.758Now there's a guy who has everything to lose...EDWIN::WAUGAMANBaseball owners, den of inequityMon Mar 13 1995 18:3214
    
> Rangers minor league camp opens today and it's a good 
> thing, couple of those guys walked out 2 weeks ago and have 
> WAY too much time on their hands. Spend most every waking moment 
> fishing, eating or uh, drinking with John Barfield. I got the 
> players side of it.
    
    Just caught this comment.  What's Barfield up to?  He hasn't played in
    the majors for a couple years, right?  But he's refusing to play in the
    exhibitions?  I gather from the last sentence that he was filling you
    up with MLBPA bile along with that beer... ;-)
    
    glenn
    
178.759SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Mar 13 1995 19:5328
John was with the Rangers until last year. He broke his collar 
bone while on the mound and has been trying to make it back. 
He made the LA Dodgers last season out of spring training as a 
lefthanded swing-man and flew to LA for a freeway series with 
the Angels before the start of the regular season. After the 
1st game, (he didn't get in) they told him that they decided to 
keep the Japanese kid up and send him down to AAA. 1hr before 
his flight was schedule to leave, Kip Gross decided to accept a 
AAA assignment after he said all during camp that he wouldn't 
accept a minor league assignment if he didn't make the team. 
He played AA ball last year. Led the team in appearances, era, 
and innings.  Played winter ball in Puerto Rico, Mexico, and 
Venezuala (sp) last year. He's lost some on his #1, down to 88 
from 94 when he broke his collar bone.

The Rangers signed him again this season to a minor league 
contract (no replacement games clause) and he was in camp until 
about 2 weeks ago when they walked rather than play. The Rangers 
told him to report to the minor league camp which opens tomorrow.

You might say I did get the players side of the strike...

Got our share of stories about Valentine (hated by just about 
every one on the team), the stuff behind the release of 
Incaviglia, a great story about Valentine and Gossage who 
wouldn't take his crap etc. Great time.

daryll
178.760Shock of shocks...EDWIN::WAUGAMANNLRB, men of judicial integrityTue Mar 14 1995 16:419
    
    The owners' general counsel has acknowledged that today the NLRB 
    has issued another unfair practices complaint against the owners on their
    decision to unilaterally implement their latest plan (whereby the PRC, 
    and not the clubs, controls all contract decisions).  More fallout to 
    follow, I'm sure... 
    
    glenn
    
178.761USCTR1::GARBARINORed Sox &gt; Syracuse HoopstersTue Mar 14 1995 18:0013
>                            -< Shock of shocks... >-

...and I'm sure the owners met this news with, "b-f-d".  What a @#$%ing
joke.  The players can "freeze" players from signing contracts, but the
owners can't.  Another empty victory.  I hope it consoles them when that
April 15 check never comes.

Hey Glenn, if the owners do NOT intend on negotiating, why did they
accept Usery's "proposal" last month ?

And remember what Costas said in an interview:  "Fehr is NOT a negotiator...
he doesn't have a 'yes' gene".  So why should we believe that the lack of
negotiation lies only on the owners' side.
178.762PTOSS1::JACOBRHow's your 'WENUS'???Tue Mar 14 1995 18:288
    The NLRB just announced that they are filing two complaints against the
    owners fer bad faith bargaining on, I think, free agency and some other
    issue.  they said that they board will investigate, and if necessary,
    seek an injunction against the owners, forcing them to return to the
    old way.
    
    JaKe
    
178.763The beatings will continue until the health of baseball improvesEDWIN::WAUGAMANNLRB, men of judicial integrityTue Mar 14 1995 19:0438
> ...and I'm sure the owners met this news with, "b-f-d".  What a @#$%ing
> joke.  The players can "freeze" players from signing contracts, but the
> owners can't.  Another empty victory.  I hope it consoles them when that
> April 15 check never comes.
    
    Hey, like I've said all along, if it's determined that you've acted
    in bad faith (not that that is definitive _yet_), in utter disregard 
    of fairness or the law, you can always fall back on good old-fashioned 
    punishment and spite.  There's always another avenue of injustice to 
    pursue until they catch up with you the next time.  Sure, stick it to 
    them again with an even more odious action (one additional month of 
    replacement ball-- that'll teach anyone who cares about this game!).  
    The worst that any such arrogance and bad legal advice has led to in 
    the past is treble damages...
    
> Hey Glenn, if the owners do NOT intend on negotiating, why did they
> accept Usery's "proposal" last month ?
    
    Public relations score?  Granted, Usery has stated that it was not a 
    proposal but a recommendation for constructive (forward, not backward) 
    negotiation, and granted Usery has come out firmly in opposition to the 
    use of the replacement scheme as a leveraging hammer in lieu of said 
    negotiation, but if you can sell the part of the story you like to the 
    public, go with it...
    
> And remember what Costas said in an interview:  "Fehr is NOT a negotiator...
> he doesn't have a 'yes' gene".  So why should we believe that the lack of
> negotiation lies only on the owners' side.
    
    The facts, as seemingly supported by yet another unfavorable labor 
    ruling.  In reality the elimination of arbitration and a 25% luxury 
    tax (as a starting point, no less) represents significant concession, 
    regardless of what ownership says about the "necessity" of an 
    effective hard salary cap.
    
    glenn
    
178.764USCTR1::GARBARINORed Sox &gt; Syracuse HoopstersTue Mar 14 1995 20:2011
>    Hey, like I've said all along, if it's determined that you've acted
>    in bad faith (not that that is definitive _yet_), in utter disregard 
>    of fairness or the law,

Let's hope they take it to a judicial body that doesn't have the word
"LABOR" in it.

And I don't agree with all of this talk about "all of the damage that's
been done to the game".  One of the key points that will be made, should
replacement games be played, is that THE GAME survives.  And when the
union players come back, people will still pay to see them play.
178.765PENUTS::JST_ONGEJohn St.Onge USDSL DTN: 297-9527Wed Mar 15 1995 14:4910
    Regular players or not, I still plan on taking my son to Fenway to see
    some games. He's still young enough  where  he doesn't really know who
    Frank Thomas  is  or  what  he  does. He doesn't understand what labor
    strikes, free agancy, arbitration etc. are, but he knows he's going to
    "Fenway" to see the "Red Sox" play  and  we  might go to "New York" to
    see the hated "Yankees" play.  If it's  replacement  players, he won't
    care because he saw a baseball game  and  the place he sees on TV once
    in awhile.
    
    John
178.766I'll take my kids to watch Legion insteadCNTROL::CHILDSEnd Corporate Welfare Instead!Wed Mar 15 1995 15:046
 Seems to me with the exception of Billl, everyone who is going to see 
 replacement games is going simply to give their kids the joy of going 
 to fenway or any other park. If it wasn't for the kids would you go?

 mike
178.767ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsWed Mar 15 1995 15:548
    
> Seems to me with the exception of Billl, everyone who is going to see 
> replacement games is going simply to give their kids the joy of going 
> to fenway or any other park. If it wasn't for the kids would you go?
    
    Well, I don't have any kids yet, and I'm going...
    
    Joe
178.768MKFSA::LONGLet your tongue hang out. Stay cool.Wed Mar 15 1995 16:0415
    > Seems to me with the exception of Billl, everyone who is going to see
    > replacement games is going simply to give their kids the joy of going
    > to fenway or any other park. If it wasn't for the kids would you go?
    
    
    Nice to know I'm setting a trend.  I go for the joy of watching the
    game in the stadium.  If they turn out to be like an over-50 league,
    I'll not return.
    
    BTW, I'll post the Merrimack American Legion schedule for all you
    would-be followers.  It ain't AAA, but it's a quality above the
    local high school level.
    
    
    billl
178.769I miss ya JoeCNTROL::CHILDSEnd Corporate Welfare Instead!Wed Mar 15 1995 16:067
 yabbut anybody who picks Penn to win it all isn't using good judgement
 anyways.......

 ;^)

 mike
178.770Gonna tell a lie might as well make it a big one... ;-)EDWIN::WAUGAMANNLRB, men of judicial integrityWed Mar 15 1995 16:3216
                                         
>    BTW, I'll post the Merrimack American Legion schedule for all you
>    would-be followers.  It ain't AAA, but it's a quality above the
>    local high school level.
    
    I'll take ya up on at least one game, billl.  Who do you have returning
    from Hollis?  That good lefty you had was only 16 last year, right?
    
    With kids the age of my youngest boy, I can tell him that the Merrimack 
    Legion team is the Red Sox, the fella at the end of the dugout with the 
    graying temples is Butch Hobson, the Legion bar is the big-league
    clubhouse and that the Anheuser-Busch brewery is the finest eatery in 
    all of Boston.  Sounds like a full day...
    
    glenn
    
178.771Former players to become air traffic controllers?POBOX::WIERSBECKWed Mar 15 1995 16:5912
    I don't have any kids and I'll be going.  I want to sit out in the
    bleachers at Wrigley, have a beer and soak up some sun.  I don't follow
    the Cubs anyway.  I'll probably head up to County as well.  That's a
    GREAT park to do some pre-game tailgating and just have some fun at.
    
    My sister and her husband have just bought tickets for a couple Twins
    games as well.
    
    Bottom line is, the GAME is above any and every player.
    
    
    Spud
178.772MIMS::ROLLINS_RWed Mar 15 1995 17:233
	I'll probably go to a game or two at Fulton County Stadium, about
	the same as I go to every year (except the last couple, I haven't
	been since the chop became the rage).
178.773ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsWed Mar 15 1995 17:3212
    
> yabbut anybody who picks Penn to win it all isn't using good judgement
> anyways.......
    
    Good judgement?  Well, it all depends... I'm judging that, given
    my entry, I'd best stay out of the contests with more riding on them...
    B^)
    
    And you must admit - if all my predictions were correct, it'd be
    a tournament for the ages... B^)
    
    Joe
178.774Pro'ly won't watch them on the toob, tho'.PCBUOA::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingWed Mar 15 1995 17:333
    I'll be at Fenway.
    
    Mark.
178.775HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 15 1995 17:359
  I think I might go see "the Can" when the White Sox come to town.

  I doubt I'll buy tickets in advance, there will be plenty of empty seats.
I'll just listen to the news to hear when he's going to pitch then maybe I'll
go at the last minute.

  If he tears up his shoulder again I doubt I'll go any scab games.

  George
178.776SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceWed Mar 15 1995 18:319
Since I'm a season ticket holder, I'll be going. I don't go to 
April games anyway because it's too cold. If the strike isn't 
settled into May, I'll be going anyway. I enjoy going to the 
park. It's a nice inexpensive night out with my wife or a friend. 
I usually get there around 5, grab a quick beer at the Beerworks, 
pick up a paper and a sausage sub and go in and watch BP and 
TWIB. A nice relaxing evening. 

daryll
178.777Concessions still a rip offODIXIE::ZOGRANNeural net needs new stringThu Mar 16 1995 12:448
    I'll probably go with the kids.  At least the tickets will be cheaper. 
    What gets me is that I'll still be paying $7 for parking, $4 for a
    beer.  At least I can bring in soda, sandwiches and peanuts.
    
    Beat reporter for the Braves says that the level of play with the
    replacement players is "good AA".
    
    UMDan
178.778HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 22 1995 14:128
  I saw a copy of Baseball Weekly in the store with a phrase on page one that
stopped me in my tracks and made me stand there with my bag of groceries. The
phrase was: 

    Replacement All-Star Game.

  Now there's one for the oxymoron hall of fame,
  George
178.779could bePOBOX::WIERSBECKWed Mar 22 1995 15:119
    According to Ron Schueler, Sox GM, there are four of five Sox regulars
    (including one "big-name" player) ready to report to camp.  He won't
    allow them because he doesn't want them to be the first, but once
    another regular breaks, he'll welcome them in.
    
    Just reporting what I read, I didn't say I believed it.
    
    
    Spud
178.780CNTROL::CHILDSEnd Corporate Welfare Instead!Wed Mar 22 1995 15:147
 could be because the NFL just got an anti-trust verdict against them
 over-turned by the higher courts. Something about an employee's union
 can sue the employer for anti-trust violations. Supposed to have some
 repercussions felt on the baseball players as well.........

 mike
178.781EDWIN::WAUGAMANWed Mar 22 1995 15:2111
    
>    According to Ron Schueler, Sox GM, there are four of five Sox regulars
>    (including one "big-name" player) ready to report to camp.  He won't
>    allow them because he doesn't want them to be the first, but once
>    another regular breaks, he'll welcome them in.
    
    He means a guy from another team, I presume?  That seems hypocritical, 
    to make someone else's guys go first...
    
    glenn
     
178.782CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Mar 22 1995 15:306
    Re .780
    I heard something about that today. It said that if congress was to
    take away baseballs anti-trust exemption then the MLPA would have to
    decertify and only individual players could sue.
    
    Mike
178.783How about this one?MPGS::MCCARTHYMike McCarthy SHR3-2/W1 237-2468Wed Mar 22 1995 16:568
    I heard an interesting scenario on WFAN a few days ago:
    
    	Assume the players get an injunction to go back to 1994
    	work rules.  They agree to report, and the owners lock them
    	out.  What would happen if Angelos didn't go along with the
    	lock out and let the Orioles report?
    
    Mike
178.784AKOCOA::BREENThe roar of the paintWed Mar 22 1995 17:422
    I believe the injunction if granted means no replacement ball, just a
    normal lockout (strike) with no work, no business just stalemate.
178.785HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 22 1995 18:0914
RE          <<< Note 178.784 by AKOCOA::BREEN "The roar of the paint" >>>

>    I believe the injunction if granted means no replacement ball, just a
>    normal lockout (strike) with no work, no business just stalemate.

  From what I've happened that will happen

    -if there is an injunction and
    -if the union sends the players back to work.

  If there is an injunction but the players don't return to work, then there
would still be scab ball.

  George
178.786AKOCOA::BREENThe roar of the paintWed Mar 22 1995 18:4311
    But George the whole point of the injunction is for the players to
    resume playing under the old agreement which of course will force a
    lockout.
    
    The more amazing thing is the little hints about regulars crossing but
    in the mounds of print regarding this strike including Gammons and SI
    noone as explored in any depth just how regulars will return while
    strike is on (as in the union sending contract players in for a period
    of time).
    
    billte
178.787HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Mar 23 1995 12:076
    Replacement All-Stars ...

    <-_-_ shiver _-_->

    George
178.788CAMONE::WAYUSS Kete, SS-306, On Eternal PatrolThu Mar 23 1995 12:188
>    Replacement All-Stars ...

Perhaps they should chage it to:


	Stars All-Replacements....

Might ring more true.....
178.789Stupid is as Stupid doesAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksMon Mar 27 1995 06:2214
Don't know what is going to happen tomorrow (today), but will the owner
that signed Bags to a 7m contract be there?  There is no unified front by the
owners.  They are as stupid and greedy as the players.  Will somene post
Jeff Bagwell's career numbers.  I think you will see how stupid this sh&% is.

I was on the side of the players originally, but this  stupid thing have got to
stop.  When the owners give "rodent boy" seven million dollars a year, they
can hardly claim poverty.  In fact, what they are doing is inflating everyone 
around hims salary.  My plan is to give up sports and enjoy life.  The hell
with these assholes.


paul
178.790HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Mar 27 1995 13:0713
  Well I don't know about $7 million but Bagwell is certainly a franchise
player. Here's his numbers for the '94 season as they stack up against several
other big names. I believe these are the top 5 according to Bill James Runs
Created Formula (Rc). The 2nd number is Bill James Runs Created per Game.

   Name              Rc      Rcg  gms   avr  Ab   Ht  Hr   Tb   Sb   BB  So
Frank Thomas  CHW  133.968 16.293 99  0.369 347  128  35  265    2  100  52
Jeff Bagwell  HOU  120.309 14.247 97  0.367 354  130  33  262   14   55  58
Albert Belle  CLE  114.945 12.414 97  0.353 377  133  32  267    9   54  66
Ken Griffey   SEA  106.384 11.177 97  0.330 379  125  36  262    8   47  62
Kenny Lofton  CLE  102.924 10.526 96  0.359 396  142  11  218   54   46  46

  George
178.791and MJ proves Teddy Ballgame right...SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Mar 27 1995 18:0422
Well, there's now talk of keeping the replacement league going 
after the strike is settled. The scenario would be that when the 
Sox are in NY playing the Yankees, the replacement Yankees would 
be in Fenway playing the replacement Sox.

The stated benefits of the plan were:

1. If the players go on strike again, league is already in place.
2. Lower ticket prices for the replacement games will allow 
   families to attend.
3. Vendors keep working while the team is on a roadtrip.
4. Increased fan interest now becasue the replacement games will 
   no longer be looked upon as temporary.

Bit far-fetched if you ask me, but these days....

Dykstra is making noise again about crossing and Daulton refused 
to stand at the podium with the other teams reps and Fehr because 
he said he was disgusted with Fehr.

daryll

178.792OUTSRC::HEISERHoshia Nah,Baruch Haba B'shem AdonaiMon Mar 27 1995 19:372
178.794no red ink?SMARTT::CHILDSEnd Corporate Welfare Instead!Tue Mar 28 1995 11:1912
 

 watch out now but the owners are caving in. Ready to play ball with
 last year's rules. Alls they want is a luxury tax in 96 and for that
 they'll reduce free agency to 4 years and I think they also would like
 to get rid of arbitration but it's not mandatory.........

 everytime it comes close to a court case where they could be forced to
 open up their books they conceed. Wonder what they have to hide?

 mike

178.795Ray of light or Freight train?CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Mar 28 1995 12:077
    Owners offer is this. Play this season under last year's rules. 25% tax
    starting next year on team salaries over 44 million. Players have
    choice of Current Salary arbitration and Free Agency after 6 years or 
    no arbitration and Free Agency after 4 years. Supposedly it's the
    Owners final offer. 
    
    Mike
178.796Just when you no longer give a damn, some movement...EDWIN::WAUGAMANTue Mar 28 1995 19:1318
    
>    Owners offer is this. Play this season under last year's rules. 25% tax
>    starting next year on team salaries over 44 million. Players have
>    choice of Current Salary arbitration and Free Agency after 6 years or 
>    no arbitration and Free Agency after 4 years. Supposedly it's the
>    Owners final offer. 
    
    Actually it's still the 50% tax for anything above $44M.  This could be
    a major sticking point, but I have to admit, these are the first signs 
    of _real_ movement from baseball ownership since the entire process
    began with the original proposal last June.  I'm somewhat puzzled as 
    to why this movement is occurring _now_, though, with spring training 
    nearly over and the season about to start.  Could be the NLRB pressures
    (but that was fairly predictable all along), could be some indication 
    that ReplacementBall is not faring so well...
    
    glenn
    
178.797SNAX::ERICKSONMoney + Boredom = MJTue Mar 28 1995 19:378
    
    	The Maryland state legislature voted to not allow replacement
    ball players, play games at Camden Yards. Camden Yards is owned by
    the State or City? I can't remember which. Peter Angelos only leases
    /rents the stadium he doesn't own it.
    	So the Baltimore Orioles mess just gets worse.
    
    Ron
178.798HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Mar 29 1995 14:2518
RE                     <<< Note 178.796 by EDWIN::WAUGAMAN >>>

>    I'm somewhat puzzled as 
>    to why this movement is occurring _now_, though, with spring training 
>    nearly over and the season about to start.  Could be the NLRB pressures
>    (but that was fairly predictable all along), could be some indication 
>    that ReplacementBall is not faring so well...
    
  We can only guess but I've felt for a while that the owners are very much
split and that all along a number very close to 2/3rds has been willing to
settle. Perhaps that's been the situation since last summer.

  If that is the case then it is possible that 1 or 2 of the teams holding out
are beginning to have 2nd thoughts about trying to survive with scabs and the
threat of the NLRB effectively taking away even that is putting serious cracks
in the backs of those 1 or 2 camels. 

  George 
178.799another screwed up season for the booksPOBOX::WIERSBECKThu Mar 30 1995 19:454
    So the former baseball players want to come back... yawn.
    
    
    Spud
178.800USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsThu Mar 30 1995 19:5311
>    a major sticking point, but I have to admit, these are the first signs 
>    of _real_ movement from baseball ownership since the entire process
>    began with the original proposal last June.

Wasn't their agreeing with Usery's proposal/framework/whatever-you-want-to-
call-it "movement" ??  Or is it because the players didn't like it that
it doesn't count ?????


I've heard it reported more than once in the last few days that if the
rank-and-file voted on the owners' latest proposal, it'd be a done deal.
178.801What is this I see before meAKOCOA::BREENThu Mar 30 1995 20:0516
    I guess Bob Ryan has gone over to Newt and the Republicans because he
    had a (imho ridiculous) piece to day lambasting Fehr (strikes out)
    today in the glove (I like that name, sort like bloody glove, getit?).
    
    Ironically it ran parallel to another article detailing how the players
    have the owners on the spot with an injunction on the weekend horizon
    if no settlement.  I guess one glove doesn't talk to the other (I'm hot
    today).
    
    Anyway I am guessing the scenario is injunction followed by lockout
    followed finally by a settlement mid-april.  The key as it has been
    since September is how many paychecks the owners can get back from the
    players in punishment for canceling the post-season last year.  The
    owners will want to take the 4/15 and 4/30 checks the second will be
    the bargaining chip - maybe a 5/6 check will be the final settlement
    with a 40% tax and no arbitration with 4 years = free agency.
178.802ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsThu Mar 30 1995 20:1311
    
    I still want to see replacement-ball, myself...
    
    Though I've decided that there is precisely one thing that will really
    turn me off to baseball - the removal of replacement stats & records
    from the books.
    
    If that happens, the owner & players can both take a long walk off
    a short pier as far as I'm concerned.
    
    Joe (hoping the one sport he follows closely does the right thing)   
178.803Bob Ryan sounds coolOUTSRC::HEISERHoshia Nah,Baruch Haba B'shem AdonaiThu Mar 30 1995 20:312
178.804HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Mar 30 1995 21:1810
  From what I've read, scab baseball looks like it has one foot in a grave
and the other on a banana peal.

  According to the Boston Globe, the NLRB has requested a number of these
injunctions and has only been turned down by the courts once.

  We may see a settlement and we may see nothing at all, but scab baseball
looks like it's in trouble.

  George
178.805USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsFri Mar 31 1995 13:1410
>    It might be worth rebuilding baseball from scratch with replacement
>    players.  Things will be back up to speed in a couple years.

Agree, wholeheartedly.



re:  replacement games in trouble

Owners voted 25-3 to have the games.
178.807CAMONE::WAYUSS Trigger SS-237, On Eternal PatrolFri Mar 31 1995 13:2515
Well, I disagree.

Scabs weren't good enough to make it when the real baseball players were
around.  Let's face it, there is no Ted Williams, no Joe Dimaggio, no
Mike Schmidt or Nolan Ryan amongst the scab players.

It would take more years to rebuild, IMO, than you think, and would, IMO,
irrevocably damage baseball in the meantime.

If I want to see baseball at the level the scabs are playing, I can go
10 minutes down the road to beehive field....


JMHO,
'Saw
178.808HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 13:2916
RE      <<< Note 178.805 by USCTR1::GARBARINO "bumhiem, lappas...idiots" >>>

>re:  replacement games in trouble
>
>Owners voted 25-3 to have the games.

  This is sort of like saying that O.J. and his lawyers have decided that O.J.
will no longer stay in jail.

  The owners can vote 28-0 if they like but if the NLRB gets their injunction
forcing the owners to use last year's salary scheme and if the players vote to
go back to work, the only choice the owners will have is to let the real
players play or impose a lockout. 

  Scabs will no longer be an option,
  George
178.809It'll all come out in the washAKOCOA::BREENFri Mar 31 1995 13:3012
    the labor action the most similar to the current baseball strike was
    the writers guild strike a few years ago.  Although the effect to avid
    sprots fans was slight the heavy soap opera fans I'm sure were livid at
    the writers and probably also the soap manufacturers and other
    advertisers and tv people.
    
    That strike I seem to recall had replacement writers ('Saw did you take
    a crack at that? Seems there was a "One Life to Live Episode" that may
    have bore your mark).
    
    But finally it was settled and Life and the rest go on and that World
    seems to be turning as well as ever.
178.810CTHQ::MCCULLOUGHPotty training is hell!!!Fri Mar 31 1995 13:399
|around.  Let's face it, there is no Ted Williams, no Joe Dimaggio, no

au contrer (or however you spell that French thang).  According to a story on
SportCenter the other night, a replacement player named Ted Williams was traded
from Pittsburgh to Kansas City.

I think he's even an outfielder.

=bob=
178.811USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsFri Mar 31 1995 14:3120
>  The owners can vote 28-0 if they like but if the NLRB gets their injunction
>forcing the owners to use last year's salary scheme and if the players vote to
>go back to work, the only choice the owners will have is to let the real
>players play or impose a lockout. 

