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HeyAbbott

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Everything posted by HeyAbbott

  1. That was operating income. There are other things such as interest expense that would need to be pulled from it to get to a true profit. The Tigers most likely have interest expense as Mike I put up a good chunk of money to build Comerica Park. On the other hand, Parking is probably not in that number.
  2. These comments are spot on. Good management is doing more with less. In my book, when I look at the sweep of the last 90 years of the St. Louis Cards management, I would rate them as the best managed baseball franchise in MLB. Yes, I am aware that there was some shady hocus pocus at least once during the last 20, but that was an aberration. Despite what Detroit fans think, Detroit's biggest problem has been poor identification of talent and abysmal training and instruction of acquired talent. There are some signs that they may be getting better on these 2 points.
  3. Cameron , perhaps as I am beginning to think, will prove to be the Great White Whale of Tigers Baseball. Like Melville's creation in "Moby Dick", the appearance of his vaunted production may prove to be elusive. I hope he puts it all together, as his past flashes of brilliance are exciting.
  4. Boyd is unsigned. So is Norris.
  5. This is solid advice. We need to find 2 arms, a SP and a LH reliever. Maybe both guys are already in camp. I kind of doubt that. As for the OF'er , come the trade dealine there might be better options.
  6. Well, It's about to get wild. I am very happy that I was wrong about how long this would take,
  7. Let's see what happens. As the old adage goes ," There's many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip"'
  8. One can be worth billions, but one still has to convert it to liquid holdings. If you have new billions of net worth in say, real estate holdings due to market increases, that doesn't mean its convertible to cash, altough they can and will be-- at some point in time.
  9. The only folks I think Manfred really cares about are the gamblers. As for the TV guys, they want the Dodgers, Yankees, BoSox, Giants and maybe the Cubs to always be in the playoffs and win. If collectively they are the Harlem Globetrotters in this morality play, how many Washington Generals do you need? Maybe five at tops.
  10. It is time to clean up the fishing gear. There will be no baseball in April, May, and quite possibly, June.
  11. It will never happen but: 16 games between the 4 teams in the division = 64 games 8 games between the remaining 10 teams in the league = 80 games Total 144 games, no inter league play. This would give time for the expanded playoffs to be played in better weather, and the MLB could cut some of the cold weather dates. If you want inter-league play, play 2 games each against 5 teams of the other three league's divisions would yield 154 games.
  12. Analytics has helped to pin down player value. Here in Detroit, we were spoiled by the Mike Ilitch years. He payed like a fan, not an owner.
  13. As respect to the why, I think a number of teams have adopted some form of analytics and therefore question whether or not paying more for players make a difference. In terms of marginal revenue, a team's revenue except for local attendance isn't going to vary as much as fans think whether they win or lose. For most MLB franchises, I think, that probably 70 to 75 percent of their revenue is from broadcast rights of some type. While more people will come out to see a good team, even if that's 1 million additional fans at $50 a head, that's only 50 million dollars. If I add 2 so so free agents I will spend more then that. With so much money completely divorced from attendance, I would think constant flirtation with .500 (77 to 81 games) would probably maximize revenue for a club. Fans just need to remember that when they attend an MLB Game, they are merely paying to be an extra with his butt firmly planted in an outdoor television studio.
  14. https://www.forbes.com/sites/maurybrown/2019/01/11/economic-data-shows-mlb-spent-less-on-player-salaries-compared-to-revenues-in-2018/?sh=72905ece39d7 Although the article does not have 2019 data, it does state that the player percentage 0f revenue has declined.
  15. Looking at last year's standings, with a 12 team playoff Cincinnati would have made the playoffs with an 83 win season? Have I got that right?
  16. All either side cares about at this point is putting it to the other side. When this bs passing for negotiations breaks down, a long cooling off period will probably be the order of the day. After Monday, I anticipate no "session" until after St. Paddy's Day.
  17. I wonder what the over/under is on the season starting by May 1? I personally think that an avalanche of animosity will be released at 12:01 AM March 1 when there is no deal. Give them a two week cool down and additional 2 weeks of negotiations and 4 weeks of spring training that makes May 1 probably the early date. I still think no MLB baseball until July 1.
  18. This nothing more than a pissing contest right now. The difference aren't materially different if what is being asked for is being properly reported in the media. Time to clean up the fishing gear for me. There won't be any baseball until July 1, at the earliest.
  19. The average sports nut will find something. During the last major work stoppage I went fishing.
  20. Shift? In the dead ball era, they were employed regularly. Shifts don't work on hitters that use the entire field. I wonder what Orlando Cepeda in his prime would have done against shifts.
  21. When I look at the differences between the two sides, I side with the players. I really think that the owners don't really want to play until mid May at the very earliest, as the marginal revenue for most clubs in April and May probably does not matter. I just hope the expand women's beach vollyebal when regular season games are canceled.
  22. "350 million birds in hand"-- That image leaves me in a fowl mood. I guess the offer wasn't egg- stravagant enough for him. He's sound a little flighty, but I'm sure he's hatched a plan.
  23. The AL, at the time was having attendance issues when compared to the NL. Some people savored the prospect of extending the careers of hitters, Ron Bloomberg, IIRC, was a very popular player that helped his club's attendance by having him bat. Basically it extended the careers of popular hitters and aided sagging AL attendance, or at least that is what Sparky said in one of his books.
  24. Very sensible. I would prefer the 8 player approach myself.
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