Many of you reading this article may be too young to
remember the brilliance of Harvey Korman and Tim Conway on the old “Carol
Burnett Show”. Conway would routinely
make Korman break character and struggle to maintain his composure by doing
something during the sketches that was so over-the-top that Korman would lose
control. In fact, on a recent episode of
Conan O’Brien Tim Conway recounted the time he made Korman wet himself from
laughing so hard in this bit:
I was reminded of this program because one of their other
bits involved a speechwriter who had to figure out how to put a positive spin
on bad news when his candidate was about to deliver a stump speech to his constituents. The topic at hand was runaway inflation and
they struggled for a bit with how to make this negative into a positive. Finally you see the candidate practicing his
finely crafted line, “I promise you in the coming year you will see more money
pass through your hands than ever before!”
My career has taken some odd twists and turns, but in
college I thought I wanted to work in public relations and I enrolled for an
undergraduate course at NYU entitled “Business Communications: How To Write a Bad News Letter”. It was truly one of the finest classes I’d
ever taken. In it we were presented with
all kinds of disastrous scenarios and challenged as aspiring PR professionals
how we would handle them. Some of our
case studies at the time included the oil spill of the Exxon Valdez and the
tainted Tylenol capsule problem that faced Johnson & Johnson.
This trip down memory lane resulted from the recent announcement
by the Mets trumpeting the fact that their ticket sales are up almost 20% over
the same period of time last year. That’s
great news, right?
Well, when you peel back the layers of this onion it’s
enough to make you cry. First of all,
the Mets started selling tickets a full three months earlier than they did for
the 2014 season. Consequently if their
sales are up just 20%, that’s pretty pathetic considering the head start of a
full business quarter for this season over last season. They’re comparing apples and oranges.
Second, why announce these non-verifiable numbers at
all. Towards what end would it benefit
them? Obviously they’re taking their hits on the back pages and the blogs for the usual litany of sins
including their hot stove inertia, the ongoing niggardly approach to spending,
their refusal to dip their toe into the international markets of Cuba and Asia,
and the plans to apparently mount a 9-man pitching rotation against the rest of the league
instead of trading away some of the excess.
There’s also the move-him-or-lose-him Daniel Murphy scenario, the contract
renewal of the rather unimpressive manager and the sacrificing of a precious
draft pick on a 36 year old DH who would be uninsurable if not for the
Obamacare provision about pre-existing conditions. So you see, this team is rather starved for
some positive news on the back pages.
Still, they are quite often their own worst enemy. With a three day span the Washington
Nationals fortified what was already baseball’s best pitching staff by
bestowing the largest free agent contract on a pitcher in the history of the
game, the Mets announced a bigger scoreboard then said they were too poor to
bid on Cuban wunderkind Yoan Moncada.
See? They do it to themselves.
However, there’s a more sinister motivation lurking inside
this particular shallot. Remember Jeff
Wilpon’s alleged wrongful termination of Leigh Castergnine, Senior VP of Ticket
Sales & Services? Her side of the
story is that it was retribution for him not approving of her out-of-wedlock
pregnancy. His side was that it was for
incompetence (though selling tickets to the mess he was putting on the field
would be challenging for anyone). Now
the Mets are getting their PR machine working overtime to spread the news about
the great ticket sale increase. There
couldn’t be any reason to try to build a case for when Jeff goes to court,
right? Stay tuned. He gets deposed on February 23rd.
This dull period before the Superbowl and before Spring
Training is tedious for sports fans and no one wants to read any more Dillon Gee,
shortstop or even #DeflateGate stories.
Consequently editors are starved to fill their column inches with
something and several passed along this tidbit without thinking it through.
Furthermore, there’s another shoot-yourself-in-the-foot
moment related to this PR-generated story.
Harken back to Sandy Alderson’s tone-deaf proclamation about this time
last year in which he said that the Mets would spend more when the fans started
showing up at the turnstiles. Hmmn…doesn’t
an increase of 20% in ticket sales mean increased revenue? It couldn’t be that the numbers are doctored
a bit for other reasons, could it? I
mean, it was just a year prior when Fred Wilpon in response to questions about
financial constraints said, “It’s all in the rearview mirror. I think
we would anticipate being big investors [next offseason] if that were
appropriate, That depends on what the market is.”
Really? Payroll went down each of the past several
years. This year it’s up due to some
arbitration-eligible players getting increases (and two to three of them are
likely on their way out the door which would result in yet another year of payroll
reduction.)
Is it any wonder no one takes what the Mets say at face
value?
I don't believe anything the Mets say when it comes to finances. MLB was a 9 billion dollar industry in 2014 and the Mets play in the biggest market and one of its most expensive. I just do not believe that "everything is good" if they continue to operate with a payroll under the Minnesota Twins.
ReplyDeleteThe Mets total increase in revenue last year from MLB was $15m. They used to get $10M and now they get $25M. The big increase in revenues was from individual teams doing local TV deals. The Mets were 21st in attendance with a below market TV deal and a pile of debt service, so it is not hard to figure out how they got so jammed up on cash flow. Their own fault, but they cannot renegotiate the TV deal because Time Warner owns a piece of the channel and won't approve an increased payment. Even with increased attendance, they won't likely be able to get to $150M in oayroll. Just having NY at the beginning of their name does not in and of itself increase revenue. It is a function of attendance, which has crashed, a TV deal, which is one of the cheapest and not renegotiable, ancillaries, which are a function of attendance and the MLB TV deal, which pays them $15M more now that two years ago. Their finances suck and are not likely to inprove dramatically even with increased attendande
DeleteOk
DeleteIt's official.
Grab the pitchforks and light the torches.
Storm the Wilpons fortress of ineptitude.
Free The Mets!
Free The Mets! !
FREE THE METS? ??
Picture if you will:...
DeleteA skit with Korman & Conway....
Conway struggling with his torch....
Reese
ReplyDeleteGreat article.
All I have to say is:
........sigh. ... Alderson......
and.......
.....sigh......Wilpons
does Korman or Conway play short?
ReplyDeleteNo, but Conway could give Kevin Long a run for his money:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bNI0btiyoWw
Reese -
ReplyDeletewe used to make guesses on how long it would take for Conway to make Korman breakout laughing. Such talent on that show.
Of course this analysis you've done makes the decision to put Fred Wilpon in charge of finances for MLB doubly ironic when it's obvious he's mismanaging the team into penury.
ReplyDelete