Can someone clear this up ?  I've heard just the opposite.  I've heard that
if the NLRB grants injunction all it does is restore arbitration and free
agency to '94 status.  If the players come off strike and the owners lock
'em out, they can still use replacements, since there still won't be a labor
agreement.  The risk the owners take is that further court action could
cost them, if they were to lose.  But I'm sure I've heard that they can
still play with replacements.



re:  how long it would take to rebuild MLB

'Saw, you may be assuming that striking players won't cross and come
back.  Probably incorrect, if the owners are soundly committed to
sticking this out.
178.812has happenedHBAHBA::HAASrecurring recusancyFri Mar 31 1995 14:3617
re: lockout and scabs

This issue is settled differently about every time it goes to court. A
few years back, there was a very nasty strike by meat packers against
Hormel, I believe. In that one, the owners locked out the strikers and
hired scabs and eventually busted the union. This was all sanctioned by
the courts.

However, this ruling would never play in the union states. In any case,
say the owners try to lockout the real players and go with scabs. I'm
sure the players association would file something in court which might at
least delay the whole thing.

I guess it's a case of who's got the better lawyer and who's on the take.
Just like most of the time.

TTom
178.813Owners sending signals: ReplacementBall idea a huge dudEDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Mar 31 1995 14:5146
    
> Wasn't their agreeing with Usery's proposal/framework/whatever-you-want-to-
> call-it "movement" ??  Or is it because the players didn't like it that
> it doesn't count ?????
    
    Hard to say since it was never remotely formalized, but was rather a
    "check yes/no box to impress the President" type deal, where likewise 
    the players did the same to the vague idea of binding arbitration.  In 
    fact, this latest proposal, now formalized, is right about even with 
    the Usery proposal just _now_.  50% tax at a number above the average
    payroll, without all the other stuff like retaining the 6-year 
    eligibility but pulling back arbitration rights, which was _not_ in 
    Usery, and has now been removed.
    
>    Though I've decided that there is precisely one thing that will really
>    turn me off to baseball - the removal of replacement stats & records
>    from the books.
    
    To each his own, I guess, Joe, but I can think of about a dozen things
    that concern me more than what they do with replacement stats.  I don't
    think the large majority of fans much care, either.
    
    
    I can understand the resentment that many fans feel that leads them to 
    support ReplacementBall, verbally and emotionally, but the bottom line 
    (to the owners) is that fans must vote with their feet.  I just sense
    an overwhelming apathy by the American public to ReplacementBall.  That
    has certainly been the case during spring training where attendance has
    been sparse even where the owners opened the gates without charging
    admission.  Sure, most regular customers have retained their 
    season-ticket privileges, but how many will use the tickets again and 
    again?  How many will tune in to the television every night?  In recent
    years this is what MLB has left with: a dedicated core of repeat
    customers who will have to be sold to come back.  Myself, I normally go 
    to 25-30 games a year.  How many fans with similar backgrounds can be 
    enticed to do that for ReplacementBall, regardless of the cost?  No 
    doubt MLB has lost many customers even if/when the regulars come back
    (admittedly my hint of baseball spring fever came and went, and will
    have to be refound) but with ReplacementBall they simply have no chance.  
    All indications are that whatever happens with the negotiations, it won't 
    take much prodding for the owners to chuck this turkey overboard.
    
    glenn
    
    
    
178.814HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 15:2919
RE If the NLRB gets their injunction and the players try to return.

  Another thing the players have that the meet packers probably didn't have
are contracts.

  As someone mentioned before the owners might be able to point to the strike
and claim that it was the players who breached the contract but that might be
a stretch. If that fails then they would have a weak legal basis for playing
the games and not honoring the player's contracts.

  Another interesting point has popped up a couple times in this note and that
is State Law. All it would take would be for New York, Michigan, Illinois,
and a couple other states to ban the scabs and the owners would be taking
yet another hit. And if Congress pulls their exemption, there goes revenue
from AAA ball.

  I think the owners are going to cave. It's just a matter of time.

  George
178.815I'm sure I misread .814MKOTS3::LONGmovin' on up!Fri Mar 31 1995 15:377
    Whether or not you agree with the owners', or the players' position,
    I can't see how anyone who believes in the free enterprise system
    would be in favor of states passing laws telling business owners
    who they can, or can not hire.
    
    
    billl
178.816USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsFri Mar 31 1995 16:0520
>    Whether or not you agree with the owners', or the players' position,
>    I can't see how anyone who believes in the free enterprise system
>    would be in favor of states passing laws telling business owners
>    who they can, or can not hire.

No, I'm sure you read it right, 'cause that's what I got too.  It's amazed
me throughout this strike that the owners are always wrong when it comes
to their actions and 'free enterprise', yet everything the players, the
NLRB and now the states do to protect labor is OK.  Just look at George's
comment that he doubts the players are wrong in striking (by some legal
standpoint).  They can strike and impose signing freezes with no problem.
The owners can't lockout, impose a signing freeze, declare an impasse or
use replacement workers because it's negotaiting in 'bad faith'.  There
are serious problems on the labor front in this country.


The owners aren't going to cave.  They have already got the union in
their ballpark, it's just a matter of degree now.  And regardless of
the agreement, player salaries have been taken back YEARS !  So what
did they get for their strike ?
178.817taxes buy them into the gameHBAHBA::HAASrecurring recusancyFri Mar 31 1995 16:2413
re: laws about who and who caint.

I generally agree with this, however, it some of the cases, the state and
local community have a vested interest in the free enterprise. Tax
dollars support some of these facilities which, to me, gives them a say
on what happens there.

The players should be wishing that they were playing in West Virginee
where lockouts and scabs are proscribed. Of course places like North
Carolina have those "right to work" laws which means that the owners are
pretty much free to do whatever with whoever however.

TTom
178.818But do we REALLY care at this point?POBOX::WIERSBECKFri Mar 31 1995 16:255
    The closer the former players come to missing a paycheck, the more
    they'll give in.  It's already happening...
    
    
    Spud
178.819SMARTT::CHILDSEnd Corporate Welfare Instead!Fri Mar 31 1995 16:268
 geez Bagwell signed for 7 million a year Joe. That hardly sounds like 
 salaries have backed up 5 years. The players got to work on their golf
 games and to show the owners that they're not pieces of meat. The owners
 aren't getting what they want. They don't have a hard cap, they have a
 luxury tax and for that they also be giving free agency earlier. 

 mike
178.820No winners, Just survivorsCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Mar 31 1995 16:3013
    Both sides have lost big time and even though the players have conceded
    some things I'm not convinced that what the owners "won" will amount to
    anything substantial. If I remember the way Gammons broke it down the
    other night using last years salaries the owners cap would affect 8
    teams while the players would affect 4. I cann't remember what the $
    for the owners proposal was but there would have been an 8 million
    dollar tax total with the players proposal. Let's just say that the
    owner proposal would bring a 16 million dollar tax. Was that amount
    worth the strike? And I bet the salaries for this year drop because I
    think the owners finally realize that they can control salaries and
    they need to make up money from last year.
    
    Mike
178.821HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 17:2923
RE              <<< Note 178.815 by MKOTS3::LONG "movin' on up!" >>>

>    Whether or not you agree with the owners', or the players' position,
>    I can't see how anyone who believes in the free enterprise system
>    would be in favor of states passing laws telling business owners
>    who they can, or can not hire.
>        
>    billl

  billl, have you been napping through the last century of labor law?

  First of all, we are not talking about the free enterprise system here. Have
you ever heard of an industry in a free market in which no company ever goes
out of business and at a point where things are so bad that the industry would
rather shut down than continue they carry out plans to expand? Some free
market. 

  I'm all for a real free market. If they yanked the anti trust exemption,
threatened the league with anti trust prosecution of teams exchanged money
then let poor teams start going under, that would be free enterprise. Then
I'd say fine, break the union if you feel you can swing it.

  George
178.822MKOTS3::LONGmovin' on up!Fri Mar 31 1995 17:4415
    No, George, the only thing I nap through are you seeming endless
    nonsensical leaps of logic.
    
    If you'd been paying attention, you'd know that I'm 100% against
    the anti-trust exemption.  However, I was taught at an early age
    that two wrongs don't make a right.  No way, no how, will I support
    a law, at the federal or state level, that dictates to a business
    owner who he can, or can not, hire.  When that happens it's time
    to follow Thomas Jefferson's recommendation for the people to
    rise up in revolt of the goverment.
    
    <Ah, I feel much better now.>
    
    
    billl
178.823And owners broke their word in 80s and that didn't helpAKOCOA::BREENFri Mar 31 1995 17:4914
    the player's strike is for free enterprise, it is exactly what they
    have asked for.  The owners bargain collectively and since the 70s the
    players have also.
    
    It is simply the nature of the business that allows the players more
    clout; Football obviously lacks it.  If baseball was simply conducted
    along the lines of free agency we could have 12-16 strong teams and the
    Milwaukees and Pittsburghs and others could be a AAAA league with lower
    prices and local tv.
    
    You have total greed and revenge as the motivating factors for the
    owners and simple survival on the other side.
    
    Billte
178.824MYLIFE::mccarthyMike McCarthy SHR3-2/W1 237-2468Fri Mar 31 1995 17:516
According to Satchel Sports, the injunction has been granted.

I wonder what impact this will have on the owners' response to
the players' proposal.

Mike
178.825CAMONE::WAYUSS Trigger SS-237, On Eternal PatrolFri Mar 31 1995 17:5212
Hey Mike, how you doing?  Long time no see....


>According to Satchel Sports, the injunction has been granted.
>
>I wonder what impact this will have on the owners' response to
>the players' proposal.

Gonna get more interesting from here on out.....


'Saw
178.826HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 17:5219
RE              <<< Note 178.822 by MKOTS3::LONG "movin' on up!" >>>

>    No way, no how, will I support
>    a law, at the federal or state level, that dictates to a business
>    owner who he can, or can not, hire.  When that happens it's time
>    to follow Thomas Jefferson's recommendation for the people to
>    rise up in revolt of the goverment.
    
  I don't think anyone is asking for that. In fact it's the players who want
a system in which any owner can hire whom ever they want to hire and at any
price.

  The owners, meanwhile, want a system in which there are rules and regulations
as to how much you can spend to run your business just to make sure that the
weakest and most poorly run businesses do not go out of business.

  Are you sure you are on the side of free enterprise here?

  George
178.827we shall seeHBAHBA::HAASrecurring recusancyFri Mar 31 1995 17:5512
Good news, Mike.

Now we're gonna see some real sheet. The players have already voted to
return and now the Owners have to put up or shutup. 

To lock out or not to lock out, that is a question. To play scab ball
or not to play scab ball, that is another question.

And I guess this helps the Orioles' owner. If'n there's a lockout, how
can they force him to play games.

TTom
178.828I wanted to name my first son Satchel, or Otis, or Lucious, or ...TNPUBS::NAZZAROThanks for a great year UMass!Fri Mar 31 1995 18:043
    Who's this guy Satchel Sports?  Any relation to Satchel Page?
    
    NAZZ
178.829ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsFri Mar 31 1995 18:0524
>>    Though I've decided that there is precisely one thing that will really
>>    turn me off to baseball - the removal of replacement stats & records
>>    from the books.
    
>    To each his own, I guess, Joe, but I can think of about a dozen things
>    that concern me more than what they do with replacement stats.  I don't
>    think the large majority of fans much care, either.
    
    Yeah, I suspect you're right.  I also suspect that the majority
    of fans aren't as annoyed as I am at the (low) level of media
    coverage of spring training this year.
    
    To me, though, the issue of what's done with the stats is key.  If
    they remain in the books, then everything is, IMHO, OK.  I'll be
    happy with the game, even if I'm not happy with the participants.
    
    If they are taken off, though, then in essence the game (at,
    apparently, the direction of the players) will simply be attempting
    to ignore part of its past.
    
    For a game for which much of my pleasure comes from its history,
    a denial of history stabs rather directly at my interest.  
    
    Joe
178.830MYLIFE::mccarthyMike McCarthy SHR3-2/W1 237-2468Fri Mar 31 1995 18:0711
I've heard on some of the talk shows that if the owners lock
out the players and continue with the replacement games, they
could be opening themselves up to a law suit for lost income.
They could be liable for triple damages as well.

The owners are also facing a $20 million payment to the replacement
players once the season starts.  Makes you wonder if the owners
will really go ahead with replacement ball, or delay the start of
the season to avoid the chance of getting killed in court.

Mike
178.831They laid the plans, let 'em stew in it...EDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Mar 31 1995 18:1729
    Well, you know, the owners' lawyers _assured_ them that it would 
    never come to this, and that antitrust exemptions, labor laws, and 
    court injunctions were just trivial irrelevancies up against their 
    monopoly powers.  Who cares about any theoretical new state laws 
    when there are plenty of old ones still left to trample?  I can hear 
    it now: it's a shameful day in America indeed that U.S. District Court
    judge can rule against a protected industry on a labor matter.  We're
    all headed straight down the road of Communism to be sure...
    
    Sure, the players have lost a lot of money (but who cares, as we've
    heard many times over, players are just players, and in 10 years this 
    group of players who lost out will all be gone anyway).  On the other 
    side, the owners have once again stupidly damaged their own 
    investments which could have repercussions for years to come.  For 
    two years they built up and then for almost a year they held a hardline 
    position of a $35M salary cap (a 15% reduction in payrolls).  Now, 
    finally, after 8 months, very suddenly at best they've softened to a 
    negotiable position that could have been taken long ago, that will
    effect a very few teams in the new economic climate. at worst they get
    _nothing_.  It was a power trip.  Let's face it, same as ever the 
    baseball owners are the chumps.  Last time it was collusion, this time 
    it was DonkeyBall, in another five years it'll undoubtedly be some
    other harebrained scheme.  It'll never end until these guys realize
    that they're not immune to all that goes on outside their sheltered
    little boardrooms.
    
    glenn
           
178.832USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsFri Mar 31 1995 19:158
>    finally, after 8 months, very suddenly at best they've softened to a 
>    negotiable position that could have been taken long ago

When was 'long ago' Glenn ?  When the union emphatically stated that
they would never agree to any system that restrains salaries ?

Hopefully the owners will vote to lock out and not put on replacement
games.  This injunction doesn't produce an agreement.
178.834Power struggle = Ego over intelligenceMARIN::DODGEFri Mar 31 1995 19:3818
	What are these bone head baseball players thinking ???  The NBA and NFL have a salary cap.
The cap has NOT kept salaries lower.  The MLB isn't even asking for a cap, only a "luxury tax".
This is great !!

	Even with a tax the overspending owners will continue to overspend.  They will gladly pay
the tax because their market can afford it or because the owner can afford it.  There will be no
reduction in salaries.  To the contrary salaries will INCREASE.  Here's why.  The rich, large market
owners will continue to pay big bucks to get the big stars.  The 50% tax that they pay will go to
the poorer small market teams.  Now what do you suppose the small market teams will do with this money ?
Put it in CD's or T-bills ?  Hell no, they will use it to pay the big salaries that they couldn't afford 
in the past and get the big name players they always coveted.  So the amount of money available for
salaries just went up by 50%.  Now there will be MORE teams who can afford to pay MORE money to players.

	The problem is that the players are taking this as a personal challenge, and they will not be 
defeated.  They are tough. They always win.  But they are cutting off their nose to spite their face.
Really stupid !

Don
178.835... Warm up Brun Hilda, the strikes almost overHELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 19:4520
RE      <<< Note 178.832 by USCTR1::GARBARINO "bumhiem, lappas...idiots" >>>

>Hopefully the owners will vote to lock out and not put on replacement
>games.  This injunction doesn't produce an agreement.

  I don't think this game of chicken will go on much longer. I believe that
from the start there have been about 16-17 teams that wanted to settle, about
7-8 willing to go down with the ship, and a handful sitting on the fence.
The intensity of the talks leads me to believe that it's been close to the
2/3rds all along.

  Now that the option of scab ball is all but gone, I think those fence sitters
will move over and join the group that wants to settle. Either that or the
majority of owners (who I believe want to settle) will start taking legal
action to try to get out of the situation where a minority can kill the deal. 

  Lots of ifs left, but if the players keep winning these injunctions the
owners will cave and the real players will be on the field by May.

  George
178.836At what point did it become important _not_ to have baseball?EDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Mar 31 1995 19:4624
    
>>    finally, after 8 months, very suddenly at best they've softened to a 
>>    negotiable position that could have been taken long ago
>
> When was 'long ago' Glenn ?  When the union emphatically stated that
> they would never agree to any system that restrains salaries ?
    
    Talk is talk, Joe.  I'm not any under illusions that the money behind
    the principle isn't the driving force in all of this.  Sometime back in
    December or January the players floated a tax proposal, however modest.
    That was no secret...
    
> Hopefully the owners will vote to lock out and not put on replacement
> games.  This injunction doesn't produce an agreement.
    
    That sounds like the nose to spite the face treatment.  What you're
    asking for is no baseball over an agreement to play baseball.  What do
    you care what the terms are?  And if you don't care if there's no 
    baseball (which might be a reasonable response by this point), then 
    why get worked up about it?  There's always the option of not caring,
    which has served many millions very well since the game was invented.
    
    glenn
    
178.837USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsFri Mar 31 1995 20:3110
>    That sounds like the nose to spite the face treatment.  What you're
>    asking for is no baseball over an agreement to play baseball.

What agreement would that be ?  One in which Fehr commits to not
strike during the season and playoffs ?  Without a collective bargaining
agreement, the owners are at risk of another late-season strike by your
boys.  Don't think they'll do it again ?  They have every reason to.
There's still the threat of declaring an impasse, and just maybe some
judge will finally see that the players have not been bargaining in
good faith.
178.838HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Mar 31 1995 20:3919
RE      <<< Note 178.837 by USCTR1::GARBARINO "bumhiem, lappas...idiots" >>>

>What agreement would that be ?  One in which Fehr commits to not
>strike during the season and playoffs ?  Without a collective bargaining
>agreement, the owners are at risk of another late-season strike by your
>boys.  Don't think they'll do it again ?  They have every reason to.

  I agree. This is exactly the reason why the owners will now want to lock
out the players.

>There's still the threat of declaring an impasse, and just maybe some
>judge will finally see that the players have not been bargaining in
>good faith.

  The players have said from the start that all they want is a free market.
How can any judge declare that to be not bargaining in good faith? Remember
it's the owners that are asking for regulation and guarantees.

  George
178.839EDWIN::WAUGAMANFri Mar 31 1995 21:089
    My mistake, Joe.  I read what you wrote to mean that you hoped that the
    owners would lock out instead of working to an agreement under the
    latest decision.  I do think that there is some fair chance that an 
    agreement in principle, or at least an agreement to play the entire 
    season, will be reached.
    
    glenn
    
178.840I am not going to take it anymoreAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksSat Apr 01 1995 19:0723
From this mornings Atlanta Urinal and Constipation:

"A lot of people have been saying we're just a bunch of babies," said Atlanta
Braves player representative Tom Glavine.  "This is some vindication."

Not from the paper:

Tom, please get a clue.  Your union, and it's chief, the antagonistic Donald
Fehr have not done S%*t.  All you did was wait until a judge made a decision.
This is far from over.  In my eyes the union is still a bunch of babies.  They
are most likely going to be around for their April 15th paychecks.  All they
have done is hold the owners and the fans hostage.  If I was Schuerholz, I would
send Tom "It's not about money" Glavine packing.  This crap is going to 
continue every few years unless the Marvin Miller wantabe Fehr is removed
from the union.  Like most unions, this one has outlived it's use.  In the
late sixties salaries average around 27k.  Today it is 1.2m.  The players have
gone from the sweat shops to mansions in 25 years.  I am sick of the arrogance
of these millionare athletes.  Because of them we (the fans) go to a game,
shell out $80 for four tickes, $7 to park, $28 for four cokes and four hotdogs.
My statement to baseball will be to not attend games anymore. 

Paul
178.841Glavine and the other negotiators are dopes plain and simpleAD::HEATHPitchers and catchers report when???Mon Apr 03 1995 10:5210
    
     
    
    
     re Glavine's quote...
    
        Cut the guy some slack.  He is a ballplayer after all and should
    not be held accountable for his remarks.  :*)
    
    Jerry
178.842ROCK::GRONOWSKIThe dream is always the same...Mon Apr 03 1995 12:036
178.843Time for the owners to take controlCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Apr 03 1995 12:2118
    Once again the owners were led down a path of destruction by a bunch of
    lawyers who if they hit the Mendoza line in winning cases would have
    saved the owners millions of dollars. Face it the owners once again
    have had their lunch handed to them again. Gammons had a great line
    about the owners lawyers. Something like they went off and bought a
    Lear Jet and have hired Pascuel Perez to be the pilot. Hopefully they
    will start to legally use the powers that they have to straighten out
    their fiscal house. They don't need the players help. They just need to
    show some guts and some restraint. According to Gammons the Red Sox
    will offer arbitration to only Vaugn and Cooper and tell the rest of
    the players eligible for arbitration that they are being offered X
    amount of dollars and if they don't want it they'll let them go to Free
    Agency. They then will offer the same amount to other similar players
    and will sign them. I see nothing wrong with that. 
    And I'm willing to bet that no current Free Agent gets more then a
    4mill/ year contract.
    
    Mike
178.844Free agent madnessHOTLNE::BRIANMon Apr 03 1995 13:097
    It will be interesting to see how the strike affects free agent
    signings.  From what I've been reading it seems that offers will be far
    less than before the strike.    
    
    
    Way to go Don, you've accomplished a lot!
    
178.845HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Apr 03 1995 13:0917
     PPPPPPPP       LL                       AA            YY       YY
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     PP      PP     LL                    AA    AA            YY YY
     PPPPPPPP       LL                   AAAAAAAAAA            YYY
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     PP  BBBBBBBB   LLLLLLLLLLLL AA  AA        LL    AA     YY LL
         BB      BB             AAAA           LL              LL
         BB       BB           AA  AA          LL              LL
         BB      BB           AA    AA         LL              LL
         BBBBBBBB            AAAAAAAAAA        LL              LL
         BB      BB         AA        AA       LL              LL
         BB       BB       AA          AA      LL              LL
         BB      BB       AA            AA     LL              LL
         BBBBBBBB        AA              AA    LLLLLLLLLLLL    LLLLLLLLLLLL
178.846ODIXIE::ZOGRANIt's the Champale talking!Mon Apr 03 1995 13:2013
    The free agent signing period will be very interesting.  Will the
    owners show some restraint, or will they act like a sailor on leave at
    a bordello and throw money around like there's no tommorrow?  If they
    start shelling out the big bucks, then they will have proved once again
    that they are incapable of managing their own affairs and want someone
    else to step in and save them.  If they were that concerned about the
    "game" they would pool their money to help keep afloat the small market
    teams which they profess to want to help so much.
    
    OJ can only hope that the owners lawyers don't start helping the dream
    team.
    
    UMDan
178.8471st big-money whiner who doesn't get what he thinks he should....SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Apr 03 1995 13:233
How long before the collusion accusations begin?

daryll
178.848USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsMon Apr 03 1995 13:4725
>How long before the collusion accusations begin?

Thanks for beating me to that one Daryll.   :^)


How is that the owners have had their lunch handed to them ?  Because
Don Fehr lucked-out in the appt of an ultra-liberal judge who had her
mind made up before the hearing even started ?  What have the players
"won" ?  There's no new collective bargaining agreement, and the same
salary system that was in place when they struck last August and
cancelled the World Series is still there...a system the owners say
they will not operate under.  Their strike created huge financial loss
for the industry that pays them.  They aren't better off now.  As Hal
Bodley wrote last Friday, this is the worst possible outcome for everyone
involved:  players, owners and fans.  There will be no agreement during
the season, and the owners will force the players' striking hands again.
Between now and then, without an agreement and the uncertainty that brings,
owners will screw the free agents and arbitration-eligibles.  Small-market
teams will purge themselves of potential free agents like they're diseased.

No, the players haven't won a thing, and most of them are going to be very
unhappy this season.  Salaries will drag dramatically without an agreement.
Will McDonough pointed out yesterday that this year's free agent salaries
in the NFL have doubled over last year.  That system is really holding
salaries down.   :^)
178.849CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Apr 03 1995 14:1812
    How did the owners have their lunch handed to them? Because once again
    they listened to lawyers who said that their was ways to circumvent
    labor laws and once again were proven wrong. They based their whole
    negotiating on ramming their ideas down the players throat. The judge
    (please don't pin labels on people you have no knowledge of just
    because they don't rule the way you want) ruled that that's not legal.
    Both sides should sit down and try to straighten out Baseball and try
    to increase the revenues again. Try and get the fans interested in the
    game. This bickering is turning people off. Both sides better wake up
    and realize they need each other.
    
    Mike
178.850They've pissed me off one time too manyPOBOX::WIERSBECKMon Apr 03 1995 14:2826
    I too, fail to see what the players have "won."  Too me they've "won" a
    ton of unhappy fans and shown an incredible disrespect for the game.  
    They've "won" blowing off the first ever World Series since 1904 and 
    putting themselves right back at point zero. (along with the owners)  
    They've "won" screwing up yet another season's records by forcing the 
    shortened season - which me and others makes this an incomplete season 
    and not true champion even before it starts.  They've "won" the
    opportunity to screw us, the fans again next year... or should I say
    later this year.  Don't put THAT beyone them.
    
    I've followed MLB since I was around seven years old.  That's nearly 30
    years now.  I've always had a true passion and love for the game.  I
    still have it for the game itself, but all this $#%& greed is making me
    sick.  My desire for MLB has been severely tested and I'm not sure when 
    or if I'll even attend a game this year, due to my disgust and mistrust
    of these guys.  
    
    So MLB and the former players are back.  BIG DEAL!  Go take your
    screwed up schedule and screwed up players values and tell someone who
    still cares.  Sadly, there are still some suckers out there waiting to
    throw their money at you.
    
    
    Spud 
    
    
178.851Please TedODIXIE::ZOGRANIt's the Champale talking!Mon Apr 03 1995 14:3822
    What both sides should do (IMO)
    
    - reduced ticket prices for a week?, day?
    
    - reduced concession prices
    
    - fan appreciation day(s)
    
    - players become more accessible, make appearances, sign autographs
    
    - players donate a day (or weeks) pay to little league or charity.
    
    If I was Fehr I would tell all of the players "Get out in the community
    at spring training, sign autographs, kiss babies, give balls to fans -
    be nice and make sure you get pictures of this in the news/papers!'
    
    The first time a paper runs an article on a player rebuffing a fans
    advances you can bet it will be front page news.
    
    Oh, and they can give me a free luxury box!
    
    UMDan
178.852A long court fight helps nobodyMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Mon Apr 03 1995 14:4332
Exactly, Mike.  Now the question is, have they finally learned their
lesson.  Darryl asks when the first accusation of collusion will come.
I ask, has the collusion already started?

What some of you seem unable or unwilling to grasp is that this dispute
does not take place in a vacuum.  There is a body of law defining the
ground rules, and once again, the owners have been found in court to
have violated those ground rules.  If they now collude to deny free
agents the salaries some would be willing to pay, they will be violating
them again.

You may not like that.  You may think it should be perfectly OK for the
owners to agree that Larry Walker (probably the premiere free agent) will
be offered no more than $3.5 million.  Maybe it should be.  But it isn't.
And if they're stupid enough to do it again, it'll cost them--again.

Obviously, it is in the best interests of all concerned to heed the
message of the NLRB and the court and come to an agreement.  If this
stays in the courts for the next few years, everyone will be bloodied.
If the MLBPA does not now bargain in good faith, it too can be slapped
down in court.

I haven't seen the players' response to the owners' last offer, but if I
were ownership, I'd take it, assuming it contains a luxury tax.  That
would establish the tax as part of the framework, and would make it
easier to negotiate a heavier tax in a future agreement.  One of the
reasons they got shot down in court is that they offered a system that
is miles distant from the old system, and never moved more than a few
yards in bargaining.  The existence of a tax would reduce the distance
the next time around.

Steve
178.853USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsMon Apr 03 1995 15:2930
>If they now collude to deny free
>agents the salaries some would be willing to pay, they will be violating
>them again.

They don't even have to collude, the money isn't there.  The owners
lost a ton last season.  Now the players will lose.  Can't pay people
if you don't have the money.  But Daryll is right.  As soon as one of
these prima donnas doesn't get what HE thinks he should, Fehr will file
a grievance.  You can bet on that.


>I haven't seen the players' response to the owners' last offer, but if I
>were ownership, I'd take it, assuming it contains a luxury tax.  That
>would establish the tax as part of the framework, and would make it
>easier to negotiate a heavier tax in a future agreement.  One of the
>reasons they got shot down in court is that they offered a system that
>is miles distant from the old system, and never moved more than a few
>yards in bargaining.  The existence of a tax would reduce the distance
>the next time around.

Finally, a sound argument.  I've never said that the owners have to
get everything they want.  What I've objected to is the players'
position that nothing has to change...that they can continually
beat the owners into submission, regardless of the economic realities.
Bruhle can talk about fiscal restraint 'til the cows come home, but
the realities of this industry are that the small-market teams have
to pay the same in player salaries as the big-market clubs if they
want to be competitive on the field.  The nature of the free agent
system, and the unique talent that uses it, makes self-imposed salary
controls next to impossible to implement.
178.854USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsMon Apr 03 1995 15:367
>    (please don't pin labels on people you have no knowledge of just
>    because they don't rule the way you want)

Who's jumping to conclusions here ?  I didn't come up with that label,
a legal *expert* over the weekend said she was a liberal in labor law,
and that Fehr couldn't have gotten a better judge had he hand-picked
one.
178.855a classic...MKOTS3::LONGmovin' on up!Mon Apr 03 1995 15:4021
    I spent most of yesterday at a dart tournament so I had no idea
    that things had been "settled" when I walked out of my local
    video store with "Field od Dreams" under my arm.  After the movie
    was over I was left with that nostalgic yearning to go to Fenway
    and watch a game, no matter what the cost.
    
    Imagine my suprise when I heard the news this morning.  On one
    hand I was elated to find my favorite specator sport back to 
    some sense of normalcy.  On the other hand I can't help but wonder
    how long this "normalcy" will last.  Will the owners go back to
    their ridiculous fee agent spending?  Will the players complain
    that they aren't be treated fairly and tuck it to the fans again
    as this "season" draws to a close?  My worst fear is that the
    answer to both is YES.
    
    I think I'm driving out to Iowa as soon as I get the chance to see 
    the likes of "Shoeless" Joe Jackson and Roberto Clemente.  Gawd, 
    they got some team out there!
    
    
    billl
178.856HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Apr 03 1995 15:4231
RE      <<< Note 178.848 by USCTR1::GARBARINO "bumhiem, lappas...idiots" >>>

>How is that the owners have had their lunch handed to them ?  Because
>Don Fehr lucked-out in the appt of an ultra-liberal judge who had her
>mind made up before the hearing even started ?  

  The Judge was not ultra-liberal. Out of something like 40 requests the NLRB 
has only failed to get this injunction one time.

>What have the players
>"won" ?  There's no new collective bargaining agreement, and the same
>salary system that was in place when they struck last August and
>cancelled the World Series is still there...a system the owners say
>they will not operate under.  

  Now the owners know that imposing their salary cap without a collective
bargaining agreement won't work, they will be less likely to take a chance on
throwing away the playoffs and World Series in an attempt at union busting. 

>No, the players haven't won a thing, and most of them are going to be very
>unhappy this season.  Salaries will drag dramatically without an agreement.

  This also remains to be seen. Remember, this strike happened because the 8-9
poorest and worst run teams insisted on busting the union. There will be no
lockout because enough teams sitting on the fence caved in and the owners who
want to settle can now get their 2/3rds vote. 

  There's nothing now to stop the richer teams and middle teams who feel they
are in contention from bidding it up for the players who can help them win.

  George
178.857Never Again!AKOCOA::BREENMon Apr 03 1995 16:0129
    Dave, you could have also pointed out the the nlrb voted on strict
    democrat/republican lines (3/2) to recommend the injunction (which to
    even the score has only been denied once in 30 requests).  As Gammons
    pointed out the Judge had a lengthy brief for a quick hearing.
    
    I still would like to know which if any paychecks have been missed as I
    will claim until disproved that the "impasse" existed only for the
    owners to take as many checks as possible back from players in revenge
    for last years walk-out (which could have been ended in one week by
    owners willing to say "no lockout").
    
    The structure of baseball is still the big problem - owners wish to
    maximize end profits via expansion fees and creative revenue
    derivatives and the players want a piece of every pie and have the
    strength to pull it off (like the U.S. has strength today because of
    Pearl Harbor in '41).
    
    The owners have had a bloody battle lost but as Steve said they have
    achieved a little respect in the players eyes and can if they use any
    restraint, humility and intelligence finally undergo a sane bargaining
    with the players with "never again" as the motto.
    
    I hope they do better than the league of nations.
    
    Oh, the fans motto of "never again" is music to my ears.  Now if enough 
    refuse to pay the mega prices I may be able to go back to the bleachers
    and take up five seats and get a tan again.
    
    Billte
178.858Let me get my crying towel for the Small marketsCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Apr 03 1995 16:169
    re: .853 Gahrbarino
    I have zero sympathy for the small market teams situation. If the
    owners think they have such a tough time why won't they let them move?
    (The answer is money). If their fellow owners won't help them why
    should the players? Also the owners of these franchises knew what they
    were up against when they bought these teams. Most of them paid half of
    what the Orioles went for. There are reasons for that. 
    
    mike 
178.859HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Apr 03 1995 16:4311
  Well put Mike. As bad as this situation is, I'm glad to see it going the way
it is. The owners must have brass stones to claim that they are losing money
while at the same time they are in the middle of adding 4 new expansion teams. 

  If Miami, Denver, Tampa Bay, and Phoenix are such great opportunities, why
didn't they just move the 4 poorest teams there instead of creating 4 new
teams?

  One thing about the players, at least they are honest.

  George
178.860USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsMon Apr 03 1995 16:5710
>  Now the owners know that imposing their salary cap without a collective
>bargaining agreement won't work, they will be less likely to take a chance on
>throwing away the playoffs and World Series in an attempt at union busting. 


There's something called 'impasse' in negotaitions.  It's obvious that
that point wasn't reached in the eyes of *this* judge, but there are
some *experts* who believe that the longer this drags out, and especially
if it results in another strike, the owners' claim of an impasse will
eventually be legitimized by the courts.
178.861SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Apr 03 1995 17:2926
When the owners proposed a salary cap, many people were in here 
saying that a salary cap isn't needed. The owners needed to get 
some backbone, set a salary limit for themselves and stop being 
spendthrifts. Let me ask you, if the owners now go out and do 
just that, this is, refuse to pay what the "going rate" was for 
players such as Walker and the contract offers start coming in 
considerably lower do you really think there won't be a collusion 
greivance filed? Wake up. The owners did not get the salary cap 
they wanted. The players got their way. The owners can now offer 
whatever they choose to. The players are betting that the owners 
can't control themselves and will return to the days of 
outrageous contracts. Just about everyone else that has followed 
this nightmare thinks otherwise. When the contract offers start 
coming in drastically lower, in both salary and length, do you 
really believe Fehr won't be in court crying about collusion?

It's a certainty.

The free market is here. Don't start whining when you don't get 
as much as you feel you're entitled to.

There are no "winners" in this. The owners have lost millions and 
the players are going to find out very soon how they intend on 
making up for that shortfall. 

daryll
178.862CAMONE::WAYUSS Pickerel SS-177, On Eternal PatrolMon Apr 03 1995 17:5218
178.863HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon Apr 03 1995 17:5532
     <<< Note 178.861 by SALEM::DODA "Donald Fehr, man of intransigence" >>>

>The players are betting that the owners 
>can't control themselves and will return to the days of 
>outrageous contracts. Just about everyone else that has followed 
>this nightmare thinks otherwise. 

  Problem is that it's not clear "the owners" want to control themselves. There
are probably about 7-10 owners who are in trouble and would like to see
something put in place to prevent the rich owners from running up salaries.
Then there are probably another 7-10 at the other end who couldn't give a rip
about the poor owners and have no problem dishing out the big bucks if that's
what it takes to draw crowds and win ball games.

  I don't think for one moment that "the owners" think with one mind. Sure they
would all like to see a cap, but for some it's a "gotah have" while for others
it's would be a "nice to have".

  What's happening here is that Baseball is shifting from the national past
time to a big business industry and like any industry the strong companies
have no problem surviving while the weak ones tend to die.

  Rather than expanding they should allow a few of the weaker teams to go belly
up. Then if times improved they could award those franchise to new owners. With
real cases of Chapter 11 or even Chapter 7 on record, the owners would have a
natural tendency to lower salaries without collusion and the failed teams would
serve as evidence in their defense.

  It's called the free market and it works. I just wish they would give it a
chance.

  George
178.864not meCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Apr 03 1995 18:048
    Darryl,
    If the owners bid on players but do not offer them what the players are
    looking for I will not hollar collusion. If the owners say we aren't
    going to bid on players then that is collusion. The owners have every
    right to say we aren't going to spend as much as we did last year. What
    collusion is is when they say I won't sign your free agent if you don't
    sign mine which is what happened in the 80's. 
    Mike
178.865There goes your teamPOBOX::WIERSBECKMon Apr 03 1995 18:167
    Re:  .858  mike
    
    I understand what you are saying, but I'd bet you'd feel different if
    Boston was a small market...
    
    
    Spud
178.866I'd like to die in peace some yearCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon Apr 03 1995 18:463
    Maybe I would but then some of the small market fans know what
    it's like to win a World Series. And their father did and their
    grandfathers did ....  :^) Now I'll take any advantage I can.
178.867SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceMon Apr 03 1995 19:016
Correct me if I'm wrong here, but didn't the other owners bid on 
free agents during what was termed as collusion? They may not 
have offered what the current team did, but they did bid didn't 
they?

daryll
178.868what a #@$%ing joke...USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsMon Apr 03 1995 19:137
>have offered what the current team did, but they did bid didn't 
>they?

I thought so.  That's the problem with the current situation, and
why I believe you're right.  I'm sure Fehr already has his grievance
written....much as Sotomayor had her 46-minute ruling done before
she left for work last Friday.
178.869Collusion was a clumsy effort to get around the law, and it faledTNPUBS::NAZZAROThanks for a great year UMass!Mon Apr 03 1995 19:3211
    During the collusion period, only one free agent moved to another team. 
    The owners colluded by not making legitimate offers to free agents,
    thereby making the free agent system a sham.
    
    What has happened since then, unfortunately, is the reverse, with
    certain owners overspending on mediocre talent.  I also think that
    the MLB owners would do well to follow the model of the NFL and set
    aside a percantage of take receipts for visiting teams and implement
    a hard cap on salaries for the 40 man roster.
    
    NAZZ
178.870USCTR1::GARBARINObumhiem, lappas...idiotsTue Apr 04 1995 13:355
>    the MLB owners would do well to follow the model of the NFL and set
>    aside a percantage of take receipts for visiting teams and implement
>    a hard cap on salaries for the 40 man roster.

And stop writing guaranteed contracts !
178.871Random NotesODIXIE::ZOGRANIt's the Champale talking!Tue Apr 11 1995 13:2729
    Some recent signings:
    
    
    Player           Old Team       New team      Old $     New $
    
    Danny Darwin     Boston         Toronto       2.4M      300K
    
    Teddy Higuera    Milwaukee      SD            3.25M     275K
    
    Chris Sabo       Baltimore      White Sox     2M        550K
    
    Paul Assenmacher  White Sox     Cleveland     2.25M     700K
    
    Roger McDowell   Dodgers        Texas         1.25M     500K
    
    Rob Murphy       Yankees        Dodgers       950K      250K (minor
                                                            league deal)
    
Looks like the owners are paying some players what they may be worth. 
    Wonder how much some the above mentioned folks would have made had the 
    strike not taken place?  Wonder who starts Fehr's car in the morning?
    
    Braves may not be able to re-sign SS Jeff Blauser.  They are waiting
    for another team to step forward and make an offer (which Blauser's
    agent, Boras, says that they have, but have not yet identified the
    team) so they can see what his market price is.  He wants a multi-year,
    4M per year, deal.  
    
    UMDan 
178.872HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Apr 11 1995 13:2818
                <<< CAM::$1$DUA5:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SPORTS.NOTE;1 >>>
                                  -< SPORTS >-
================================================================================
Note 88.1800                     Boston Red Sox                     1800 of 1800
USCTR1::GARBARINO                                     4 lines  11-APR-1995 09:23
                     -< again, who was this strike for ? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Like why isn't Fehr and the boys screaming colusuion over these low salaries?
>
>What does Fehr say to all those at Camp Unemployment (Homestead, FL)
>who will see their careers end because of the strike ???

  Who's career is ending due to the strike?

  Seems that there are still 28 teams and each team still has a 40 man roster,
who's out a job?

  George
178.873weren't the players claiming victory a couple weeks ago ?USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Apr 11 1995 15:0718
>What does Fehr say to all those at Camp Unemployment (Homestead, FL)
>who will see their careers end because of the strike ???

>  Who's career is ending due to the strike?

>  Seems that there are still 28 teams and each team still has a 40 man roster,
>who's out a job?


Dave Magadan was on CNN last night and stated that he is preparing
himself for the realization that his ML career may be over.

Yesterday's USA Today also reported about one MLer (forget his name)
who got his real estate broker's license over the winter, and also
acknowleges that under the present conditions his ML career may be
over.

I love it.  What a strike !  What a country !!!
178.874Why was there a strike?CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Apr 11 1995 15:213
    Like I said in another note the players got what they asked for. But
    they are not going to get what they wanted. The owners are getting a
    little smarter. Good for them.
178.875RE: .873IMBETR::DUPREZTue Apr 11 1995 15:289
Joe,

The two guys you mentioned are one in the same.  Magadan is the guy
who went out and got his real estate license.

FWIW, I don't feel particularly sorry for him.

Roland
178.876HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Apr 11 1995 15:3624
RE                    <<< Note 178.873 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>Dave Magadan was on CNN last night and stated that he is preparing
>himself for the realization that his ML career may be over.
>
>Yesterday's USA Today also reported about one MLer (forget his name)
>who got his real estate broker's license over the winter, and also
>acknowleges that under the present conditions his ML career may be
>over.

  I still don't understand what this has to do with the strike.

  Ok so Dave Magadan is getting close to the end of his career. He's 32, not
that great on defense and has little power. At that age an on base percentage 
will only get you so far.

  And ok, so some minor leaguer is looking for a job elsewhere, but there will
be two new guys to take the place of those players with a ripple effect
through the minors. Somewhere down the bottom two guys will get a chance to
play professional baseball instead of getting a job parking cars.

  So what's the problem?

  George
178.877MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Apr 11 1995 15:5711
    
      It sounds like Joe's beef is that the palyers said that the
     owners didn't need a hard cap to bring about fiscal respons-
     ibilty and they're being proven correct. Hasn't it always been
     the owners overpaying mediocre talent that everyone points to 
     and says "what fools!"? And now that they've been forced to
     change their loose spending ways without declaring socialism
     in baseball, it's more obvious than ever what a major blunder
     the owners made last year. They could have done what they're
     doing now without losing almost a billion dollars collectively.
     I think it's high time folks stepped up and thanked the players.
178.878WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MNY YANKEES 1995 WORLD CHAMPS!!!!!Tue Apr 11 1995 16:024
    
    
        Mickey Tettleton is also unsigned? I mean not too many teams could
    use a 30+ HR catcher??
178.879DD is he all hypeAD::HEATHPitchers and catchers report when???Tue Apr 11 1995 16:077
    
    
    Hey Chappy you remind of TCM with that pname.  Oh and  Mickey Tettleton
    hasn't been a regular catcher in two years maybe longer.  I'd still
    rather have him than McFarlane FWIW.
    
    Jerry
178.880SNAX::ERICKSONMoney + Boredom = MJTue Apr 11 1995 16:1214
    
    	What you are seeing is the big market teams. Signing the players
    they want to the big money. All the other FA are signing for what
    everybody else is offering. Dan Duquettes budget is 25 million for
    this season. Down from 42-45 million last year for the Sox.
    	Colorado played 2 seasons RENT FREE at mile high stadium. They
    have sold out Coors field for the season. Colorado has a lot of money
    to spend. Thus, the big contract to Larry Walker and others. Same goes
    for the Yankees, they are going to have a 45 million dollar payroll.
    This Strike has controlled the owners a little bit. You have owners
    telling there GM's, you can spend this much. Except this year it is
    a lot less then in other years for most teams.
    
    Ron
178.881USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Apr 11 1995 17:3220
>  I still don't understand what this has to do with the strike.

You're either playing games, or ......

The players' strike cost the owners a TON of money.  They were striking
for "the little guy", and many more "little guys" to come.  They've now
called off the strike (claiming some sort of victory, while still not
playing under a CBA) and MOST are signing for a FRACTION of what they
played for last year....and SOME may not play this year (or ever) at
all.  The cost of the strike is being passed on to them, and what
have they won at this price ?  Nothing.

The only guys getting their money are the true stars, not the 'little
guys'.  This is the way it should be, and hopefully will be forever.
But Fehr never sold this strike to the masses this way.

IMO, if there was a CBA, and they hadn't drained MLB of all that cash,
the salaries would be better, and the owners wouldn't be turning their
backs on these marginal players and taking their chances with unproven
'prospects'.
178.882CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Apr 11 1995 18:302
    If there was a CBA then it would have had a Salary cap in it and
    revenue sharing. The players didn't want this which is why they struck.
178.883HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Apr 11 1995 18:4617
RE                    <<< Note 178.881 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>The only guys getting their money are the true stars, not the 'little
>guys'.  This is the way it should be, and hopefully will be forever.
>But Fehr never sold this strike to the masses this way.

  I think it would be more accurate to say "the little guys are not getting
their money yet". The owners are probably a bit gun shy right now because it's
still not clear if there's going to be any playoffs but if they get their
confidence back those guys will be getting jobs. 

  Wait until the pennant races start heating up. With 8 teams making the
playoffs teams with a shot at that wild card will be making mid season moves to
try to squeeze out the extra runs they need to get over the top and the money
will start to flow again.

  George
178.884HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Apr 11 1995 18:5411
RE                    <<< Note 88.1805 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>I love this kind of pro-union talk....the union went on strike 'cause
>ownership *forced* them to.  I mean, they had no choice !

  If they wanted to keep playing without a cap, then yes they had no choice.

  If you don't believe that, tell us what it was? Other than striking, what
could the players have done to prevent the cap (i.e. socialist baseball).

  George
178.885AKOCOA::BREENTue Apr 11 1995 20:484
    I had another thought about the reduced number of per game (payroll)
    checks the owners need to payout.  Since 162 - 144 = 18 games or 11% of
    the 30 mil average per team, the owners are only missing half in terms
    of revenue.
178.886MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Tue Apr 11 1995 20:5219
  >> IMO, if there was a CBA, and they hadn't drained MLB of all that cash,
  >> the salaries would be better, and the owners wouldn't be turning their
  >> backs on these marginal players and taking their chances with unproven
  >> 'prospects'.
    
     Yeah, them owners just give, give, give 'til it hurts. Wasn't the
     whole idea of the cap to rein in costs? Or was it just to tee off
     the players union and lose a billion dollars in the process? And
     now we're hearing that if the players hadn't struck the owners would
     still be spending big dollars on mediocre players. If that's the case, 
     it's a good thing that the players saved the owners from themseleves.
     What we're really seeing is a chasm developing between the small 
     market (read: towns that don't/can't support major league ball)
     and big market (read; tons that can/do support a major league
     club(s)). Two years ago baseball expanded, raked in big franchise
     fees and now X number of "small market teams" are losing money.
     I ain't buying.
    
178.887There are othersPOBOX::WIERSBECKWed Apr 12 1995 14:097
    Chris Sabo was another player "just glad to be here" when signed by the
    Sox the other day.  He'll be making 1/4 what he did last year.  He was
    quoted in the paper as saying that there just weren't any other offers
    for him.
    
    
    Spud
178.888HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Apr 12 1995 14:3522
RE        <<< Note 178.886 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>     Two years ago baseball expanded, raked in big franchise
>     fees and now X number of "small market teams" are losing money.
>     I ain't buying.
    
  This is a good point. I can't help but coming back to the fact that the
owners keep crying about losing money yet their industry is expanding going
from 26 to 28 teams last year and now they are adding two more. 

  There are too many Major League teams. With minor league ball growing in
popularity it would have made more sense to let the teams losing money move to
Denver, Miami, Tampa, or Phoenix. Then AAA teams could have moved to the towns
vacated by major league clubs if they felt there was enough baseball interest
left in those towns and the lower levels could have shifted around accordingly.

  There's an Andy Worhol effect going on here. Some day no doubt there will be
100,000,000 major league teams, every human on the planet will be on someone's
40 man (excuse me person) roster, and the owners will still be baffled at
why the poor teams can't seem to make money.

  George
178.889USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Apr 12 1995 14:469
>     Yeah, them owners just give, give, give 'til it hurts. Wasn't the
>     whole idea of the cap to rein in costs? Or was it just to tee off
>     the players union and lose a billion dollars in the process? And
>     now we're hearing that if the players hadn't struck the owners would
>     still be spending big dollars on mediocre players.

Not *big dollars*, but probably more than they are getting.  Some of
these guys are getting 10% of what they made last year.  Financial
losses certainly play a part in those decisions.
178.890MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Apr 12 1995 15:0218
 >> Chris Sabo was another player "just glad to be here" when signed by the
 >> Sox the other day.  He'll be making 1/4 what he did last year.  He was
 >> quoted in the paper as saying that there just weren't any other offers
 >> for him.
   
    There is a list of players, who took hits, in today's Globe. The guy,
    who really took it on the chin, is Andre Dawson. The Hawk went from
    $4.3 mil in 1994 to $500,000 this year. Why the hell would anyone
    pay Andre Dawson $4.3 million? He's making much closer to what he 
    ought to be. Most of rest of the list is the same way - players who
    were grossly overpaid and whose paychecks have gotten a reality smack.
    Would this have happened if there hadn't been a strike and the owners 
    hadn't sustained heavy losses? Probably not to this degree. Is it a
    bad thing? I don't think so, I think it's way overdue. The players
    have said all along that they were willing to let market forces deter-
    mine salaries and that is what is happening - c'est la vie. 
    
178.891MIMS::ROLLINS_RWed Apr 12 1995 15:4214
        <<< Note 178.890 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "I need somebody to shove!" >>>

>    ought to be. Most of rest of the list is the same way - players who
>    were grossly overpaid and whose paychecks have gotten a reality smack.
>    Would this have happened if there hadn't been a strike and the owners 
>    hadn't sustained heavy losses? Probably not to this degree. Is it a
>    bad thing? I don't think so, I think it's way overdue. The players
>    have said all along that they were willing to let market forces deter-
>    mine salaries and that is what is happening - c'est la vie. 
    
     I agree completely, and it's kind of baffling to try to understand
     why baseball owners didn't do this in the first place.  Let's face it,
     there are players in the minors who can outplay the marginal players;
     they just don't have experience yet.  I'd bring them up.
178.892AKOCOA::BREENWed Apr 12 1995 15:504
    I would assume that since the budgets for 1995 and probably 1996 will
    be under the original cap proposed in 94 that cap numbers and probably
    tax numbers are bye-bye even if the players all of a sudden say "We'll
    take that August Cap offer after all".
178.893HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed Apr 12 1995 16:5226
  Actually I think that there was a change taking place and much of this would
have happened without the strike. 

  There is some evidence that many of the teams are moving toward a system
where by they hold a garage sale to dump players then try to build a "wave" of
good players low in the minors. When this "wave" hits the majors, then they go
out and buy up all the talent that's around and try to win.

  This happened with the Braves in the late 80's when they were dead last but
they were building up their minor league teams. They actually had two "waves"
and when they started winning around 1991-1992 the 2nd wave with Chipper Jones,
Javy Lopez, etc was setting records in A and AA ball. Now that wave is hitting
the majors and they are filling in with free agents again.

  Meanwhile the Indians seemed to be doing the same thing only a couple years
later. When their wave hit they went out and got Dennis Martinez and a few
others to go for a win. The Padres seem to be early in the cycle. They just
completed holding their garage sale and now they are looking for prospects.

  Anyway, this change seems to be getting more popular and would have lead
to reduced salaries anyway since not as many teams are trying to win at the
same time. The strike may have moved things along a bit but not by that much.
Even if there had been a quick settlement, the pickings for guys like Sabo and
Dawson would have been slim.

  George
178.894Arbitration impact?ODIXIE::ZOGRANIt's the Champale talking!Wed Apr 12 1995 19:355
    How do all of the signings for less money impact the arbitration
    hearings for those players that are eligible for it?  I am not really
    sure haw that process works.
    
    UMDan
178.895got to affect the scaleUSCTR1::GARBARINOWed Apr 12 1995 19:387
>    How do all of the signings for less money impact the arbitration
>    hearings for those players that are eligible for it?  I am not really
>    sure haw that process works.

It's got to affect them, since the whole arbitration process is comparing
a player's stats to other players like him, and deciding whether he should
get their money or not.
178.896Feel free to cut my pay to 500kAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksThu Apr 13 1995 01:1511
Another reason in the decline in salaries is that a lot of the big adverstisers
were reluctant to put much into their budgets for baseball ads.  With the
uncertainty of a baseball season even taking place in 1995, those dollars went
elsewhere.  I've got to say that I am enjoying these paycuts.  The great
players will always command the big bucks.  Rookies, first and second year
players never usually made much more than the minimum.  It was the rewarding
of mediocrity that brought baseball to it's knees.  However, Heir Fehr could
get pissed at this and we could see another strike in the future.

Paul
178.897top HS football AND baseball player in the countryPOBOX::WIERSBECKThu Apr 13 1995 13:079
    "could?"  I think it's a certainty.
    
    There's a kid just out of HS that plays for the Marlins Class A
    affiliate here in suburban Chicago.  (Kane County)  He got a $1.75M
    signing bonus - which lured him away from LSU.  BTW, he was recruited
    to be their starting QB...
    
    
    Spud
178.898Yeh, it is easy to sayAKOCOA::BREENThu Apr 13 1995 14:019
    Spud you had a good point about it being easy for say Bostonians to say
    to Pirate fans "Give it up".  In fact Pittsburgh for all my jesting
    would be the saddest case for losing a major league team given there
    history.  And the fans there are serious, just not enough of them.
    
    Of course part of the problem is the anti-trust exemption which allowed
    mlb to protect large metropolitan areas like New York from competion
    thus allowing them to reap enormous profits and to outspend the
    competition.
178.899USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Apr 13 1995 14:028
>However, Heir Fehr could
>get pissed at this and we could see another strike in the future.

I think there's a good chance this will happen again this season.
The Union won't give a no-strike pledge.  Perhaps this time, with
having identified replacement players, and a solid minor league
season to draw prospects from, the owners will continue the season
without them.
178.900PCBUOA::LEFEBVREPCBU Asia/Pacific MarketingThu Apr 13 1995 14:121
    No way would players agree not to strike.
178.901HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu Apr 13 1995 14:1526
RE                      <<< Note 178.898 by AKOCOA::BREEN >>>

>    Of course part of the problem is the anti-trust exemption which allowed
>    mlb to protect large metropolitan areas like New York from competion
>    thus allowing them to reap enormous profits and to outspend the
>    competition.

  Well this was certainly the case before free agency. The Yankees dominated
the American League from the early 20s through the end of the Mantle - Maris
era.

  But when free agency came along the wheels fell off and suddenly many more
teams including small market teams started contending and winning.

  As for supporting the teams, where do you propose they draw the line? What
happens when the owners expand to 1000 teams and the Holyoke Plumbers start
complaining that they just can't seem to compete with Holyoke Community College
and Mount Holyoke? Who pays their bills then? 

  In a free market if you expand beyond what the market will support, someone
goes belly up. And them's the breaks. And yes I'd feel the same way if it
were the Red Sox but if teams do have to fold I'd favor folding any failing
expansion teams and moving any of the original 16 since they have the longer
history. 

  George
178.902Projected to reach majors in 1998MUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Thu Apr 13 1995 14:3314
.897, Spud:
    
>   There's a kid just out of HS that plays for the Marlins Class A
>   affiliate here in suburban Chicago.  (Kane County)  He got a $1.75M
>   signing bonus - which lured him away from LSU.  BTW, he was recruited
>   to be their starting QB...

Yup, his name is Josh Booty.  Whether he was THE top football AND
baseball in the country is debatable (Ben Grieve was the first pick
overall), but he certainly seems to be a live one.  The scouts expect
him not to need more than a year at any level, so enjoy him while
you can in Class A.

Steve
178.903MYLIFE::mccarthyMike McCarthy SHR3-1/P32 237-2468Thu Apr 13 1995 15:0816
I believe the players have said that they would agree not to
strike in return for the owners agreeing not to lock them out
or impose a new economic system over the off season.

I can't see the players striking again this year.  They didn't 
get anything out of the first strike.  Winning the court case
gives them a degree of security against a lock out or a 
declaration of an impasse.

A new agreement is really in the hands of the owners now.
I haven't heard that the players have backed off their last
position.  It will be interesting to see what comes out of the
small market vs. big market conflict now that the pressure
to settle is lessened.

Mike
178.904An attempt by the owners to prove their own point?TNPUBS::NAZZAROThanks for a great year UMass!Thu Apr 13 1995 15:1611
    I have a question that I have not seen answered (forgive me if it's
    been brought up somewhere else):
    
    How come a team that is owned by the third or fourth richest person in
    the WORLD has to sell Randy Johnson to meet a budget?
    
    Is it because Major League Baseball has told small market teams they
    must stay within a certain budget and told large market teams they can
    spend whatever they want?
    
    NAZZ
178.905A true free marketILBBAK::SILVESTRII have no answersThu Apr 13 1995 15:2828
>>    <<< Note 178.904 by TNPUBS::NAZZARO "Thanks for a great year UMass!" >>>
>>            -< An attempt by the owners to prove their own point? >-
>>    I have a question that I have not seen answered (forgive me if it's
>>    been brought up somewhere else):
>>    How come a team that is owned by the third or fourth richest person in
>>    the WORLD has to sell Randy Johnson to meet a budget?
  
	Maybe because he got to be so rich by making good sound business 
	decisions .. he probably wants each one of his individual business
	ventures to be profitable .. so if the Mariners are only bringing
	in XXX dollars, they should have less than XXX expenses .. or are you
	suggesting that he should divert profits from one of his other 
	businesses (say, Nintendo) to prop up the Mariners??
  
	My take on this situation is that the system cannot function as it
	stands now for the forseeable future .. the playing field is just way
	to unlevel .. the "big market" clubs have just so much more revenue
	from radio/local tv/gate than the "small market" teams .. they will
	continually get the big time free agents looking for the big bucks ..
	this will lead to an emormous imbalance in the competition .. the
	owners solution to regaining some semblance of competitive balance is
	a salary cap or revenue sharing .. the other possibilty is just
	saying "screw the small market teams" and let them sink or swim ..
	but this would require letting the teams move about freely, finding
	a location where they could maximixe their revenue .. not sure if 
	baseball is ready for that yet ..

	Vinny
178.906SNAX::ERICKSONMoney + Boredom = MJThu Apr 13 1995 15:328
    
    	The owner of the Mariners didn't become rich, by operating a
    business at a lose. The Mariners make X amount of money in a season.
    Thus, the Mariners can spend X amount of money in a season. Yes,
    he could run the Mariners at a lose and take money out of his own
    pocket. He just chooses not to do so.
    
    Ron
178.907AKOCOA::BREENThu Apr 13 1995 15:379
    The problem is today there is a mix of free enterprise and socialism
    (or artificial barriers).  So Pittsburgh, which is big enough to
    support a team cannot truly compete with New York or Atlanta,
    especially when the reins are completely off.
    
    Of coure speaking of NewYork and Atlanta brings up another problem the
    superstation anomolie where the pittsburghs and milwaukees play for
    free on national tv while NY and Atlanta (especially) the latter reap
    the revenue.
178.908CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Apr 13 1995 16:3920
    I've said this about 20 times but why should the players help the small
    market owners when the large market owners won't. The Giants are a
    fringe small market as is the A's. Both of these teams tried to move
    but were rebuffed by the other teams. The A's were almost sold to
    someone who was going to move them to Denver but the sale was negated
    by the other owners.  The Giants tried to move to Tampa but the other 
    owners disallowed it. Gee guess where 2 expansion franchises went and
    how much $ did the owners split on that? Also if one of those
    franchises were allowed to move then the other would have been left
    with the entire Bay area and would probably be considered a large
    market team. Seattle and Milwakee both had franchises before their
    current teams were located there. Neither area could support a
    franchise before but that still didn't stop these teams from moving in.
    I don't understand why the Pirates don't draw? It is football country 
    but they haven't had a strong owner in years. Minnesota almost lost
    their NBA franchise. Montreal I believe will move. 
    For those of you in a small market team I can understand what you say. 
    But why blame the players when it's the other owners who won't help.
    
    Mike
178.909USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Apr 13 1995 17:192
Rod Beaton has officially begun the "collusion" claims with his article
in today's USA Today.
178.910I'm shocked.SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceThu Apr 13 1995 17:540
178.911CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Apr 13 1995 19:328
   > Rod Beaton has officially begun the "collusion" claims with his article
   > in today's USA Today.
    
    Who does he play for?
    
     End of note
    
    
178.912clarificationPOBOX::WIERSBECKThu Apr 13 1995 20:0312
    Actually, the Timberwolves move wasn't based on attendance.  There was
    a group (Top Rank) that was willing to put out mega-mega bucks to move
    the team to New Orleans.  Turned out they weren't a "clean" group
    (unscrupulous would be a good word) and were denied the purchase by the
    NBA. 
    
    I won't go into all the details, but the owners were trying to get the
    city to buy the Target Center, etc.  It really wasn't at all based on
    attendance.
    
    
    Spud
178.913Childish spoiled little bratSALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceFri Apr 14 1995 12:2810
Well, seems Fehr is compiling a master list of all 
replacement players to be distributed to each and every MLPA 
member. The reports a couple months ago about possible relaiation 
against replacement players seems to be a more than just
irresponsible journalism.

Anyone care to make an educated guess what other purpose this 
list will serve?

daryll
178.914:-)ODIXIE::ZOGRANIt's the Champale talking!Fri Apr 14 1995 12:463
    Autograph possibilities?
    
    UMDan
178.915exitCNTROL::CHILDSFri Apr 14 1995 12:515
    
    The list according to Roger could be forwarded to the DEA for leads...
    
     ;^)
    
178.916AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksFri Apr 14 1995 14:2921
My guess is that Fehr, and his "union" want to compile a list of the scabs
in order to blacklist them and identify them in case the ever get to the majors.
Who can forget Bonilla's comment that scabs might end up in the East river,
or was the NHL strike?  It gets confusing.  How any professional sport can
call themselves a union is beyond me.  How many steelworker hire agents to 
negotiate their salaries?  The players union likes to compare themselves to 
the movie actors, who also are a union with the screen actors guild.  In 
Hollywood if an actor doesn't like the price he is being offered for a part,
someone else is brought in.  There is plenty of actors willing to take their
place.  I don't think I have ever heard them walking out or an actor going
to salary arbitration.  This immature players union should just shut the hell
up.  If the owners had any balls they should have let the replacements play
the season and broke the union.  If I was the union, I would be more worried
about an ex-Scab pitcher throwing a high fast ball to Barry Bonds head. Barry
by the way, is going to get about $500,000 every two weeks during the baseballs
season.  

I can't take it anymore. 

Paul
178.917SALEM::DODADonald Fehr, man of intransigenceFri Apr 14 1995 14:498
Of course, you're right Paul. What's the damn point of this? 
There's no collective bargaining agreement, the chance of another 
strike still looms and meanwhile Fehr decides that this is where 
his efforts should be? The players would be wise to set this 
immature little brat out on his butt and do it asap before he 
does any more damage.

daryll
178.918Cleveland loses 12 home gamesPOBOX::WIERSBECKFri Apr 14 1995 20:0312
    Just to point out another reason why I consider this season already
    screwed up - to the point where we won't have a "real" champion.  The
    schedules are all messed up with teams playing opponents an unequal
    amount.  
    
    Local case in point:  Sox/Cleveland schedules show in the 18 games that
    will be missed, the Sox don't play Baltimore and the Yanks in 12 of
    those, while Cleveland's games lost were mostly against
    Oakland/California, which they were 11-0 against last year.
    
    
    Spud                                
178.919early attendance POBOX::WIERSBECKFri Apr 14 1995 20:4510
    The Cubs ticket director reports that no game at Wrigley is near a
    sellout this year, even the traditional Saturday game with the
    Cardinals.  It appears that the opening spring attendance is mediocre
    at best.  
    
    I hope the trend continues, but I doubt it will.  There are too many
    casual fans that will go anyway.  It'd be nice to get a message across.
    
    
    Spud
178.920I'll pay for someone to punchout Fehr!AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksFri Apr 14 1995 21:348
A local radio sports talk show in town said he feels that when (if) a new
agreement is reached that the players will fire Fehr.  It seems some 
players weren't to thrilled with the little crap faced union leader.  My
guess is that only the 3+ million dollar a year players could tolerate his
antics.  Face it Fehr, you are no Marvin Miller and this isn't 1969.

Paul
178.921USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Apr 18 1995 16:5625
>players weren't to thrilled with the little crap faced union leader.  My
>guess is that only the 3+ million dollar a year players could tolerate his
>antics.  Face it Fehr, you are no Marvin Miller and this isn't 1969.

Miller said in a recent interview that Fehr made a huge blunder by even
agreeing to *some type* of cap/taxation system.

Fehr is now receiving a lot of heat from the press for his "hit lists"
of replacement players who are in ML camps.  He apparently created
these lists and distributed them at all ML camps so union players
are aware of those who would have been replacement players.

And in today's USA Today he has officially begun the collusion claims.
The same paper has an article that states that Financial World is
reporting that MLB lost $119M from the strike, and that even without
it, 12 of the clubs would have lost money last year.  Hey George,
you and Fehr need more proof that MLB clubs are having financial
difficulties ????????????????


re: fan support

Spud, Yankee Stadium has sold just 35,000 tickets for Opening Day.
I don't remember the last time they didn't sell it out (56,000).
That's a fan statement in itself.
178.922AKOCOA::BREENTue Apr 18 1995 17:3511
    one impression I got of the strike was that most of the player
    representation was of high-priced multi-year contract guys who had
    benefitted most from the free market of the past and could be hurt
    least (individually) by a long strike (Cone,Clemens,Butler).
    
    I wonder if an impression had been created that being a player rep
    could be hazardous to a career and average players who would most
    benefit from a cap took a back seat to the minority who would most
    benefit or had benefitted from free market status.
    
    "Hoist by one's own petard" comes to mind. 
178.923ONOFRE::MAY_BRpet rocks, pogs, Dallas CowboysTue Apr 18 1995 17:475
    
    Could soeone explain to me the difference between the owners' collusion
    and Fehr's hit list?
    
    brews
178.924CNTROL::CHILDSTue Apr 18 1995 17:496
    
    Joe, did MLB open up their books to prove those numbers reported in FW?
    If they did why didn't they open them up for the players? My guess is
    those numbers were based on assumptions. 
    
    mike
178.925USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Apr 18 1995 18:1512
>    Could soeone explain to me the difference between the owners' collusion
>    and Fehr's hit list?

Yeah, or the owners' freeze on free agent signings, and the union's
freeze on free agent signings ?


re:  who was striking more

I said at the beginning that this strike was about the small percentage
of big-$ superstars, and NOT the average player.  I was roundly criticized
by the pro-union guys.  And now the average players are getting reemed....
178.926That's the ticket: We're not pro-union we're pro-choiceAKOCOA::BREENTue Apr 18 1995 19:2110
    Wasn't collective bargaining agreed to by mlb in order to preserve the
    anti-trust exemption,reserve clause, drafts etc?  Given that and the
    concessions made thru collective bargaining it was obvious that to try
    to win back the losses in one fell swoop the owners would either force
    a strike or attempt a lockout.  The latter because of existing labor
    law seems to be illegal without "bargaining" before hand.
    
    The basic agreement with the above apparently makes one pro-union in
    that some of us agree that the players had a right to make a choice and
    defend that choice.
178.927HELIX::MAIEWSKITue Apr 18 1995 19:2214
RE                    <<< Note 178.925 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>I said at the beginning that this strike was about the small percentage
>of big-$ superstars, and NOT the average player.  I was roundly criticized
>by the pro-union guys.  And now the average players are getting reemed....

  ... but this is based entirely on a very short period of time. Of course
the big names will be the guys who are signed early. That doesn't mean the
other guys won't get signed later.

  Wait until the Pennant races start heating up, we'll see how well the owners
do at keeping their expenses down.

  George
178.928SALEM::DODAMasquerading fatherWed Apr 26 1995 13:497
Gene Orza, associate general counsel for the MLPA is quoted in 
this mornings' USA Today as stating the the union will be filing 
a lawsuit charging the owners with collusion.

FWIW, Gene plays for the MLPA.

daryll
178.929USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Apr 26 1995 17:108
>Gene Orza, associate general counsel for the MLPA is quoted in 
>this mornings' USA Today as stating the the union will be filing 
>a lawsuit charging the owners with collusion.

Setting a positive climate for further negotiations, I see.
One of these days the union is going to go to 'the well'
(ie: NLRB) once too often.  When they finally do lose, they'll
really get buried.
178.930MSBCS::BRYDIEI need somebody to shove!Wed Apr 26 1995 18:1514
  >> Setting a positive climate for further negotiations, I see.
  >> One of these days the union is going to go to 'the well'
  >> (ie: NLRB) once too often.  When they finally do lose, they'll
  >> really get buried.

     The NLRB isn't "the well".  If the owners are negotiating con-
     tracts in good faith, they have nothing to worry about. It *is*
     possible to exercise cost controls without breaking the law.
     If the owners aren't dealing in good faith then obviously the
     climate for further negotations is already poisoned. What the
     owners have never been able to do is convince the players that
     a change would be beneficial to them. Until they do, they'll
     continue to get their clocks cleaned on a regular basis.
178.931CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Wed Apr 26 1995 20:2212
    If the players take the collusion to a court I think they will lose and
    I hope they do lose. The players have to smarten up and realize that
    there isn't the money in baseball that there used to be. The owners
    IMHO have not colluded because the number of player movements and the
    contracts that Walker, McDowell and other top players have signed for 
    are still quite high. To me the owners have proven my point that they
    could control salaries if they just got smart. The need for a salary
    cap or any other artificial means is just a crutch for poor managment.
    To me the two sides need to sit down together and figure out a few
    things if they want to prosper.
    
    Mike
178.932SNAX::ERICKSONMoney + Boredom = MJThu Apr 27 1995 13:0214
    
    	Mike, I agree I hope the players don't win another collusion case.
    The players want the world. You just have to laugh when a player
    won't sign with a particular team. Even though that team is offering
    him more money. Other players have no-trade clauses or clauses that
    say you can't trade me to team X. Then when a players signs with his
    team of choice for less money then someone else. They turn around and
    say, I don't play for the money. I play for the love of the game.
    	Hey if the Red sox can cut there payroll from ~42M down to ~25M.
    Any team in the league can cut there payroll. In fact I think this
    years Red Sox team is better then last years, for almost half the
    price.
    
    Ron
178.933USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Apr 27 1995 17:479
>     The NLRB isn't "the well".

ie:  "the legal front"

Fehr and Orza have proven without a doubt that their primary method
of dealing with the owners is through legal action.  Negotiation is
a secondary mode of operation.  IMO, if the NLRB ever rules in favor
of the owners these clowns won't know what to do, and I think the
owners will finally have them by the balls.
178.934Braves UpdateODIXIE::ZOGRANYoungest one's walking - OH NO!Fri Apr 28 1995 13:1212
    Took my daughter to the Braves game yesterday.  Although attendance was
    officially stated as 26,120, the paper said crowd estimates were
    anywherer from 10 - 16,000.  Granted it was a 2:10 start, but in the
    past when I went to weekday day games the crowd was always 35,000+.
    
    Glavine was the SP, and recieved a smattering of boos.  The crowd, due
    to it's size, was fairly lifeless.  On the other hand, there were no
    waiting lines for anything.
    
    At least the Bravo's won.
    
    UMDan
178.935CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Fri Apr 28 1995 13:3216
    Yeah right, the owners lawyers are 0 fer 900 in court. Maybe the reason
    the players only litigate is because the the owners don't want to play
    by the same legal rules as everyone else. Both sides better negotiate
    real quick or revenues are going to fall even more. I know it's early
    but attendance for the first 3 days is down 22%. And fans are really
    letting everyone have it. Every game I've watched has had a ton of boos
    coming from the stands. As I've said the owners have gotten very smart
    with the signings this year. I'm willing to bet payrolls will be down
    by at least 10-15%. And they've done it by playing by the last
    contract.
    Ron, As for the Red Sox cutting 22 mill, just about all of their LTC's
    they had ran out last year. When youy add 4.5 mill for Dawson with 4
    mil for Viola, 2.5 mil for Darwin, 2 mil for Fletcher and all of the
    other Lou contracts it really was kind of easy. The Nixon Canseco deal
    added only 1.5 mill. 
    Mike
178.936HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Apr 28 1995 13:4312
  Braves attendance will pick up.

  One of the guys on ESPN (I forget who) was saying that he expected that for
the teams that were winning, their fans would tend to forget about the strike
where as the teams that would catch grief and have fans boycott would be the
teams that posted lousy records. In particular he said the Brewers would
probably be in trouble (Poetic Justice if that happens).

  If he's right the Braves will have few problems as they run away with the
N.L. East.

  George
178.937ODIXIE::ZOGRANYoungest one's walking - OH NO!Fri Apr 28 1995 13:5919
    You may be right George.  
    
    For what it is worth, whne I listen to the local FAN call in show, most
    of th sentiment seems to be running against the players in particular
    and baseball in general (I realize that talk radio is not necessarily
    representative of the fan base as a whole).  Lots of folks talking
    about never going to another game.
    
    Next Friday, May 5, should be an interesting indicator of fan
    sentiment.  It is the first night home game for the Braves, and they
    have a big fireworks display scheduled.  I'll probably be at the game. 
    If they have less than 30,000, and that attendance figure carries over
    to the weekend, then I'll say that the fans may be staying away (until
    the playoffs.)
    
    BTW, I've never seen the field in better shape. Guess it helps when
    they don't have tractor pulls and moto crosses on it in the off season.
    
    UMDan
178.938USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Apr 28 1995 14:4122
>    For what it is worth, whne I listen to the local FAN call in show, most
>    of th sentiment seems to be running against the players in particular
>    and baseball in general (I realize that talk radio is not necessarily
>    representative of the fan base as a whole).  Lots of folks talking
>    about never going to another game.

I've heard some say that the diehards will be there no matter what.  But
MLB will be hurt by the *casual fan's* lack of interest.  This is the guy
who 'sometimes' checks the boxscores and standings, and thinks about going
to or watching a game at the last minute.  These are the guys that have
lost interest because of the work stoppage.  They may not get interested
until mid-season.  There was no "hotstove league" to build-up interest,
and Spring Training was very short.

But if the union keeps talking of 'boycotts' and another strike, these
guys may not invest their time in something that will not have a conclusion,
AGAIN.

And you may say, "so what ?".  The casual fans are the ones that
drive TV ratings, and TV pays the freight in pro sports.  Diehards
produce 1.9 Neilsen ratings, like those for a typical ESPN college
basketball game, or an NHL game.
178.939Fehr is a pigAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksFri Apr 28 1995 15:5616
I will go to a Braves game when Fehr gets fired.  I was with a friend a mine
at a bar and he won two field level seats for a Rockies game in May.  He
offered me the other seat, I refused.  I am really upset about this issue
of Fehr circlulating the list of replacement players to the "union".  Last
week on the "680 The Fan" call in talk show, the interviewed the wife of the 
Braves replacement player who was shot and killed in West Palm last month.  
This was really sad to hear.  She said that none of the regular Braves or any 
major league player has contacted her.  Although the "union" had nothing to do 
with this death, I can invision the pig Fehr snickering when he heard
what happened.  Some of these replacement players lost their regular jobs to
try out for major league teams.  All I can see that the union lost was three
or four paychecks to the strike.  The owners and the fans lost out big time.


Paul
178.940More sound reasoning from the player hatersMUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Fri Apr 28 1995 16:427
So, Paul, because you're frosted at the head of the players' union, you're
going to punish them by not going to Braves' games?

I'm sure Ted Turner will be delighted at the way you're sticking it to Don
Fehr.

Steve
178.941will it ever stop???BSS::MENDEZFri Apr 28 1995 16:5113
    I don't know about Paul but I am frosted at the players and the owners.
    I will stay away from the game and the merchandise for some time.  I
    was not a frequent game viewer anyway but believe me the merchandise
    buying will stop.  BTW the Rockies player rep for the union Joe Girardi
    was quoted as saying "the replacement refs were just trying to do their
    best".  Wonder why we didn't here that about the replacement players???
    There is greed on both sides and we are continuing to pay for it.  I'm
    amazed that even 20,000 people showed up for the Braves home opener.
    The Rockies had opening attendance in the 45,000 range.  Somethings
    never cease to amaze me.....
    
    Frank Mendez
    
178.943ODIXIE::ZOGRANYoungest one's walking - OH NO!Fri Apr 28 1995 17:467
    At Atlanta Fulton County Stadium yesterday someone put up a large sign
    (40 - 50' x 6'), at the top of the upper deck underneath an old press
    box, that said "Remember Shotoski" (sp).  It stayed up the whole
    game, and may still be there.   His widow was in the owners box on
    opening day.
    
    UMDan
178.944HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Apr 28 1995 17:4714
  Well maybe you are continuing to pay for it but I'm not. As far as I'm
concerned, baseball's back and that's great. 

  So they only went 4 months last year instead of 6. Big deal. Olympics comes
only once every 4 years and lasts 2-3 weeks. America's cup comes once ever 3
years and coverage is very limited. By comparison, we get tons of baseball even
if they do shut everything down for a couple months once per decade. 

  As for players not calling the replacement players wife, well Michael J.
Fox didn't call my father when his sister died but that doesn't mean we won't
go to his movies. There was little if any relationship between the players and
the replacements. Heck, I didn't call his wife either, did you?

  George
178.945MKOTS3::LONGSpring has sprung, grass has rizFri Apr 28 1995 19:1413
    I'll still go to the games.  Hail, I was one of the few in here who
    was willing to pay to see the 'spring training' players play the 
    game.  I really don't think the owners will be hurt that much by 
    empty seats.  I think their main revenue is from tv and radio.
    (I may be wrong)
    
    In my opinion the empty seat mentally effect the players more.
    Being entertainers it's like a play opening to an empty house.  Some
    of the thrill of the performance must be lost.
    
    
    
    billl
178.946:o)USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Apr 28 1995 20:506
>    In my opinion the empty seat mentally effect the players more.
>    Being entertainers it's like a play opening to an empty house.  Some
>    of the thrill of the performance must be lost.

And from the clips I saw, Glavine didn't care for the boos he got from
those who did show up.
178.947HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri Apr 28 1995 21:0114
RE                    <<< Note 178.946 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>And from the clips I saw, Glavine didn't care for the boos he got from
>those who did show up.

  If Glavine get's his circle change working and starts winning games the
boos will quickly disappear. On the other hand, if he loses his edge and
they start pounding him, it will get worse.

  Funny, that's exactly what would have happened without a strike.

  I wonder what that means?

  George
178.948AIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksFri Apr 28 1995 21:1414
Re: .944

> As for players not calling the replacement players wife, well Michael J.
>Fox didn't call my father when his sister died but that doesn't mean we won't
>go to his movies. There was little if any relationship between the players and
>the replacements. Heck, I didn't call his wife either, did you?

Great comparison George.  I don't know what else I should  expect from a 
lawyer-wannabe.  Isn't Fehr a lawyer?

I didn't call his wife, but I am looking for the address to make a donation.

Paul 
178.949PTOSS1::JACOBRPlaying with box the kids came in!Fri Apr 28 1995 21:5816
    
>>  If Glavine get's his circle change working and starts winning games the
>>boos will quickly disappear. On the other hand, if he loses his edge and
>>they start pounding him, it will get worse.

>>  Funny, that's exactly what would have happened without a strike.

    Wrongo, George.  the Atlanta fans would not have been booing glavine in
    his first start of the season had it not been for the strike.  They're
    not Philadelphians, who will boo the National Anthem, they would cheer
    for Glavine there.
    
    JaKe
    

    
178.950HELIX::MAIEWSKISat Apr 29 1995 13:578
  Question is, how many fans were booing Glavine? In Boston one reporter said
the ratio of boos to cheers when the players were announced was about 10% boos
to 90% cheers. 

  Also, did that change as the game went on? How did Glavine do and how was he
treated later in the game? 

  George 
178.951PTOSS1::JACOBRPlaying with box the kids came in!Sat Apr 29 1995 17:598
    I dunno, George, why don't you go to Atlanta, get a list of EVERYBODY
    who was at the game, and go interview them personally, then report back
    to us.
                                            
    Sheesh
    
    JaKe
    
178.952HELIX::MAIEWSKISat Apr 29 1995 18:179
  Why, what would a list like that prove.

  All I want to know was if the reaction to Glavine was mostly negative
or positive? Did the fans really give it to him or were there a few
scattered boos?

  Is that an unreasonable question?

  George
178.953Greed is goodAIMTEC::MORABITO_PHotlanta RocksSat Apr 29 1995 19:1520
Glavine was shaky the whole time he pitched.  Yeah, when he fanned a batter
they cheered.  He didn't endear himself to the fans when he gave up two
runs in the first.  A couple Braves did mention that it was strange playing
before such small crowds.  I do agree with George however, when things heat
up later in the season the fans will be back.  I already have seen people I
know who claimed they would never go to a game again shell out the bucks
and go.

On the other hand you gotta love the Mets "fans" who jumped on the field
wearing "Greed" on their T-shirts and throwing money at the players.  I 
worked last night so I didn't see the replay of it.  It has to be a classic.

Steve Avery, one of the four starting pitcher for Atlanta got rocked last
night by L.A.  Avery is the only player on the Braves yet to be signed.  He
wants 4.3m the Braves are offering 3.5m.  In my opinion he is the weakest
of the starters and really only had two good years.  They should send him
packing.

Paul
178.954SALEM::DODAKids, don't try this at home...Mon May 01 1995 03:256
The stats show that, in the past, players who took the lead 
or were outspoken in labor negitiations have had miserable years on 
the field. Glavine will have to buck the trend to have his 
usual year.

daryll
178.955CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Mon May 01 1995 12:329
    Gammons had a good article yesterday. Basically it said baseball
    (players and owners) better start realizing who pays their bills (the
    fans) and start some serious butt-kissing. 
    The average player salary is down 10% compared to last year, attendance is
    down about 20% and that is with some 1/2 off ticket prices and some
    1.00 admissions. The fans are talking with their wallets and the mouths
    and both sides better wake up.
    
    Mike
178.956HELIX::MAIEWSKIMon May 01 1995 13:1719
RE       <<< Note 178.955 by CSLALL::BRULE "Was there life before ESPN?" >>>

>    The average player salary is down 10% compared to last year, attendance is
>    down about 20% and that is with some 1/2 off ticket prices and some
>    1.00 admissions. The fans are talking with their wallets and the mouths
>    and both sides better wake up.
    
  Well yes and no.

  True salaries are down 10% but according to the Boston Globe that has mostly
to do with the fact that teams are being allowed to carry 28 players instead of
25 on their major league rosters. Since the last three guys are normally rookies
making $190,000 per year, that brings the average down. According to the Globe,
based on 25 man rosters, salaries are only down by 1.3%. 

  As for attendance, the Globe put it at 4%, not 20%. Most likely it's another
example of people measuring different things.

  George
178.957Play the numbers gameODIXIE::ZOGRANYoungest one's walking - OH NO!Mon May 01 1995 13:4017
    Regarding Glavine - There were more boos directed at him during the
    introductions than any other player (even Bonds for SF).  During the
    game, when he threw a bad pitch, the fans around me would say things
    like "How much was that pitch, Tom, $10,000?".  However, as the game went 
    on, the retoric decreased.  I imagine that the response to Glavine will
    depend more on his pitching than his union activity (unless the players
    decide to boycott the All-Star game, and he becomes a spokesman once
    again.)
    
    Regarding attendance - The NL went to the number of tickets sold as
    opposed to turnstile count last year (I think).  As a result the
    attendance figures are not a reflection of AIS (Asses In Seats).  Last
    Thursdays game (as I said earlier) had an official attendance of
    26,000, but AIS was closer to 12,000.  Depending on what figure you
    use, attendance is either a little or a lot off.
    
    UMDan                                           
178.958USCTR1::GARBARINOMon May 01 1995 13:555
re:  Atlanta's pitching staff

From my experience, even the best pitchers only have 2-3 *prime* years.
Maybe Atlanta's starters have past that point.  Wouldn't it be sad if
they built all this offense, and nurtured all these youngsters too late ?
178.959USCTR1::GARBARINOWed May 24 1995 20:023
USA Today is running a 4-part series this week on MLB's post-strike
recovery.  Only 4 teams (Boston, Detroit, the Mets and Montreal) are
running ahead of last year's revenues at this point of the season.
178.960PCBUOA::MORGANWed May 24 1995 20:585
    Can anyone explain why the Mets have increased revenues but the Yankees
    haven't?  You would think with the Yankees being favored to at least
    win the East, the fans would be excited.
    
    					Steve
178.961HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed May 24 1995 21:0223
Re                    <<< Note 178.959 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>USA Today is running a 4-part series this week on MLB's post-strike
>recovery.  Only 4 teams (Boston, Detroit, the Mets and Montreal) are
>running ahead of last year's revenues at this point of the season.

  That shouldn't be a surprise considering that they canceled the end of their
season last year. The World Series always generates interest among marginal
fans and that often carries over into the spring. 

  Assuming that they get some sort of agreement and don't strike again, the
question will be what does their attendance look like at this time next year
after a full season, a playoff and World Series. My guess is that while they
won't be all the way back they will be in decent shape and the strike will be
relegated to the category of trivia questions. 

  A six or seven game "all tribe" Indians v. Braves World Series or a series
involving the Yankees would all but wipe out the effects of the strike. 

  Meanwhile, the real fans are back. If it takes a while for the pseudo fans
to start coughing up their cash then no biggie.

  George
178.962MKOTS3::LONGLife is better left to chance.Wed May 24 1995 21:026
    C'mon now, Steve.  You can't seriously expect anyone, except TCM,
    to be able to explain any logic around the Mets and their fans.
    
    
    
    billl
178.963HELIX::MAIEWSKIWed May 24 1995 21:034
  The worse the Mets do, the more their fans like it.

  It's a tradition, go figure,
  George
178.964AKOCOA::BREENIndians rule,sox sip; Phillip is sixWed May 24 1995 21:058
    Is it the location of the stadium and the acceleration of a trend
    already in place even last year?  Fenway park has managed to continue
    to be regarded as a safe park and attract the family crowd.  I suspect
    less families one to get to Yankee stadium for night games.
    
    I think Steinbrenner will be perfectly happy to use low attendance as
    an excuse to get out of the city to New Jersey as opposed to promoting
    the game to the ethnic community.
178.965don't call 'em "Fenway Faithful" for nuttin'USCTR1::GARBARINOThu May 25 1995 14:3934
>  Assuming that they get some sort of agreement and don't strike again, the
>question will be what does their attendance look like at this time next year
>after a full season, a playoff and World Series. My guess is that while they
>won't be all the way back they will be in decent shape and the strike will be
>relegated to the category of trivia questions. 

>  Meanwhile, the real fans are back. If it takes a while for the pseudo fans
>to start coughing up their cash then no biggie.

Spoken by someone who has absolutely NO FINANCIAL interest in this business
at all.  You're a kick George.  "No biggie" !  In every professional sport
it's the "marginal" fan's money that determines profit/loss.  Cash in the
cash register is a very real concern TODAY.  I'm sure not one owner is
sitting back comfortably thinking that next year everything will be fine.

Baseball has been sliding for at least a decade, in terms of popularity
among sports fans.  What this season's early attendance figures could be
indicating is that the fans ARE finally speaking, and that perhaps that
slide has been greatly accelerated.

I love the game, but I'm being honest when I say that my excitement for
it is NOT the same....and the expectations for my team haven't been this
high since Mr. October was still on our roster.  And maybe that's where
the rest of the Yankees fans sit too.  The problems with The Stadium's
location are well known, but NYC offers a multitude of teams to follow
and many more non-sports activities than the average city.

As for the Mets, they had an awful attendance year last year, so a small
improvement (which is what it is) over last year is probably not significant.
But the Boston #s are eye-opening.  Given the joint is jammed even in down
years (like last year), a year-over-year improvement following this
horrific strike (it will never be considered trivial George) tells me
that no matter what MLB does, as long as there are warm bodies wearing
"Red Sox" on their uniforms, "they will come".
178.966HELIX::MAIEWSKIThu May 25 1995 14:5825
RE                    <<< Note 178.965 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>In every professional sport
>it's the "marginal" fan's money that determines profit/loss.  Cash in the
>cash register is a very real concern TODAY.  I'm sure not one owner is
>sitting back comfortably thinking that next year everything will be fine.

  What does this have to do with anything? Sure, some owners might be a little
nervous. So what? They should be nervous considering the hair brained stunt
they tried to pull. All I'm saying is that I predict it will all work out and
the fans will be back next year. That's my opinion.

>Baseball has been sliding for at least a decade, in terms of popularity
>among sports fans.  

  No, this is wrong. Attendance was on a steady increase at major league parks
before the strike and at all levels in the minors. And with Magic and Bird
retired and Jordan playing AA baseball guys like Frank Thomas and Ken Griffey
were gaining name recognition that few baseball players have had since the
70's. 

  Of course if I lived in New York and had to choose between Steinbrenners
Yankees and the Miserable Mets I might be down on the sport as well. 

  George
178.967SALEM::DODAChairman of the BoredThu May 25 1995 15:488
He's right, attendence has been increasing steadily over the past 
few years.

Hype won't fill the park, results will. That's why NY can't get 
the fans into the park. If and when their performance matches 
their press clippings, the fans will be there in droves.

daryll
178.968You can read anything you want into numbersTNPUBS::NAZZAROCeltics coach? I'm available!Thu May 25 1995 17:3115
    Re. attrendance increasing:  THis is misleading.  Attendanc increased
    because, due to expansion, there were two more teams, and thus an
    additional 162 games played the last two seasons.  Add that to the fact
    that the Rockies sold out Mile High Stadium for attendanc over 4
    million per year, and you can see where the increase came from.  Add to
    that the new parks in Chicago, Baltimore, and Cleveland that attracted
    huge numbers to those cities for another attendance booster.  However,
    the fans per game at MLB sites without new parks or teams has stayed
    the same or declined over the past decade.
    
    Add to that the disappointing TV ratings and it is clear that MLB is on
    a steady decline.  Conversely, the popularity of minor league baseball
    ios at an all-time high.
    
    NAZZ
178.969USCTR1::GARBARINOThu May 25 1995 18:0036
>    Re. attrendance increasing:  THis is misleading.  Attendanc increased
>    because, due to expansion, there were two more teams, and thus an
>    additional 162 games played the last two seasons.  Add that to the fact
>    that the Rockies sold out Mile High Stadium for attendanc over 4
>    million per year, and you can see where the increase came from.  Add to
>    that the new parks in Chicago, Baltimore, and Cleveland that attracted
>    huge numbers to those cities for another attendance booster.  However,
>    the fans per game at MLB sites without new parks or teams has stayed
>    the same or declined over the past decade.
    
>    Add to that the disappointing TV ratings and it is clear that MLB is on
>    a steady decline.  Conversely, the popularity of minor league baseball
>    ios at an all-time high.


Thank you, Nazz.  I couldn't have said it better.  And it's been reported
many times that MLB does NOT make its money from game attendance, but
from TV and Radio contracts, and merchandising, ALL of which have been
on the decline.  Polls and surveys done for the sports business have
indicated time after time that of the major sports, baseball and its
stars are not among the general sports fan's favorites.


re:  "What does this have to do with anything ?"

George your participation in discussions always livens things up in here,
but try to make an attempt to understand the topic of conversation before
you drag out your own agenda.  My point in bringing up the USA Today
report is to point out that a significant drop in attendance has the
business concerned that *maybe* this time the fans aren't as forgiving.
Sure, this has serious ramifications on the owners, but it will also
translate to less money for the players come contract time too.  Both
sides miscalculated each other's resolve during the strike, and perhaps
they are now learning that they've miscalculated the fans, who make
this whole business possible.  I hope it's true and this run-away
train gets derailed.
178.970GENRAL::WADEAh'm Yo Huckleberry...Thu May 25 1995 19:157
    
    	Maybe someone could dredge up the attendance figures after
    	the prior baseball "work" stoppages.  It might be a good
    	indicator of just how upset the fans are THIS time.  Where is
    	Ninj when you need him....
    
    Claybone
178.971HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri May 26 1995 13:2417
RE                    <<< Note 178.969 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>George your participation in discussions always livens things up in here,
>but try to make an attempt to understand the topic of conversation before
>you drag out your own agenda.  My point in bringing up the USA Today
>report is to point out that a significant drop in attendance has the
>business concerned that *maybe* this time the fans aren't as forgiving.

  You contradict yourself. First you praise NAZZ for his doom and gloom analysis
of a decreasing trend in support for Major League baseball that went on before
the strike, then you claim that the strike is causing the decline. 

  Make up your mind, was Baseball a thriving industry done it by it's strike or
was it already on the slide in which case the decreasing attendance this spring
would have happened anyway? 

  George
178.972So Id guess it was bad for both sidesMR1PST::THEKGB::MBROOKSFri May 26 1995 14:342
    Well I havnt heard any say or claim the Strike was GOOD for baseball
    :-)
178.973HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri May 26 1995 14:4011
  That's not the question.

  The question is this. Was baseball:

   - gaining in fan support then derailed by the strike.
   - already on the way down and would be losing fans anyway.

  I say they were gaining then got derailed by the strike and by next year
they will be over 90% back to where they were this time last year.

  George
178.974USCTR1::GARBARINOFri May 26 1995 15:4133
> You contradict yourself. First you praise NAZZ for his doom and gloom analysis
>of a decreasing trend in support for Major League baseball that went on before
>the strike, then you claim that the strike is causing the decline. 

>  Make up your mind, was Baseball a thriving industry done it by it's strike or
>was it already on the slide in which case the decreasing attendance this spring
>would have happened anyway? 


George, did you have trouble with reading comprehension in school ?
Below are taken from two of my previous replies...clearly saying that
the early-season attendance #s could be a sign that the strike has
MADE WORSE A TROUBLING TREND IN MLB.



from note 178.969:

*Polls and surveys done for the sports business have
*indicated time after time that of the major sports, baseball and its
           ---------------
*stars are not among the general sports fan's favorites.



from note 178.965:

#Baseball has been sliding for at least a decade, in terms of popularity
                   -----------------------------
#among sports fans.  What this season's early attendance figures could be
#indicating is that the fans ARE finally speaking, and that perhaps that
#slide has been greatly accelerated.
 -----------------------===========
178.975MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri May 26 1995 15:4915
>                     <<< Note 178.973 by HELIX::MAIEWSKI >>>
>  The question is this. Was baseball:
>
>   - gaining in fan support then derailed by the strike.
>   - already on the way down and would be losing fans anyway.
>
>  I say they were gaining then got derailed by the strike and by next year
>they will be over 90% back to where they were this time last year.
>
>  George

   The answer:

 In established markets without newer facilities, MLB was on the way down and
 would be losing fans anyway.
178.976HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri May 26 1995 16:4019
  Ok fine. If you only consider those cities that won't support their team by
building new parks or going to old stadiums it appears baseball is headed down.
If you discount places where there is support like Cleveland and Baltimore
where citizens are willing to build new stadiums or Boston where people would
go if they played in a cow pasture then you don't see any places where baseball
is popular. 

  In fact, here's another one. If you only consider magazines that cater to the
arts and women's fashions, I'll bet you will see a dramatic decrease in
articles written about baseball. And if you only consider areas that are at
least 200 miles from the nearest city you probably won't find any major league
baseball teams at all. 

  Now, what if you do consider the cities with new teams, teams with new parks,
and cities like Boston where fans will go anyway? Whooo, suddenly things are
not so bleak.

  George
178.977USCTR1::GARBARINOFri May 26 1995 17:197
>  Now, what if you do consider the cities with new teams, teams with new parks,
>and cities like Boston where fans will go anyway? Whooo, suddenly things are
>not so bleak.

The polls and stats (attendance, TV and Radio ratings, merchandising)
include these booming franchises and still translate to a business on
the decline.
178.978HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri May 26 1995 17:4527
RE                    <<< Note 178.977 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>The polls and stats (attendance, TV and Radio ratings, merchandising)
>include these booming franchises and still translate to a business on
>the decline.

  I disagree.

  Before the strike everything I heard was that professional baseball was on
the increase in terms of fan participation both at the park and on TV and that
the financial problems were caused because CBS had agreed to pay more in their
contract than they could afford. The new TV contracts were more reality based
and MLB which was expanding in terms of salaries and number of teams based on
the CBS contract was feeling the pinch. 

  What's happening now in terms of the strike may raise hope in the doom
sayers and those who hate baseball or player salaries but that hope will
be short lived. The season canceling strike was a one time event which will
soon be forgotten. Baseball will complete the adjustment to living without
the CBS contract, perhaps they'll have to cancel the plans for the two new
teams and drop a couple more teams then things will return to business as
usual.

  One thing that will not go away and in fact will never go away are the mega
salaries at the top end. Those are here to stay.

  George
178.979WONDER::REILLYSean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375Fri May 26 1995 18:0411
    
    George, even George Will, the biggest owner hater baseball fan
    columnist going, has said over and over that baseball was on the
    decline in most stats - overall media audience, merchandise, etc.
    Only park attendance went up, and that has been explained.  The most
    telling sign were the polls amongst youth, which showed baseball at
    an all-time low in terms of support.
    
    I don't know what all you heard, but baseball has been seeing a
    general decline.
    
178.980HELIX::MAIEWSKIFri May 26 1995 18:2225
  Oh excuse me, "even George Will". Well, how can I argue with George Will? I'm
trying to think, there was one time about 10 years ago when he said something
on Brinkley's show that I actually agreed with but for the life of me I can't
remember now what it was. Something about Sam Donaldson being pushy I think. 

  Attendance is up. There is more baseball on TV than ever before so while the
ratings for a single program may be down, over all that is not necessarily the
case. Superstations have popped into existence that were never around before
and ESPN is drawing millions of viewers who could only choose between their
local team and the Weekly network offering just a few years ago. 

  As for Merchandise every mall has a couple or 3 stores selling caps and
shirts, baseball cards have become more popular than they've been since the
early 60's heck you can even buy a minor league cap which is something you
could never buy before. 

  And baseball is expanding. They added two teams last year and now they are
talking about adding two more. If this industry is in crisis, the people who
are running it haven't seem to have gotten the word.

  Baseball, it's been the greatest game ever played and it remains the greatest
game ever played. And in my pocket are two tickets for Friday's game. So sulk
and complain, gripe about salaries, I'm going to the ballpark.

  George
178.981PTOSS1::JACOBRCertified LooneyFri May 26 1995 19:179
    
>>  Baseball, it's been the greatest game ever played and it remains the greatest
>>game ever played. And in my pocket are two tickets for Friday's game. So sulk
>>and complain, gripe about salaries, I'm going to the ballpark.
    
    And not a one of us in here will bitch much if you just go and leave
    early today.
    
    JaKe
178.982USCTR1::GARBARINOTue May 30 1995 13:064
Doesn't everyone know that in "The World According to George" all actual
facts and figures in the real world are fabricated by some anti-American,
socialist-lovin' commies, and the only reality that matters is the one
perceived from his couch ?
178.983HELIX::MAIEWSKITue May 30 1995 13:443
  ... for example?

  George
178.984but don't they know that George said MLB will bounce back ?USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Jun 23 1995 17:203
NBC and ABC (TV) today told MLB that they want no part of The Baseball
Network, citing the continued decline of the sport as a revenue-producer
over that medium.
178.985I think in reality it was just the oppositeAKOCOA::BREENMon Jun 26 1995 16:261
    
178.986goin' down the shitter...USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Jun 26 1995 17:3211
>                -< I think in reality it was just the opposite >-

Today's reports say that NBC/ABC divorced themselves from TBN 'cause
MLB was trying to squeeze them for more money (currently giving $150M/yr),
and if they didn't get it MLB would shake 'em by 8/15 and see if FOX and/or
CBS would be fool enough to give it to them.  The NBC/ABC guys say no TV
package *should* give MLB $200M/year.

So it really doesn't matter who blew-off who, the point is MLB wants more
TV $$$ and its current TV partners are saying the product doesn't deserve
it (ie: the audience ain't buyin').
178.987IMBETR::DUPREZMon Jun 26 1995 17:3713
>So it really doesn't matter who blew-off who, the point is MLB wants more
>TV $$$ and its current TV partners are saying the product doesn't deserve
>it (ie: the audience ain't buyin').

I don't consider myself to be a brilliant businessman, but this *reeks*
of stupidity.

You've already got an image problem, ratings are down, and you're trying
to get *more* money???

Good for baseball.  Lord only knows why you would want more national TV
exposure.  Pass me the stupid pills, Jerry R.  Here you go, Boss - they
sure taste good...
178.988USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Jun 26 1995 18:557
>Good for baseball.  Lord only knows why you would want more national TV
>exposure.  Pass me the stupid pills, Jerry R.  Here you go, Boss - they
>sure taste good...

Yeah, what MLB should do is tear down the protected market barriers and
allow other team's games to be purchased.  I'm sure they'll tell us
that it's in the future, but they can't move that fast.
178.989TBN was a loser-- fans can't be worse offEDWIN::WAUGAMANMon Jun 26 1995 20:5711
    All is not bad here with the dumping of NBC and ABC a/k/a The Baseball
    Network, though, unless we have all become cynics that measure 
    everything strictly in dollars and cents.  As a TV concept, for the 
    real die-hard fan, TBN sucked.  "Less is better" was their motto.  It
    may even be possible that the baseball owners will engender some
    goodwill by accepting less money in guaranteed revenues, with a return
    to fully televised (or at least expanded) postseason baseball...
    
    glenn
    
178.990ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsMon Jun 26 1995 21:374
    
    ...and maybe a return of an expanded ESPN lineup...
    
    Joe
178.991Further Signs of the DeclineUSCTR1::GARBARINOThu Jul 13 1995 17:133
1995 All-Star Game gets lowest TV rating since they moved it to prime-time
in the 60's (ie: lowest ever !).  But advertisers will surely pay top-dollar
for next year's "Classic" based on George's "bounce-back" theory.  :^)
178.992ERICF::MAIEWSKIThu Jul 13 1995 17:296
  If they sign a contract and play a world series there's every reason to
believe that interest next year will be up. If it is then that's the end of
your decline theory. 

  We'll see,
  George 
178.993nba treading thin iceAKOCOA::BREENThu Jul 13 1995 17:317
    Makes you wonder why the sides in the nba impasse are mimicing they're
    baseball cousins.   Any deal they make now slices up a big pie; they
    could lose the whole thing with a lengthy strike, replacement
    basketball etc.  Nba doesn't have the "tradition" begot by longevity of
    baseball or appeal to the quaint dysfunctionalism of the hockey fan -
    it's become a marketers league and I suspect a sport most easily
    displaced.
178.994CSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Thu Jul 13 1995 18:015
    But isn't the NBA thing more of a player vs player problem then a
    player vs owners problems. The megastars want the megamillions while
    the rest want a piece of the pie? 
    
    Mike
178.995AKOCOA::BREENThu Jul 13 1995 18:1810
    Agreed, but I see the beginnings of acrimony and words being thrown
    around and traditional tactics being used.  One of the sides for the
    players wants cooperation with the nba the other, fueled by good old
    fashioned greed doesn't want the inferior player nor management to
    benefit at his expense even though he making mega millions as it is.
    
    No one ever looked at baseball as ever being a problem between the
    stars and the also rans among the players but beneath the surface that
    problem probably was there.  To prevent the mediocre players from
    hashing a deal the stars of baseball took over the negotiations.
178.996USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Jul 13 1995 18:229
>    hashing a deal the stars of baseball took over the negotiations.

And a fine job they did....


re:  split between mega-stars and everyone else

Let them play one-on-ones against each other and see how many fans show
up.  It's still a team sport.
178.997Myopic agents only care about their own millionsWORDY::NAZZARORIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94Thu Jul 13 1995 18:2711
    I see no evidence that interest in MLB will bounce back, WOrld Series
    or no World Series, contract or no contract.
    
    As far as the NBA labor problems go, this is a unique one since it pits
    union vs agents, with theowners playing a secondary role.  The ONLY
    issue, and I maean only, is the threatened loss of megabucks from
    agents pockets due to a rookie salary cap.  Jordan, Ewing, and the
    other multi-millionaires are being used as dupes by their agents, and
    they should be smart enough to see that.
    
    NAZZ
178.998ERICF::MAIEWSKIThu Jul 13 1995 18:3717
RE      <<< Note 178.997 by WORDY::NAZZARO "RIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94" >>>

>    I see no evidence that interest in MLB will bounce back, WOrld Series
>    or no World Series, contract or no contract.
    
  Do you see any evidence that it won't? How do you know what's going to
happen next year, the year after, etc.

  As for the strike, if anything other sports are probably noticing that
even with a canceled season and no championship baseball drew 80% of it's
fans early in the season when fan interest is normally low and the winning
teams are packing them in.

  Based on that there's ever reason to believe that the negative impact
of a season ending strike is short term only.

  George
178.999AKOCOA::BREENThu Jul 13 1995 18:4816
    Well Nazz, as I've been hammering for awhile now, I think there is a
    fundemental disconnect between cap salaries for megastars and the stars
    intrinsic worth.  On the other hand Joe's point is valid about the
    stars needing a milieu to earn the money or just how much did those
    guys on the washington generals make?
    
    I heard on the radio that when Magic first wanted to return that it
    wasn't the comments by players such as Malone that hurt but the
    comments by Colengelo who Magic reasoned had been a terrific
    beneficiary of his and Larry's efforts in saving the league (and Magic
    was right on the money).
    
    Note btw that Golf has something very similar that Greg Norman tried
    and failed to address.  Note also that in 50s Williams and Mantle were
    making 10 times what Joe DeMaestri and Matt Batts were making - Jordan
    doesn't make 10 times Rick Fox's salary.
178.1000zzzzzzzzzzzz...IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Thu Jul 13 1995 19:072
As I look into my crystal ball, I see reply #2000 in the near future...
178.1001Although I did fall asleep before NL bats woke up completelyEDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Jul 13 1995 19:2812
> 1995 All-Star Game gets lowest TV rating since they moved it to prime-time
> in the 60's (ie: lowest ever !).  But advertisers will surely pay top-dollar
> for next year's "Classic" based on George's "bounce-back" theory.  :^)
    
    Still comparable to the ratings of actual *real* games of the 
    championship round of the world-renowned, ultra-popular 
    NBAfantastick-ball.  Everything is relative.  Dead is still
    right up there with alive, vibrant...
    
    glenn
    
178.1002CSC32::MACGREGORColorado: the TRUE mid-westThu Jul 13 1995 21:349
    
    George,
    
    I'm a little confused by your 80% comment.  Are you saying that the
    stadiums have been 80% full so far this season?  Or are you saying
    something else?
    
    Marc
    
178.1003ERICF::MAIEWSKIFri Jul 14 1995 12:104
  During the all-star game the announcers said that attendance this year was
running at 80% of last year's totals.

  George
178.1004SALEM::DODATwitchin' like a finger on the trigger of a gunFri Jul 14 1995 13:035
Only three teams in MLB have not seen a decrease in average attendence 
from last year. Boston, Cleveland, and Montreal are all up 1%
over last years average.

daryll
178.1005CSC32::MACGREGORColorado: the TRUE mid-westFri Jul 14 1995 13:596
    
    Okay, I'll buy the 80%.  I thought they might be saying 80% capacity in
    which case I was going to laugh.
    
    Marc
    
178.1006MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Jul 14 1995 15:5411
    
 >> Still comparable to the ratings of actual *real* games of the 
 >> championship round of the world-renowned, ultra-popular 
 >> NBAfantastick-ball.  

    Talk about your unfair comaprisons - a once a year event where by
    rule every city in the league is represented vs. a seven game series
    between two very small market teams. This was the sort of skewed
    comparison we saw when the World Cup was here. Anyone notice the glut
    of network soccer programming?    
    
178.1007ERICF::MAIEWSKIFri Jul 14 1995 16:336
  So care to compare the potential ratings of a World Series between the Reds
and Indians with the NBA all-star game?

  I bet the World Series would win. 

  George
178.1008MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Jul 14 1995 16:5412
 >> So care to compare the potential ratings of a World Series between 
 >> the Reds and Indians with the NBA all-star game?

     How do compare the ratings of something that hasn't happened (and
     might not ever) with any thing much less an event that is totally 
     different from the ones previously discussed? And what would be the 
     point of such an exercise? 
    
     BTW - I'd like to see a comparison of the demographics of the
           viewers of the baseball all-star games and the NBA finals.
           I'd guess that basketball wins hands down in the eyes of
           Madison Avenue.
178.1009USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Jul 19 1995 14:2117
>  Do you see any evidence that it won't? How do you know what's going to
>happen next year, the year after, etc.

>  Based on that there's ever reason to believe that the negative impact
>of a season ending strike is short term only.


Evidence that baseball might not "bounce back" is this year's low attendance,
low TV ratings, the break-up of the The Baseball Network, and even the
decline in merchandising revenue (yesterday's USA Today...before the
strike baseball was making minimal gains, while the NFL and NBA were
growing between 20 and 30% annually...MLB merchandising $$$ fell last
year).  These are facts.  You are speculating.

Sure, the fans may come back after giving the owners and players a one-year
spanking (historical fact shows they have).  But, the "evidence" out there
now does NOT support your "bounce back" wishes.
178.1010Just de factsODIXIE::ZOGRANReasonable summer ratesWed Jul 19 1995 14:4831
    Some facts from yesterday's paper regarding attendance at Braves games - 
    
    Through 38 games. 
    
    Tickets sold - 1,297,388
    
    Attendance - 935,961
    
    No Shows - 361,427
    
    Average No Shows - 9,511
    
    The no show rate is double what it was last year (IMO people and
    corporations signed up for season tickets mainly to get good seats when
    the new stadium opens and it becomes a status symbol to have seats
    there)
    
    Average attendance figures for MLB and the Braves - 
    
                  1995             1994            1993
    
    Braves      34,142           46,171          47,496
    MLB         24,462           30,765          30,636
    
    
    I, for one, will be going to tonights game with Maddux pitching against
    the Bucs.  Gonna buy a couple of cheap seats and then move to behind
    home plate after the 3rd or 4th.
    
    UMDan
    
178.1011ERICF::MAIEWSKIWed Jul 19 1995 14:5211
RE                   <<< Note 178.1009 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>Evidence that baseball might not "bounce back" is this year's low attendance,
>low TV ratings, the break-up of the The Baseball Network, and even the
>decline in merchandising revenue ...

  That's evidence that they are having problems today, but how can you tell
from those things you have listed whether this is a temporary problem or
a trend that will extend into the future?

  George
178.1012ODIXIE::ZOGRANReasonable summer ratesFri Jul 21 1995 13:305
    The WS telecasts will be split between two networks this year.  ABC
    will broadcast games 1, 4 and 5, NBC will air games 2,3 and 6.  Who
    gets game 7 is up in the air.
    
    UMDan
178.1013let the free market LIVE !!!USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Jul 21 1995 14:063
>    Who gets game 7 is up in the air.

They should both do it...ala Super Bowl I.
178.1014Isn't only fans staying away from the ballparkTNPUBS::NAZZARORIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94Mon Jul 24 1995 19:093
    Also Braves telecasts are down 22% on TBS from last year.
    
    NAZZ
178.1015USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Jul 24 1995 19:464
>    Also Braves telecasts are down 22% on TBS from last year.

Just read that in 3 large US cities (Atl, Det, and ???) they couldn't
find a radio station to pony-up the $$$ to carry the All-Star game.
178.1016IT WAS A DIFFERENT SITUATION THEN THE HOCKEY LOCKOUT.KDCA03::CDCUP_TORRENMon Jul 24 1995 20:0111
    
    	Well, the owners have no one to blame but them selves, they
    shot them selves in the foot. The players are still gettin paid,
    the owners are the ones losing. I don't follow baseball much, and
    don't know who was right or wrong (if there is such a thing) alls
    I know is that its gonna be a long road back to where baseball once
    was. I do know that it was a different situation then the Hockey
    LOCKOUT, where the owners were the greedy money glutton pigs, that
    were wrong.
    
    Bob 
178.1017Have you found a way to sneak into Foote's duffle bag yet?AD::HEATHTribe Rooools Sox Suck (again by the way)Tue Jul 25 1995 16:0110
    
    
     Good to see ya over here Boborado....but the NHL lockout and the MLB
    strike where very much the same.  Both side where incredibly greedy
    and didn't want to give an inch and fought over millions while both
    sides lost billions (over the long run).  The NHL seemed to fair a
    little better at the gate but attendance was down a bit but baseball
    will take years to come back.
    
    Jerry
178.1018ERICF::MAIEWSKITue Jul 25 1995 17:4211
  Well we shall see.

  I keep hearing about a downward trend, does anyone have numbers showing a
decrease in attendance from a month or so ago to today? Seems if there were
really a downward trend early June should look good compared to more recent
box office activity.

  I still say it's a temporary setback and that if they get a contract signed
next year will be better.

  George
178.1019CAMONE::WAYSoftware MorticianTue Jul 25 1995 18:2112
Well, I realize one man's opinion doesn't a whole world make, but to me there
is no special significance attached to a contract.

I'm probably one of the folks in here who really gets into baseball and this
year, quite frankly, has not GRABBED my interest as in years past.  I still
love baseball, and one of these nights I'll pop in my "When It Was a Game"
tapes, but I haven't made the effort to really follow the season this year.

I'm not sure that next year will be any different.


Now I'm really excited about Football this season, with the two new teams....
178.1020USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Jul 25 1995 18:563
>Now I'm really excited about Football this season, with the two new teams....

and the Giants having that new, multi-talented offensive machine !
178.1021CAMONE::WAYSoftware MorticianTue Jul 25 1995 19:0811
>
>and the Giants having that new, multi-talented offensive machine !
>

Yeah, but they still have Dan Reeves.....


(you KNEW I HAD to say it!)


'Saw
178.1022USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Jul 25 1995 19:113
>(you KNEW I HAD to say it!)

Someone had to serve it up for you...
178.1023No Winter advertismentsCSLALL::BRULEWas there life before ESPN?Tue Jul 25 1995 19:259
    How much of baseball's attendance problems were caused by what Gammons
    called the "nuclear Winter"? Usually during the offseason teams are
    trading, signing Free Agents and hyping their rookies. Fans start to
    get baseball fever in February and then 6 weeks of spring training adds
    to it. Come April everyone is ready. This year's offseason and Spring
    Training was condensed to 4 weeks and things started late. If a new CBA
    isn't reached before December the same thing will happen next year.
    
    Mike
178.1024USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Jul 25 1995 20:5815
>    How much of baseball's attendance problems were caused by what Gammons
>    called the "nuclear Winter"?

A lot of it, IMO.  But as fans discover other things to do this summer,
how many of those *casual* fans will ever purchase the # of tickets they
used to ?  And what about the impact this year will have on the future
fan...the kids that aren't following the sport at all this summer ?
This is what the *experts* are looking at when they project MLB's
future...the increasing % of kids who list baseball as their least
favorite sport.  Sadly, I see it with my own 12-yr old son.  Dropped
Little League halfway through to play soccer instead.  Follows MLB,
but only because I talk about it.  Doesn't have the passion for the
game.  His generation doesn't play the game day-in-and-day-out like
I used to.  Are these kids going to support MLB's millionaires of
the future ?
178.1025No bucks from themSPIKED::SWEENEYTom Sweeney in OGOWed Jul 26 1995 11:3614
>Are these kids going to support MLB's millionaires of
>the future ?

I don't THINK SO!

	That's the saddest part about this whole mess.  The players and owners
are alienating the one set of fans that they can't afford to loose.  The
youngsters.  Soccer is becoming a huge sport in this country for the youngsters.
 In another 20 years baseball may well be relegated to candle pin bowling 
status while soccer will take over for baseball as the nations summer time sport.

Yuck!

zamboni
178.1026ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsWed Jul 26 1995 12:347
    
    Maybe it's just me, but I think this "death of baseball" stuff
    is highly overrated.  Baseball has a number of messes they need
    to clean up, surely, but I sincerely doubt baseball will ever be
    in significantly worse shape than they are now during my lifetime.
    
    Joe
178.1027SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIWed Jul 26 1995 12:5513
  Attendance at minor league games is at an all time high. I wonder who's going
to those games? 

  Also it's quite possible that all those minor league fans will get drawn back
to the major leagues when their minor league stars get called up to The Show.
After all, at that point the "millionaire crybabies" who "caused the strike"
will be gone and their place will have been taken by those "eager young minor
leaguers" who kept playing while the major league players walked. 

  Of course as we've noticed some of those players seem to be the same guys but
I'm sure that will be lost on those who are most effected by the strike.

  George 
178.1028IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Wed Jul 26 1995 13:1814
>After all, at that point the "millionaire crybabies" who "caused the strike"
>will be gone and their place will have been taken by those "eager young minor
>leaguers" who kept playing while the major league players walked. 
>
>  Of course as we've noticed some of those players seem to be the same guys but
>I'm sure that will be lost on those who are most effected by the strike.

And of course, sooner or later you'll accuse someone of dredging up the same
old lines and the same old arguments over and over again despite the fact that
you do the same thing most times that you draw a breath...

You made your point, George.  Walk away.

Roland
178.1029SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIWed Jul 26 1995 13:258
RE<<< Note 178.1028 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "The stars might lie, but the numbers never do..." >>>

>You made your point, George.  Walk away.

  Funny, I only make this point in response to people griping about the
strike. Why is it you never tell them they've made their point now walk away?

  George
178.1030IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Wed Jul 26 1995 13:4024
>  Funny, I only make this point in response to people griping about the
>strike. Why is it you never tell them they've made their point now walk away?

This is a valid question. I decided to investigate this by examining the 
last 150 replies to this note.

Far and away, the most frequent noters are you and Joe Garbarino.  I've got
a few, and the rest appears to basically be people popping in for a reply or
two.

I examined some of Joe's replies.  Some are flat-out opinion, but a majority
are facts, or opinion gleaned from facts that he cites.  They're basically
more information being added to support his point.

I then examined your replies.  Most either present opinion, or spend time
arguing against the meaning of facts that counter your position.  There's
rarely much besides stating the same opinion over and over again, with
slightly different words.

So I suppose it's more a style problem.  So you're right, I shouldn't tell
just you to walk away.  But I think Joe's stuff contributes a lot.  So I
take back telling you to walk away - I will...

Roland
178.1031No correlation between minor league fans and MLB fansTNPUBS::NAZZARORIP Andrea 1/18/85 - 7-21/94Wed Jul 26 1995 14:1025
    Someone asked a good question a few notes back.  Who is going to the
    minor league games that have allowed them to become so popular?
    
    I don't think it is the same fan base that goes to major league games,
    since many minor league parks are hundreds of miles from the nearest
    major league city.
    
    Minor league fans seem to me to be both families that may have used to
    make a trek to a major league park once or twice a year but prefer the
    closer, cheaper venue as well as long-time baseball fans who enjoy the
    game for itself and not for who is participating.
    
    I don't think those fans will be affected by what happens to baseball
    at its highest level.  Likewise, those fans will not affect what MLB
    does as far as getting back its own fan base.
    
    I think ticket sales and TV ratings will level off next year, but in
    1997 will begin a slow slide that will not be diminshed for a long
    time.  The reason is the solid fan base baseball has had for a century
    will never be the same again.  My kids, Joe's kids, and lots of other
    kids simply don't care for the game the way we did when we were their
    age, and I'm not sure there is anything baseball can do to get that
    generation more interested in their game.
    
    NAZZ 
178.1032AKOCOA::BREENWed Jul 26 1995 15:1023
    I disagree with you Roland, I've watched this baseball strike debate
    over the past year and I find that the opinion George espouses is in
    general ignored and the opposite opinion stated again and again and
    George has only so many ways to state his side.  I will paraphrase
    (sorry George) George's side as simply as possible:
    	Regardless of whether they are arrogant, greedy crybabies or not
    the ml players absolutely have the right to strike and given the
    circumstances virtually no choice but to strike.
    
    	The opposite opinion is stated a number of ways (good?,maybe) but
    it essentially states that baseball belongs to the fans and if the fans
    feel the players are making a good enough living off what the owners
    are offering then it is the duty of the players to accept it.
    
    Now in it's current phase the argument has been put the mlb baseball is
    dying because those players are so spoiled but minor league is doing
    well because those players aren't "spoiled".  George says just wait but
    nobody has said back to him "George, you're wrong, this generation of
    minor leaguers is different and they will all be a combination of Hobey
    Baker and the parfait knight when they get to the bigs.
    
    But nobody in their right mind would state that so George's statement
    is simply left dangling.
178.1033SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIWed Jul 26 1995 15:2712
RE<<< Note 178.1030 by IMBETR::DUPREZ "The stars might lie, but the numbers never do..." >>>

>So I suppose it's more a style problem.  So you're right, I shouldn't tell
>just you to walk away.  But I think Joe's stuff contributes a lot.  So I
>take back telling you to walk away - I will...

  Bottom line, your side is making the claim that baseball is on the decline
but you only provide facts about what's happening now and never provide any
facts or arguments that suggests that the trend will continue into the future.

  And that you keep doing over and over,
  George
178.1034The minorsSPIKED::SWEENEYTom Sweeney in OGOWed Jul 26 1995 16:3326
Just from what I've seen,

	The minor league parks are being filled by the types of people that
were filling major league parks when prices were lower.  For me to take my
wife and kid to Fenway, it's an hours drive each way, $10 for parking, $20 
for food and junk, $36 (at least, and I'd want better) for seats, and about $5
for gas for a total of $71.  In 1995, that's a weeks worth of groceries for 
my family.  I'd bet a similar trip in '75, or '65, or '55 wasn't a weeks 
worth of groceries.  

	The other factor is accessability.  At the major leauges it's tough to
get an autograph.  In the minors a lot of teams have the kids come down to the 
field or some designated area before/after the game to get autographs.  Plus
most minor league parks run more promotions (hat night, card night, 2 for 1
seats, etc.) then the majors do.

	So you factor in that kids aren't playing/watching the game as much as 
they used to, and I don't think you have to wonder why families are heading
to the near by cheaper minor league games.

	Plus I think a lot of people are just fed up with both sides in the 
majors strike, and have turned to the "purer" minor league form of the game.

	my .02, per usual, not likely to have a basis in fact!

	zamboni
178.1035CAMONE::WAYSoftware MorticianWed Jul 26 1995 18:2415
Plus there is another factor too....

I have rarely heard fans at a minor league park yelling obscenities to the
players on the field, or in general acting up.

You go to Fenway and there's always some a__hole yelling four letter words, or
drunk beyond belief.   Families don't like that kind of atmosphere, and I've
heard it is as bad or worse at Yankee Stadium or Shea.

I've never heard that kind of stuff at Beehive in New Britain or Yale Field
in New Haven.  The folks who go there seem to go there and watch baseball and
NOT make a spectacle of themselves.


'Saw
178.1036throw em' the montega ballCNTROL::CHILDSWashing MachineWed Jul 26 1995 18:326
    
    I quess you were never at Lake Park when Buggsy was pitching Saw....
    
    mike
    
    ;^)
178.1037RE: .1035IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Wed Jul 26 1995 18:363
>there's always some a__hole yelling four letter words

As opposed to seven letter words?  :-)
178.1038btw where is that Holman minor league schedule?AKOCOA::BREENWed Jul 26 1995 18:443
    Well I'm going to check Holman field in Nashua out sometime before end
    of season.  I'll check for obscenities but since they'll be in French
    I'll have to bring my LaRousse de Poche.
178.1039Nashua HawksIMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Wed Jul 26 1995 18:5520
Info and tickets:	(603) 883-9000

I'm hoping to take my daughter on Saturday, August 12th.  They're home
that night, playing at 7:00 pm.  I don't have the entire schedule.

They're not doing very well attendance-wise.  (< 1000 per game now.)  The
league founder wasn't too bright, didn't get things straightened out for
a team until a couple of months ago, and is paying for it now.  He would have
been much better off to wait a year, advertise better, and give people time to
get all hopped up about it.

The "nuclear winter" referred to earlier is a pretty good analogy.  No one in
Nashua was even sure they'd have a team, so there was nothing to get excited
about.

There are attempts going on to get one of the Eastern League (AA) teams to move
to Concord, NH, and another to Lowell, MA.

Roland
178.1040SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIWed Jul 26 1995 20:3619
RE          <<< Note 178.1034 by SPIKED::SWEENEY "Tom Sweeney in OGO" >>>

>	The other factor is accessability.  At the major leauges it's tough to
>get an autograph.  In the minors a lot of teams have the kids come down to the 
>field or some designated area before/after the game to get autographs.  Plus
>most minor league parks run more promotions (hat night, card night, 2 for 1
>seats, etc.) then the majors do.

  This is nothing new. I grew up in a baseball neighborhood in Western Mass.
The older guys always went to Springfield Giant games at Pynchon Park and once
in a while they'd go down to N.Y. to see the N.Y. Giants play. I often heard
stories about how one player or another who had practically crawled across the
dugout in Springfield to sign an autograph would snub them at the major league
level. 

  And this was the early '60s. The way you hear people talk about it these
days you'd think it was something new.

  George
178.1041USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Aug 04 1995 14:5116
I watched a news program out of NYC last night and they interviewed
a marketing/ad exec regarding the selling of TV ads for MLB games.
She said that next season the same ad spots will sell for 1/2 of this
year's price.  The reason given:  dropping TV ratings (fact).  Her
subjective opinion:  The game doesn't appeal to the youth market.

The report went on to talk about what MLB had to do to turn things
around.  Some of the advice was:  run FREE youth clinics with REAL
MLB PLAYERS to encourage the kids to play the game;  make the game
more attractive for the TV medium....

So the strike's impact will continue.  Players' salaries will go
down not only because of last year's and this year's losses, but
with the break-up of The Baseball Network and ad revenue projections
at 50% of this year's, how can the owners not squeeze salaries even
more ?
178.1042MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Aug 04 1995 14:555
    Baseball not appealing to the youth market is a result of
   the strike? Really? I thought it hadn't been appealing to
   the youth market for years.
    
178.1043USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Aug 04 1995 15:1012
>    Baseball not appealing to the youth market is a result of
>   the strike? Really? I thought it hadn't been appealing to
>   the youth market for years.

I said "Some of the advice" given.  I thought by now it was
generally accepted that the strike has played the most significant
role in turning fans away, or do you refuse to believe this too ?
The report also concluded (some sports *expert*) that MLB would
have to produce a full season (WS included) and get a labor
agreement before the *old* fans come all the way back.

The point is clear:  Ad revenue for MLB is going down.
178.1044MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Aug 04 1995 17:1510
  >> I said "Some of the advice" given.  I thought by now it was
  >> generally accepted that the strike has played the most significant
  >> role in turning fans away, or do you refuse to believe this too ?

     Nope. But I do refuse to believe that the strike had very much to
     do with baseball's declining appeal to youth. The game has been
     losing ground to basketball and football for the last 10 years
     for a variety of reasons.
    
178.1045SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIFri Aug 04 1995 17:3122
  I agree with Tommy, what does the question of youth's interest in baseball
have to do with the long term impact of the strike?

  I think there are two separate issues

  1). The long term effects of youth being less interested in baseball
  2). The short term impact of the strike.

  Since the pro-owners side really got hosed by the courts backing the NLRB
decision they are trying to gloat over their loss by mixing the two and somehow
implying that youth's lack of interest over the last few years is wrapped up
with the strike. 

  I feel that baseball has always appealed to older folks and youth's lack of
interest in baseball these days probably has more to do with the modern trend
of youth being less interested in what their fathers like and more interested
in what their friends like.

  As for the strike, it will be reduced to a trivia question once a World
Series has been played and a contract has been signed.

  George 
178.1046USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Aug 04 1995 19:323
I can't see the strike being totally unrelated to the lack of interest
in MLB by our youth.  It certainly did nothing to help reverse that downward
trend, and probably accelerated it.
178.1047PCBUOA::MORGANFri Aug 04 1995 19:5314
    For the most part, I think the kids that were MLB fans before the
    strike are still fans, unless their parents influenced their decision.
    
    In our town we had an increase in kids that signed up for Little League
    baseball this year.  Kids still love to play baseball, they just don't
    get the opportunity to watch meaningful MLB games on television, which
    has more of an effect on this statistic that keeps popping up about the
    nation's youth and disinterest in MLB.  
    
    One other interesting numbers to look at in the Boston area.  Pop Warner
    registrations are up (probably at the cost of soccer) this year.  This
    is known as the Drew Bledsoe Factor.
    
    					Steve 
178.1048SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIMon Aug 07 1995 12:1221
RE                   <<< Note 178.1046 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>I can't see the strike being totally unrelated to the lack of interest
>in MLB by our youth.  It certainly did nothing to help reverse that downward
>trend, and probably accelerated it.

  So what? The price of corn in Iowa is related to the lack of interest in MLB
by our youth as is everything else. But is it related in any meaningful way?
And more important, is it related in a way that justifies the pro-owners
gloating about how the strike has caused the lack of interest by our youth
which in turn will cause the down fall of major league baseball? 

  What you are arguing is that 6 years from now some 10 year old who otherwise
would have become a fan will say "heck, I'm not following that sport which had
that strike back when I was 3 years old." 

  The strike will have no direct long term impact on our youth. The youth of 5
to 10 years from now will see this strike as yet another bit of ancient history
that happened before or shortly after they were born. 

  George 
178.1049ODIXIE::ZOGRANReasonable summer ratesMon Aug 07 1995 12:5020
    I just got my SI "1994 The Year in Sports" video the other day (about
    time they sent us long term subscribers something instead of just the
    newbies!).  If you are a Cleveland, Yankess or Expo's fan it will bum
    you out big time.  I had forgotten about all of the teams
    (particularly the AL ones) that were having great years last year,
    and the records that might have been broken (HR's?) had the strike not
    taken place.
    
    Regarding the youth and the interest in baseball - personally speaking,
    my interest in baseball is quite recent (1992 and on).  I really didn't
    follow it before then, but now I'm hooked on the Braves.  Call me a
    bandwagon jumper if you will, but I imagine that I am the customer that
    baseball wants.  They have the hard core fans, and the youths will
    follow the parents (in my case anyway).  Not to jump into the LDUC
    about the long term effects the strike will have on the youth, but Ive
    got to belive that their are a whole lot more diversions for the young
    of this country than there have ever been.  MLB will be competing for
    their time just like everything else.
    
    UMDan
178.1050IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Mon Aug 07 1995 13:2210
>    Call me a
>    bandwagon jumper if you will,

OK, I will... :-)

This surprises me, since I've been unable to avoid the Braves on cable
for years.  I suppose, though, that with cable and superstations, I get
to see the Braves and Cubs as much as the folks in Atlanta and Chicago...

Roland
178.1051Bingo!MUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Mon Aug 07 1995 14:4916
Roland, that's exactly the point.  The Braves are out there where they
can be seen.  But MLB's showcase events, the playoffs and World Series,
are hidden away where kids can't see them, even if they happen to be
played.

The demise of the Baseball Network is a stroke of luck for MLB, if they
will only realize it.  Fox is said to be interested in a Saturday Game
of the Week - in the daytime, where it belongs (though when I think of
those hockey robots...).  Go for it.  Baseball's period of greatest
popularity, as the writer Curt Smith has pointed out, corresponds almost
exactly with the availability of baseball on daytime television.

The seeds of the current decline of interest were sown when the contract
with CBS was signed, and the Game of the Week became a memory.

Steve
178.1052remembering TOCCNTROL::CHILDSWashing MachineMon Aug 07 1995 15:106
    
    I like the Robots but if they're going to use them for baseball it
    seems kind of tough to believe that a metal machine has an itch to
    scratch.........
    
    mike
178.1053Machine oil?MUNDIS::SSHERMANSteve Sherman @MFR DTN 865-2944Mon Aug 07 1995 15:2714
And I wonder what they would spit?

Actually, I kind of enjoyed the robots, too, even though I generally
come down on the purist side of things.  OTOH, by about the fifth week,
the novelty wore off.

No, my concern is more with things like the feel of the game.  I didn't
like Howard Cosell doing baseball because he didn't have that feel.  His
style was the same for baseball, football, or whatever.  Fox seems to aim
its programming at people with an attention span of about 10 seconds, and
I'm afraid they'd try to juice up the game and destroy its leisurely
quality.

Steve
178.1054USCTR1::GARBARINOThu Aug 31 1995 17:3519
If you haven't heard, last night's Mets-Dodgers game in LA reminded us
that the labor problems are very much still controlling MLB.

LA has called up a replacement player (Mike Busch) from their AAA affiliate.
The Dodger players are upset about it, and before last night's game publicly
stated that they might walk off the field when the game starts, despite their
pennant race with Colorado (they're tied for 1st place).

The players did not walk off the field, and did play the game.  Throughout
the game the fans booed Brett Butler.  When Busch came to the plate for
the 1st time they gave him a standing ovation.  After he struck out, he
was given another standing ovation as he walked back to the dugout.

The Dodger players gave the message that union concerns may be more important
than:  1) playing ball,  and 2) a pennant race.  The fans clearly gave the
message that they don't want to hear anything more about the union and its
problems with the owners.  All they want is baseball.  This statement by
the fans has been clear all season long.  And I'll bet there will be
major problems in the off-season before (if) a CBA is reached.
178.1055SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceThu Aug 31 1995 18:226
On another note, seems that the White Sox' moving their BP time 
hasn't effected Frankie's production at all. So in the end, it 
was all just more whining. Unless they want to blame that for the 
fact that they inhale as a whole this year....

daryll
178.1056MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Thu Aug 31 1995 20:0818
   Don't you guys ever get tired of the same anti-union pro-owner drivel
  to the point where you'll even condone egregious scams on fans like
  PSLs? The Dodgers stance was clear, "We meant what we said and we said 
  what we meant." They didn't do anything that any other union wouldn't 
  have done. That's the way the game is played. Where's the hue and cry
  from you guys when Georgia Frontiere or Bob Irsay says, "It's been great
  but the grass is greener somewhere else?" Not a peep. Owners look out
  for their best interests and that's fine. Players look out for their
  best interests and it's a crime against humanity that demands that the
  dead horse be dragged out and flailed yet again.

   As for Frank Thomas the man is a class individual and a pro. It's no
  surprise that he's managed to overcome petty distractions and post the
  kind of numbers we've come to expect from him. Where were you when the 
  Globe ran a front page series on the losers and get-a-lifers that traffic 
  in autographs and memorabilia and have essentially ruined what used to be 
  an innocent hobby?
178.1057take a deep breath and try and relaxMKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::longSome gave all...Thu Aug 31 1995 20:285
	Tommy, I think it's time for another prozine (sp?)



	billl
178.1059IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Thu Aug 31 1995 20:342
Prozac hasn't come to Clinton yet - they still do shock treatments...
178.1061EDWIN::WAUGAMANThu Aug 31 1995 20:5813
                        
>     I'm just tired of hearing the
>     same one-sided view over and over and over (throw in another
>     'and over'). But I don't expect anyone from the I-got-mine-you
>     get-yours State to understand that.
  
    Hey, a good half of the anti-owner position in the debate came from 
    this Graniteheaded-Stater.  Some of us still believe in free
    enterprise... ;-)
    
    glenn
    
                                  
178.1062IMBETR::DUPREZThe stars might lie, but the numbers never do...Thu Aug 31 1995 21:0021
>      I don't nbeed any prozac.

Maybe not.  But your fingers could use it... :-)

>      I'm just tired of hearing the
>      same one-sided view over and over and over

From what I've been told (as one of the new guys), this
is standard operating procedure.

I think any hand-wringing over the situation from either side is
pointless.  It's not life and death.  There aren't leg-breakers
waiting for the "replacement" players behind every metal support 
under the stands, and the owners and the regular players aren't 
going to be eating from garbage cans anytime soon. 

>      But I don't expect anyone from the I-got-mine-you
>      get-yours State to understand that.

Well, things are looking up.  At least you're putting us in initial caps.

178.1063This from a Nashuaite, albeit a former baystaterAKOCOA::BREENThu Aug 31 1995 21:0831
                 -< Welcome to the Boston Celtics Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 227.61             Another Sport with Labor Problems               61 of 61
AKOCOA::BREEN                                        25 lines  31-AUG-1995 17:06
             -< granted it's an inconvenience to many (a strike) >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Well Business Week in the same issue talks about phenomena of the
    excess compensation which the 80s and now 90s has seen.  This of course
    at the same time as the middle class is caught between stagnant income
    increase vs volatile recreation (not to speak of more germane)
    expenses.
    
    A lot of the sports problems began when owners in the major sports
    started reaping windfalls in tv money (later luxury boxes, now
    merchandise and tm credits) and blocking the players as long and hard
    as possible from the excess cash.  Unfortunately the same laws which
    protected the wealthy enterprisers from themselves also granted the
    players anti-trust protection hence collective bargaining.
    
    And hence the possibility of lockouts and strikes unless the owners
    choose to abide by the laws of the country and operate like a business
    and get rid of the draft and just hire and contract out labor (still
    upholding the law, drat).
    
    Outside of a 40 million/year bonanza for Michael this idea pleases very
    few.  So they need "rules of engagement" and to get these have to go
    through labor upheaval.
    
    Why only players generally get blamed is beyond me, I can't fathom why
    the above is so difficult it has to be spelled out and when spelled out
    (seemingly) denied.
178.1064SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceThu Aug 31 1995 21:2724
   <<< Note 178.1056 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!" >>>

   
>  surprise that he's managed to overcome petty distractions and post the
                                          -----

   Bingo. It is now and it was then. So why the crying and gnashing of 
   teeth in the press last spring?

> Where were you when the 
>  Globe ran a front page series on the losers and get-a-lifers that traffic 
>  in autographs and memorabilia and have essentially ruined what used to be 
>  an innocent hobby?

   I have absolutely no idea how you came to the conclusion that since I 
   failed to mention anything on this series, I was somehow in support of it.
   I'm not. The people that took a simple kids enjoyment out of collecting 
   cards and the like and turned it into big business by driving up prices 
   and driving kids out make me sick. I cheered when the bottom fell out.
   In any case, I may have even mentioned it had I seen it. Of course, since 
   I can't stomach most of the drivel they see fit to print, I don't read 
   the rag.

   daryll
178.1065SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceThu Aug 31 1995 21:319
   <<< Note 178.1060 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!" >>>

    
    > But I don't expect anyone from the I-got-mine-you
    > get-yours State to understand that.

    See a chiropractor about that chip on yer shoulder pal.

    daryll
178.1066CAMONE::WAYWe aim by P.F.MFri Sep 01 1995 12:1915
Boys, boys.....

Let's not have any of that stuff now.  We're supposed to be gentlemen (to
a point) in here, so let's maintain a little decorum....



My biggest grip with the trading card business is that the piece of gum
got smaller and smaller and then disappeared....


'Saw



178.1067DECEAT::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Sep 01 1995 13:5723

   Unnecessary shots at New Hampshire aside, this whole issue
  is my pet sports peeve. That somehow players are greedy and
  the owners aren't. Let's be honest enough to admit that there's
  plenty of greed on both sides. Both sides act out of their own
  best interests and fan interest is secondary at best. The big-
  gest beef that the pro-owner guys seem to have is that the players
  hold all the cards because after all, they're the guys you
  want to see. I'm sure John Harrington is a fine owner but if
  he got hit by a beer truck tomorrow most wouldn't know he was
  gone. But when Frank Thomas and the union play their trump card 
  and strike, it's big a injustice. They're sticking it to the fans!
  Owners have always stuck it to the fans whether it's $3.25 for a
  waterd down beer, holding us up for a new stadium or picking up
  and moving in the dead of nioght. But this is a free market economy.
  The players have a right to excercise their bargaining power to
  maximize their revenue. Owners certainly have always tried to max-
  imzie their revenue and usually at the expense of both fans and 
  players. It's just that now the balance of power has shifted. It's
  simple market dynamics. You can either constantly complain about
  it or accpept that the times they are a changin'.
    
178.1068SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceFri Sep 01 1995 14:0818
Tommy,

My problem with Butler and the rest of them is that other teams 
have called up replacements and we've seen nothing like what 
they're doing in LA.

When the Sox called up Mahay, some of the players said that 
they weren't thrilled with the idea, but they understood his 
situation and since they were in a pennant race, they would live 
with it. Same thing in MIL.

Now we have the Dodgers in a tight race and these guys are 
talking about refusing to take the field and all that BS. 

I'm not resurrecting this dead horse to beat it again, Butler did 
that.

daryll
178.1069MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Sep 01 1995 14:119
	I have no problem with owners sticking up for the owners side,
	and players sticking up for the players side.

	Of course, I also support fans sticking up for what the fans are looking
	to get out of this; and since they ultimately pay the bill, it's hard
	to understand why anyone would complain about fans who boo either side
	that threatens to interrupt the game again.

	Does that make sense ?
178.1070MKOTS3::tcc122.mko.dec.com::longSome gave all...Fri Sep 01 1995 18:459
>>       Does that make sense ?


	In a word......yes




	billl
178.1071USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Sep 01 1995 18:4625
>	to get out of this; and since they ultimately pay the bill, it's hard
>	to understand why anyone would complain about fans who boo either side
>	that threatens to interrupt the game again.

Amen.  It doesn't seem too difficult to understand that MLB players
take a lot of heat 'cause they've caused so much pain to fans of the
sport over the last 20 years.  It's hard for fans to understand why
players take the game away from them when they're making so much money.
Fans find a way to deal with higher ticket, parking and concession
prices.  But the owners never cancelled games on them.

Sure, the players believe they have an economic position to uphold.
But the problem, as I see it, is they've won so many battles over the
years that now, despite operating losses by some teams, they refuse
to be "partners" in this business and make adjustments.  They take,
take, take and give back little in return.  Their huge strike will
depress revenues for years, and the moment owner contract offers
were less than previous years they wanted to haul 'em into court
on collusion charges.  And they'll pull out the same bag of tricks
this off-season, further alienating the owners, and both will march
toward an uncertain season in '96.

My point in posting the note about the Busch-Butler incident is that
the fans have not forgotten (as George claims they will), and any
wiff of bad air from the players will further depress this business.
178.1072Baseball who????BSS::MENDEZFri Sep 01 1995 23:134
    You mean you guys are still watching baseball?   I thought they went
    on strike?  Come on its time for the No Fun League and College 
    Football.  Can't wait to hear Keith Jackson to say
    fuuuuuuuuuuuuuumbllllllllleee.
178.1073ERICF::MAIEWSKITue Sep 05 1995 13:4823
RE                   <<< Note 178.1071 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>Amen.  It doesn't seem too difficult to understand that MLB players
>take a lot of heat 'cause they've caused so much pain to fans of the
>sport over the last 20 years.  

  What pain? Hitting someone with a plank causes pain. Taking away their
job causes pain. Driving a nail through someone's foot causes pain. What
pain is caused because someone doesn't play a game? I love baseball but when
they didn't play I just watched something else in my spare time. Where's this
pain?

>It's hard for fans to understand why
>players take the game away from them when they're making so much money.

  The players AND OWNERS took the game away from the fans.

  And the fans are guilty of contributing to the problem. By attending when
teams win and staying home when teams lose they send a loud and clear message
that owners had better go get the best talent they can get at what ever it
costs to get it. 

  George 
178.1074MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Sep 08 1995 13:1011

     No mention of Bud Selig being roundly booed for telling
    a commission and citizens in Winnetka, Wisconsin that
    "we will take our team elsewhere" unless $160 million in 
    public money is appropriated to help build a $250 million
    convertible-roofed stadium? No spiel about how fans are
    tired of being abused? Or of how the owners are greedy
    and just don't get it? Or is that kind of righteous indig-
    nation reserved for Brett Butler and the rest of the players?
    
178.1075CNTROL::CHILDSWashing MachineFri Sep 08 1995 13:188
    
    the best part was the guy in the crowd who told him to pack his bags
    and go...........
    
    well Tommy after all it must be those greedy players' fault. They must
    have told Bud they can't play in the rain anymore.........
    
    mike
178.1076Miss Sportscenter once and look what happens...SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceFri Sep 08 1995 14:053
I missed it, when did this happen?

daryll
178.1077SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceFri Sep 08 1995 14:1617
   <<< Note 178.1074 by MSBCS::BRYDIE "Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!" >>>

    >Or is that kind of righteous indig-
    >nation reserved for Brett Butler and the rest of the players?
    
    Well since the fans have booed Selig and last week booed the 
    living daylights out of Butler and the rest the conclusion would 
    be it isn't. But, you knew that didn't you.

    Now, if someone could tell me what the difference is between 
    LA calling up a replacement player and Boston, Detroit, and MIL 
    doing the same. Let me help you on that. There is no difference 
    aside from the fact that Butler is a whining spoiled little crybaby 
    and fans have little patience for his ilk. 
    Just as they have little patience for Selig's threats.

    daryll
178.1078SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 08 1995 14:217
  Then again, maybe L.A. fans are different than other fans.

  It wouldn't be the only place where L.A. is different.

  "Yah coool dewd"

  George
178.1079MSBCS::BRYDIEFaster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! Kill!Fri Sep 08 1995 15:4821
    
    >> Well since the fans have booed Selig and last week booed the 
    >> living daylights out of Butler and the rest the conclusion would 
    >> be it isn't. But, you knew that didn't you.

       I meant amongst the noting population here, but you knew that
       didn't you? I knew it wouldn't be mentioned by either JoeG or
       yourself. Just as we heard waht a jerk Frank Thomas was for 
       not wanting to change the time for BP because he wasn't being
       inaccessible to fans but we heard nothing about the lengthy
       Globe series on some of the fagins who deal in autographs and
       memorabilia and use kids to do their bidding. That's why I found 
       Joe's display of righteous indignation just a little disingenuous. 
       Butler's position was indefensible, made him look like a jerk and 
       he could never have followed through anyways. But after he made a 
       fool of himself, we get a bit about the pain the players have caused 
       the fans over the last twenty years. Let's just be little more even-
       handed here. Moves like Selig is trying to pull are far more painful. 
       Players go out on strike but really they have no choice but to event-
       ually return. The Colts ain't never going back to Baltimore.
 
178.1080SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 08 1995 15:5513
  I agree with Tommy with regard to the strike but this brings up something
else that should be obvious by now, Milwaukee is just not a major league
town.

  So far this century 2 teams have left Milwaukee, the current Orioles and
the Braves and now the new Brewers are on their last legs. Seems someone
should take a hint, one team left at the start of the century, one in the
middle, and now one's leaving at the end.

  This is baseball, 3 strikes and your out. Move the team to Tampa or the
South West.

  George
178.1081SALEM::DODAAsk me about my vow of silenceFri Sep 08 1995 16:345
Can someone tell mw when this Selig crap all happened? Was it 
yesterday? I've check ESPNet and haven't had any luck.

Thanks
daryll
178.1082PCBUOA::MORGANFri Sep 08 1995 17:344
    I remember reading something about it earlier in the week.  Not sure if
    it was in Sunday's or Monday's Globe.
    
    					Steve
178.1083MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Sep 08 1995 18:1610
	I hadn't seen it either, but Selig deserves to be booted out of
	Wisconsin on his backside, and hard.  It's just too bad that
	the owners haven't thought hard enough to dump him as well.

	Meanwhile, it should be pretty obvious to everyone (except George)
	that none of the players in Boston/Milwaukee/etc. haven't threatened
	to boycott baseball because a replacement player was brought up.
	George might think it's because people in L.A. are different, but
	I think we would have seen a similar reaction in every major league
	city if the same threats had been made.
178.1084CNTROL::CHILDSWashing MachineFri Sep 08 1995 18:229
    
     Milwaukee Brewers owner Bud Selig was booed at a hearing when he told
     lawmakers "we could take our team and go elsewhere" if the taxpayers
     fail to help build a new ballpark. "take your suitcases and go" one 
     onlooker at the second of three legislative hearings on a plan to
     contribute 160 million in public money toward the 250 million 
     covertible-roof stadium.
    
     Worcester Telegram and Gazette Press Box section  9/8/95
178.1085SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 08 1995 18:3924
  As I said, he should go. Obviously Milwaukee is not interested enough or big
enough to support major league baseball. They've lost two teams and now they
are all but throwing the 3rd out of town. Bud may be strong arming them but no
sort of diplomacy would make baseball work in Milwaukee. He should pack his
bags and leave. 

  What bothers me is that while the owners are weeping and moaning about how
their poorer teams can't make ends meet, rather than move them to prospective
towns that might support baseball they are expanding and sending new teams to
places like Pheonix and Tampa. That's where they lose my sympathy. If things
were as bad as they claim why not move the 2 poorest teams rather than creating
new ones and trying to squeeze blood from a rock in 2nd rate towns? 

  As for replacement players being accepted in Boston, you can thank Mike
Greenwell for that. No joke, Greenwell, went on record right around opening day
as saying they should accept replacement players and saying he would personally
work with players to iron out any problems if a replacement player came to the
Red Sox club house.

  Strange guy Mike Greenwell, one day he picks a fight with Mo Vaughn, the
next day he's the great arbitrator. One day he makes a great diving catch in
left field, the next day one bounces off his head. Go figure,

  George
178.1086Nibblin them no-doze?OLD1S::CADZILLA2Rocky Mountain IchthyologistFri Sep 08 1995 18:441
    
178.1087USCTR1::GARBARINOFri Sep 08 1995 20:5223
>       Joe's display of righteous indignation just a little disingenuous. 

Come again ?  I don't know if this is referring to something specific
I said, but nowhere did I ever say that an owner doesn't hurt fans
by moving his team.  But how many fans can be hurt if so few are
supporting the team ?  Milw's the perfect example, and this time
I agree with George (man, was that hard).

This is far different than all of the MLPA refusing to go to work, isn't it ??
A team moves, MLB games are still played, World Series are still played.
The MLPA goes on strike, the game shuts down.  So when someone asked
why (in general) the players take most of the heat, IMO, this is why.

You people may find this surprising, but I actually sided with the NFLPA.
They were clearly being mistreated (no free agency).  But they never shut
the game down during their struggle.  IMO, the MLPA has little to fight
over.  They've gotten their way every time, and their players are very
wealthy people.  They could have NEGOTIATED a compromise, but instead
chose to keep their winning record in tact, this time going further than
any sports union has ever gone.

This whole thing could have been avoided if Donald Fehr had (as Bob
Costas said) "a 'yes' gene".
178.1088SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIFri Sep 08 1995 21:2029
RE                   <<< Note 178.1087 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>This is far different than all of the MLPA refusing to go to work, isn't it ??
>A team moves, MLB games are still played, World Series are still played.
>The MLPA goes on strike, the game shuts down.  So when someone asked
>why (in general) the players take most of the heat, IMO, this is why.

  Right, but the reason the players went on strike was because of something
the owners wanted to do, imposing an illegal salary cap. So the owners should
be the ones taking the heat.

>They could have NEGOTIATED a compromise, but instead
>chose to keep their winning record in tact, this time going further than
>any sports union has ever gone.

  They tried to get an agreement. The players and most of the owners wanted
that agreement based on a tax but a group of about 9 minority owners held
out for the cap and shut down the game to break the union.

>This whole thing could have been avoided if Donald Fehr had (as Bob
>Costas said) "a 'yes' gene".

  and the players would now be stuck with a cap instead of being able to rely
on a free market. Fehr made the right move and both the NLRB and the courts
backed him up. 

  But hey, I guess we agree Milwaukee doesn't deserve a team.

  George
178.1089The Owners just need to manage betterCSLALL::BRULEyou killed freakin Larry!Mon Sep 11 1995 12:3722
    I think both sides should quit their posturing and negotiate a new 5-7
    year deal and tell everyone connected to keep their mouths shut until
    a deal is done. The teams that are most successful this season,
    Cleveland, Atlanta, the Reds and Red Sox have shown that good managment
    is just as critical as having a top player or two. Cleveland this year
    is reaping the rewards of the job their managment did the last 3 years
    in acquiring good young players and signing them to fair Long term
    contracts. Atlanta has had the best the previous 3 years and yet their
    Farm system churns out 2 future Allstars the last 2 years in Chipper
    Jones and Javy Lopez. The Red Sox got around the league rule that
    forbids giving bonuses for winning a championship but allows bonuses
    for attendance (boy that's a great rule) by inserting attendance
    bonuses for ALCS games in Boston and World Series attendance bonuses.
    I've said it before but I think the owners should swap arbitration for
    Free Agency and flood the market with average ball players and then
    sign them for reasonable amounts. Give the players freedom and let them
    find out what the costs are. Maybe after they see that 20% of the
    players making 80% of the salaries paid out that they'll want to change
    their thinking. And maybe the owners will see that they can control
    costs on their own they won't need to ask the players to help them out.
    
    Mike
178.1090BSS::MENDEZMon Sep 11 1995 17:122
    On a different note the salary cap did not seem to hurt "Prime Time"
    much...
178.1091at what price, success ?USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Sep 12 1995 15:506
>    On a different note the salary cap did not seem to hurt "Prime Time"
>    much...

True.  But look at Dallas' cap situation next year.  They'll have 17
free agents, and with the cap projected to be $40M, they'll have $70,000
to pay them.
178.1092Owners will find a wayBSS::MENDEZTue Sep 12 1995 16:439
    Well maybe Nike or Pepsi or sega could kick in enough endorsements
    to make-up the difference???  I am sure there are loopholes to be
    found.  It seems in this day and age that shrewdness (perhaps greed)
    has reached new levels.  You haven't heard the end of endorsements.
    BTW with Candlestick now being called 3Com for 30 - 40 million
    dollars, Who gets that money???
    
    Frank 9er/suspicious Mendez
    
178.1093USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Sep 20 1995 14:435
The owners have named a new chief negotiator.  He's from NYC, and says
he hopes to be the difference in getting this thing settled.

There are rumors that the PA may strike for a couple of games during the
playoffs (mini-strike ?).
178.1094Would be last straw for most all remaining fans...EDWIN::WAUGAMANWed Sep 20 1995 14:559
> There are rumors that the PA may strike for a couple of games during the
> playoffs (mini-strike ?).
    
    Which would be stupid beyond comprehension and which I can't believe 
    will happen...
    
    glenn
    
178.1095USCTR1::GARBARINOMon Jan 29 1996 18:416
Roberto Kelly just signed a MINOR LEAGUE contract with the Twins.
Gammons just reported yesterday that he turned down a big offer
on the advice of THE UNION.  Now he's got a minor league deal and
has to be invited to Spring Training.

Collusion-*** should be filed in some court, soon...I would guess..
178.1096WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MDonnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!Mon Jan 29 1996 18:458
    
    
        I'm glad the sox Did not acquire him. I think he's still a real
    good player and would have made the sox a much better defensive team.
    
    
    
    Chap
178.1097IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandMon Jan 29 1996 18:524
>Roberto Kelly just signed a MINOR LEAGUE contract with the Twins.

This amazes me.  The guy does a little of everything.  The idea that the
Red Sox would prefer Dwayne Hosey over this guy escapes me.
178.1098ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsMon Jan 29 1996 19:3314
    
>>Roberto Kelly just signed a MINOR LEAGUE contract with the Twins.

>This amazes me.  The guy does a little of everything.  The idea that the
>Red Sox would prefer Dwayne Hosey over this guy escapes me.
    
    Actually, the better comparison would be Alex Cole, and taking Cole
    over Kelly is defendable (they're roughly equal offensively, in terms
    of production) if not obvious.
    
    And there's even a defendable argument for preferring Hosey over Kelly,
    believe it or not.
    
    Joe
178.1099CSLALL::BRULEcountry in need of a leaderTue Jan 30 1996 11:244
    But what is it about Kelly that every other team is passing on him?
    The Red sox aren't the only team needing a CF.
    
    Mike
178.1100IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandTue Jan 30 1996 12:109
>    And there's even a defendable argument for preferring Hosey over Kelly,
>    believe it or not.

I don't.

And if you have the numbers showing Cole and Kelly to be roughly equal, I'd
love to see them.  From my memory (which can admittedly be faulty), I think
of Cole as a guy who treats walks like a communicable disease, which is not
good for someone who makes their living by getting on base.
178.1101ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsTue Jan 30 1996 12:4043
    
>>    And there's even a defendable argument for preferring Hosey over Kelly,
>>    believe it or not.

>I don't.

    OK, here's the argument:
    
    In 1994, Hosey took a big step forward, posting a .330 equivalent
    average in Omaha (equivalent averages are a batting-average like
    comprehensive offensive measurement, normalized to a neutral park
    in the 1992 American League).  Kelly's overlay EQA was about .270.
    With Significant playing time, Kelly's 1995 EQA fell to .252; 
    Hosey, in limited plate appearances, posted a .347 EQA in the majors.
    Hosey's 2 years younger.
    
    Now, I don't _buy_ the argument; if they're the same price, I take
    Kelly every time.  He _might_ be fading out, but I'd give him 
    another year.
    
>And if you have the numbers showing Cole and Kelly to be roughly equal, I'd
>love to see them.  From my memory (which can admittedly be faulty), I think
>of Cole as a guy who treats walks like a communicable disease, which is not
>good for someone who makes their living by getting on base.
    
    Cole doesn't treat walks like a communicable disease; he walks quite
    frequently.  In fact, that his strength - that's how he gets on base
    a lot.
    
    EQA comparison, 1990-1995:
    
    		1990	1991	1992	1993	1994	1995
    Kelly	.283	.290	.270	.294	.271	.252
    Cole        .258	.289	.252	.220	.281	.287
    
    Cole's one year younger.  I'd still prefer Kelly, generally, -but if
    your team needs more OBP rather than power, Cole might be a better
    choice-.
    
    Cole walks once every 9.3 plate appearances; Kelly, once every 15.0
    plate appearances.
    
    Joe
178.1102IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandTue Jan 30 1996 13:2712
>    Cole walks once every 9.3 plate appearances; Kelly, once every 15.0
>    plate appearances.

OK, then I definitely stand corrected RE: Cole vs. Kelly.

I still don't buy Hosey over Kelly.  I could care less what he did in Omaha.
And yes, I know about major league equivalancies.

Hosey is only *two* years younger than Kelly.  And how long has Kelly been in
the bigs?  Quite a while - I remember seeing him play for the Columbus Clippers
against Syracuse, but that was a dog's age ago.  A guy Hosey's age just making
it to the bigs doesn't often make much of a splash.
178.1103We don't want him...might as well bring back Billy HatcherEDWIN::WAUGAMANPride of SteelTue Jan 30 1996 14:0313
>    But what is it about Kelly that every other team is passing on him?
>    The Red sox aren't the only team needing a CF.
    
    Undoubtedly part of it is the major-league 'tude the guy possesses.
    Kelly can't seem to last more than a season in the clubhouse without
    having the other 24 men despise him.
    
    Where I stand on this is that if a guy like Kelly can really play,
    then I can tolerate his negatives.  But Kelly ain't that good.
    
    glenn
     
178.1104ROCK::HUBERFrom Seneca to Cuyahoga FallsTue Jan 30 1996 14:238
    
>I still don't buy Hosey over Kelly.  I could care less what he did in Omaha.
>And yes, I know about major league equivalancies.
    
    I don't either, as I said.  All I claimed was that it's a defensible
    argument.
    
    Joe
178.1105He russian,him finnish; himalayanAKOCOA::BREENYou could see that he truly did love the MademoiselleTue Jan 30 1996 14:3313
    Don't forget that one of the reasons the Sox went to Hosey over Tinsley
    was that the former was more "aggressive".  Glenn refers to it as
    attitude but I'm guessing it is just the way Kelly plays the game.
    
    I am not making any judgements since I'm only really a little bit
    familiar with Hosey.  Kelly was in the deal for Dijon (thanks to
    George's puns I finally "got" that nickname - unbelievably slow eh
    Roland?) wasn't he?
    
    I think DD is making a himalayan attempt to make the redsox into an
    "aggressive" team; good luck
    
    billte
178.1106WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MDonnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!Tue Jan 30 1996 14:386
    
    
       Nope.
    
      It was Kelly for O'neill. I think glen said it was a bad deal for the
    Yanks. But so did I. :-)
178.1107That's it Chap, I'm not going to take it anymore! ;-)EDWIN::WAUGAMANPride of SteelTue Jan 30 1996 14:5010
            
>    It was Kelly for O'neill. I think glen said it was a bad deal for the
>    Yanks. But so did I. :-)
    
    Like hell I did.  I said it was an excellent deal because Kelly
    was an overrated such-and-such that Boston had no interest in, and
    got roasted by you Yankers...
    
    glenn
    
178.1108IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandTue Jan 30 1996 15:242
Chap, I think Bill is talking about one of Kelly's later trades, between the
Reds and the Braves.  Correct me if I'm wrong, Billte...
178.1109:-)WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MDonnie Baseball Yankee HOFer!!!Tue Jan 30 1996 15:573
    
    
       Woops I stand corrected. Dijon plays for so many teams!!!!
178.1110IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandTue Jan 30 1996 16:2811
I'm surprised Dijon hasn't asked for a trade to the Rangers now that he's
playing for the Cowboys.

Chap has me thinking about how many baseball teams he's been on.  If I'm
correct:

			Yankees
			Braves
			Reds
			Giants
178.1111FWIWAD::HEATHThe albatross and whales they are my brotherTue Jan 30 1996 17:014
    
    
     Toss in the White Sox.  Although Dijon never suited up he twas on da
    team.
178.1112MIMS::ROLLINS_RFrom BK&gt;&gt;Dean to BK&gt;&gt;TOTue Jan 30 1996 18:308
>I'm surprised Dijon hasn't asked for a trade to the Rangers now that he's
>playing for the Cowboys.

 While I think Sanders' on field antics in football make him look like a jerk,
 as a Brave he was a great team player and rarely acted to upstage anyone,
 at least not while on the field.  His trade from Atlanta to Cincinnati was
 not at his request, and I believe the Braves would say they got taken in that
 deal.
178.1113SLEEPR::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsTue Jan 30 1996 18:5411
  Actually Sanders didn't look like all that much of a jerk Sunday. On one
occasion he seemed to be taking responsibility for allowing a guy to complete
a sideline pass and at the end of the game in his interview he claimed to have
little to do with the team's victory.

  And he hardly danced at all. Humble Dijon didn't relish being the hotdog in
the spotlight. 

  Hotdogs, relish, mustard, maybe some onion, I'm getting hungry.

  George
178.1114USCTR1::GARBARINOTue Jan 30 1996 19:319
I believe I heard Deion say in an interview (a couple of years ago) that
he's a football player by heart and his skills allow him to play baseball,
kinda like a hobby.  I think he even said football allows him to "express
himself" on the field.

I know the feeling, having been there many times after a rim-wrecking
slam in the Digital Men's league....

	:^)
178.1115:^)USCTR1::GARBARINOWed Feb 07 1996 16:4311
Saw Damn Yankees last night and Jerry Lewis (Applegate -> "The Devil") had
a good line that got a lot of laughs.  During one scene the Senators'
manager and another character were talking about ballplayers and how
they played for the love of the game...

	"Some day players may refuse to play because of their contract !"

	"This is baseball, not BUSINESS !"

and Applegate says:  "Boy did I just have a great idea.  I've got something
		      good planned for 1994."
178.1116CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 16:3126
RE "show me one note saying attendance would NOT be up this year."

  Here's one.

  George

                   <<< Note 178.1009 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

>  Do you see any evidence that it won't? How do you know what's going to
>happen next year, the year after, etc.

>  Based on that there's ever reason to believe that the negative impact
>of a season ending strike is short term only.


Evidence that baseball might not "bounce back" is this year's low attendance,
low TV ratings, the break-up of the The Baseball Network, and even the
decline in merchandising revenue (yesterday's USA Today...before the
strike baseball was making minimal gains, while the NFL and NBA were
growing between 20 and 30% annually...MLB merchandising $$$ fell last
year).  These are facts.  You are speculating.

Sure, the fans may come back after giving the owners and players a one-year
spanking (historical fact shows they have).  But, the "evidence" out there
now does NOT support your "bounce back" wishes.

178.1117CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 16:3522
  Here's another predicting a downward trend.

  George

          <<< Note 178.1025 by SPIKED::SWEENEY "Tom Sweeney in OGO" >>>
                            -< No bucks from them >-

>Are these kids going to support MLB's millionaires of
>the future ?

I don't THINK SO!

	That's the saddest part about this whole mess.  The players and owners
are alienating the one set of fans that they can't afford to loose.  The
youngsters.  Soccer is becoming a huge sport in this country for the youngsters.
 In another 20 years baseball may well be relegated to candle pin bowling 
status while soccer will take over for baseball as the nations summer time sport.

Yuck!

zamboni

178.1118CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 16:3823
  Here's another

  George

                   <<< Note 178.1041 by USCTR1::GARBARINO >>>

I watched a news program out of NYC last night and they interviewed
a marketing/ad exec regarding the selling of TV ads for MLB games.
She said that next season the same ad spots will sell for 1/2 of this
year's price.  The reason given:  dropping TV ratings (fact).  Her
subjective opinion:  The game doesn't appeal to the youth market.

The report went on to talk about what MLB had to do to turn things
around.  Some of the advice was:  run FREE youth clinics with REAL
MLB PLAYERS to encourage the kids to play the game;  make the game
more attractive for the TV medium....

So the strike's impact will continue.  Players' salaries will go
down not only because of last year's and this year's losses, but
with the break-up of The Baseball Network and ad revenue projections
at 50% of this year's, how can the owners not squeeze salaries even
more ?

178.1119MIMS::ROLLINS_RFri Feb 23 1996 16:407
	Well, George, I read these as saying LONG TERM baseball is going to
	have a decline.  I personally believe that (unless something changes
	on the part that MLB and the Players Union do business).

	The fact that I believe there will be a down turn in the LONG TERM
	doesn't mean I think there will be an immediate impact.  That's why
	it's LONG TERM (and not SHORT TERM).
178.1120CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 16:566
  Hmmmm, didn't see a reference to LONG TERM in those notes.

  In fact several people on our side said the effects of the strike would be
temporary but that seemed to get argued down.

  George
178.1121reading comprehension not one of your strengthsUSCTR1::GARBARINOFri Feb 23 1996 17:5027
George asks:

>>  Do you see any evidence that it won't? How do you know what's going to
>>happen next year, the year after, etc.
>>  Based on that there's ever reason to believe that the negative impact
>>of a season ending strike is short term only.

I respond:

>Evidence that baseball might not "bounce back" is this year's low attendance,
>low TV ratings, the break-up of the The Baseball Network, and even the
>decline in merchandising revenue

>Sure, the fans may come back after giving the owners and players a one-year
>spanking (historical fact shows they have).  But, the "evidence" out there
>now does NOT support your "bounce back" wishes.

C'mon George, your question (prompting my response) clearly sets the
context of the discussion as "long term".



And Mr. Sweeney sure is talking long term when he talks about "20 years"...

> In another 20 years baseball may well be relegated to candle pin bowling 
>status while soccer will take over for baseball as the nations summer time
>sport.
178.1122CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 18:015
  My comprehension is fine. If you wanted to say "baseball will bounce back
over the next few years then take a dive" you could have said so.

  George
178.1123IMBETR::DUPREZThe engineer formerly known as RolandFri Feb 23 1996 18:263
>My comprehension is fine. 

Several of us might argue otherwise.
178.1124CLUSTA::MAIEWSKIBos-Mil-Atl Braves W.S. ChampsFri Feb 23 1996 18:423
  Those with whom I usually disagree no doubt.

  George
178.1125MIMS::ROLLINS_RSun Feb 25 1996 01:086
>  My comprehension is fine. 

   That may be, but you don't demonstrate it in your comments.  It was
   obvious from the statements you quoted that the reference was to long
   term.  But we will try to make it even MORE obvious to you in our
   future discussions. 
178.1126POWDML::GARBARINOThu Aug 08 1996 16:339
Owners are going to give the union another *last and final offer* next
week.  Sounds like things weren't progressing, as we were led to believe
by some media reports this spring/summer.


An interesting fact reported on ESPNET:  Attendance was down 20% last
year (on the heels of the strike).  It's bounced back only 5.9% this
year.  On-going tracking must continue to see if the strike made this
impact, or the much-discussed trend toward fewers MLB fans is continuing.
178.1127just checkingHBAHBA::HAASmore madness, less horrorThu Aug 08 1996 16:373
Joe,

Is it time for one of us mod types to change the title of this topic?
178.1128It ain't over yetMUNDIS::SSHERMANClean living and a fast outfieldSun Aug 11 1996 12:0013
CNN International's Teletext reported this morning (Sunday) that negotiators
are holding around-the-clock talks in an attempt to come to an agreement.  It
was reported that the issue is no longer "Will there be a luxury tax?", but
rather "For how long will there be a luxury tax?"

Don Fehr was quoted as saying he had no idea how it was going to come out.

Of course, it's a good thing that they have managed to keep the details of
the negotiations out of the newspapers, but I find it a bit frustrating not
to have a sense of who is being the bad guy.  (There is a natural presumption
that everybody is.)

Steve
178.1129still lingering...POWDML::GARBARINOThu Mar 20 1997 18:3791
            Yankees' replacement players to get Series ring, $25,000

            Associated Press
            ----------------------------------------------------------------

            HACKENSACK, N.J. -- Three New York Yankees replacement
            players each will receive $25,000 and World Series rings,
            though the team's regular players who had been on strike
            opposed the idea.

            The trio is being rewarded by owner George Steinbrenner at
            the urging of general manager Bob Watson, The Record of
            Hackensack reported Thursday.

            Watson said it was "an injustice" to deny Dale Polley, Dave
            Pavlas and Matt Howard a part of the World Series jackpot
            the Yankees received for winning.

            The three also will participate in the ring ceremony at
            Yankee Stadium next month.

            "It's our way of correcting something that was very wrong,"
            Watson said.

            The three were among those who played in exhibition games in
            the spring of 1995 when the major-league players were on
            strike. All replacement players were released that April 1,
            the day before the season began, but Polley, Pavlas and
            Howard were re-signed and were with New York last season.

            Yankees players, after a bitter debate last fall, excluded
            the three when World Series shares were voted.

            Polley told The Record that Steinbrenner's decision "closes
            the issue once and for all. At least I hope so."

            The club had been divided on whether the replacement players
            should get rewarded for the team's World Series victory.
            Yankees' union loyalists David Cone and Jim Leyritz were
            against giving the replacement players anything. In a vote,
            the union loyalists won out.

            Manager Joe Torre has said he was opposed to the union's
            position. At the team's victory parade, Torre told Watson
            what had happened.

            "Until that point, I had no idea they were being punished,"
            Watson said. "I felt I had to take some action."

            Watson took the issue to Steinbrenner.

            "I was part of a management group that said to these
            players, 'Come work for us,"' Watson explained. "We
            encouraged this. So to ignore them after the fact would've
            been wrong on my part. The amount of money being paid is Mr.
            Steinbrenner's decision, but I felt we had to do something
            for these guys."

            All three replacement players were re-signed by the Yankees
            again following last season, after having been released, and
            each was promised a $25,000 bonus. Because Pavlas, Polley,
            and Howard returned to the team that released them, they
            must remain in the minor leagues until at least May 15.

            But during spring training, they are back in the same
            clubhouse with most of the same players who voted against
            them.

            "There hasn't been any incidents," Polley said. "Not even
            one."

            The replacements lost a key ally in reliever John Wetteland,
            who wrote a personal check for what Pavlas called "a
            substantial amount."

            Wetteland, now with the Texas Rangers, said he felt
            compelled to help the replacement players.

            "I decided to take care of it in my own way," Wetteland
            said. "It just felt like the right thing to do. These guys
            helped us get to the World Series; they were an important
            part of the bullpen. Once I thought of it objectively that
            way, it became an easier choice for me."

            Cone felt the opposite way. He is the Yankee's player rep,
            and the American League rep on the union's executive
            council.

            Cone said he voted against the replacement players "because
            we wanted to remember the players who lost their jobs as a
            result of the replacement players."
178.1130SALEM::DODAResignation SupermanThu Mar 20 1997 18:486
I got the chance to speak to John Wetteland last week. Honestly, 
one of the nicest people I've ever met. 

I hope Brett Butler reads it.

daryll
178.1131WMOIS::CHAPALONIS_MNEW YORK YANKEES WORLD CHAMPSThu Mar 20 1997 18:575
    
    
       Wonder if he was still a Yankee if you would have thought so?
    
    Chap
178.1132POWDML::GARBARINOThu Mar 20 1997 19:335
>       Wonder if he was still a Yankee if you would have thought so?

Chap,

Sure he would...all the world was Yankees fans last season !
178.1133SALEM::DODAResignation SupermanThu Mar 20 1997 19:506
Yeah I would've Chappy. He wasn't wearing a uniform when I talked 
to him. 

Like I said, but me a beer on Pat's Day and I'll call it even.

daryll