I’m throwing aside that old cry of “Wait until next year.” Next year starts right now. 2017 is creaking its way toward the end of the season, but preparations for next year have to begin. There are a couple areas of concern that have to be handled right away so they are in place at the end of the season. The club has to be ready to move forward with the off-season programs in place. Needless to say, this series is going to stretch into the off-season as I consider the whole list of topics, rendering the title of this series obsolete as time goes along.
Now
let’s see... Where do I start? What is the most crying, screaming need that
this ballclub has that needs to be straightened out before we go into the off-season?
OWNERSHIP
-----Boy!
How about them Dodgers? Are they the envy of the league or aren’t they? Record
earnings. Record profits. An on-the-field juggernaut that is plowing through
the league. A stunning lineup. An incredible list of starting pitchers. A
minor-league system that is just oozing with prospects.
Wasn’t
it just a few years ago that the franchise had a lot of problems? The owner was
going through an ugly divorce. He was siphoning money out of the club to help
make alimony payments. The club was floundering around, directionless, in one
of the largest markets in baseball.
So
Commissioner Rob Manfred stepped in and forced a sale of the franchise. What
was the result? In few short years the club is the envy of the industry.
At
that same time, there was another club that was going through a lot of pains.
The owners had imprudently sunk a lot of money into a Ponzi scheme headed by a
guy named Madoff. They were scrambling around for money, borrowing from various
sources including Major League Baseball to keep themselves afloat. A lot of
people were calling for the commissioner to take the same action with them as was
taken with the Dodgers: force a sale, bring in new blood. The commissioner in
that case was Bud Selig, an old friend of the embattled owners. He chose to select
a general manager for the club who was known for his close-fisted practices
with money.
And
he accomplished those goals. He took a payroll that was well over $150 million
and got it down to about $50 million. He was so interested in cutting payroll,
he let go two all-star infielders and a centerfielder who was given a a
long-term contract and started for a World Series team.
But
more on the General Manager in a later article in this series.
In
the meantime, the owners set stringent budgets on the GM as far as payroll was
concerned. This large-market team had payrolls that were restricted to under
$100 million. There was a string of sub-.500 seasons as the owners tried to
patch their Ponzi-Scheme-induced debt. Their alleged main business was in construction
and real estate, but they didn't seem to be very active there. It appeared that
they were using the team as a source of cash. (That sounds kind of similar to
getting alimony payments out of the club.) The GM resorted to dumpster diving
to find players to fill out his roster.
What
else happened with the ownership? Son of Wilponzi was appointed COO of the
Mets. He promptly went about not returning phone calls from the team's AAA
affiliate in Tidewater putting their noses so out of joint that they took the
first opportunity available to move their affiliation away from the Mets. That
started the team on the death spiral that eventually left the team with Las
Vegas, the worst possible AAA franchise for developing young talent.
Additionally,
the new COO made snide comments about an employee who was having a child out of
wedlock, costing them a large amount of money settling a lawsuit.
The
owners built a new ballpark, one that seemed more devoted to the Brooklyn
Dodgers than the Mets. They imprudently decided to make the field a large,
pitcher-friendly park, because they thought that fans wanted to see tight,
well-pitched games. The rest of the league was rushing in the opposite
direction, making parks smaller and smaller, encouraging more and more home
runs. The Mets hitters became frustrated and disoriented trying to launch the
ball out a Grand-Canyon-sized park. The team was finally forced to bring the
fences in in a process that took two steps to finally settle on the proper
dimension.
There
are two other things I've observed with this ownership,which I have no proof
on, but I would be willing to bet serious money on (maybe even a whole nickel).
I'm
quite certain there was an edict put out by ownership that if a player was
making a certain amount of money, (I'd guess about $10 mil a year) they'd
better be in the starting lineup rather than sitting on the bench making all
that money. It didn't seem to matter how well the guy was playing.
On
the second point, I'd like to walk you down memory lane. Remember the original
left field home run line in Citi Field? The one that came down the foul pole,
ran horizontal for a bit, did a quick loop-d-loop, cha-cha'd a bit deeper,
hopped on a quick side trip to Cleveland, came back and finally ran along the
top of the left field fence? My assessment of that architectural oddity is that
it bears all the signs of someone who said, far too late in the process,
"I don't want that." This
would be someone who owns a construction company and therefore should know how
to a read an architect's rendering. He forced through a change that made the
left-field home run line look like a laboratory maze.
So what conclusion have I reached about
ownership? I think it sucks. They are really no better than Frank McCourt,
former Dodger owner. They were forced to take a general manager whose penurious
practices put them in a slightly better financial situation. However the team
took a nosedive this year and looks primed to continue a downward trend that
will carry them through the next 5 or 6 years.
The
franchise is bleeding. It is going to get worse. It will be a drain on the
league when it should be one of the gems. Please, Mr. Manfred, send these
owners packing.
4 comments:
Richard, I have often thought the same thing, why couldn't we be lucky like the Dodgers and have MLB step in.
For right now, Cabrera is HOT, Reyes is HOT, All I is HOT. Out of respect, start each 5 of the last 10 games. The rest? Start all the kids...forget "winning is contagious", these 3 kids Evans, Cecchini, Taijeron want to PLAY FIRST, WIN SECOND.
Lose a bunch of games and ensure you get no worse than 5th draft slot...smart owners would do that and sell it as, "we want to see what we have in the kids and get their feet wet." Especially Evans. I think he is the only future bona fide MLB caliber bat of the 3.
Not All I, Aoki.
we need them to slump big time... I really want a top 5 pick and if we lose (and get sweeped by the Phils) we have a shot at top 3-4....
Come on Mets do something right this time and when your suppose to lose...
"... Record earnings. Record profits. An on-the-field juggernaut that is plowing through the league. A stunning lineup. An incredible list of starting pitchers. A minor-league system that is just oozing with prospects. ..."
And all those W.Championsh... oh, wait. Well. all those WS appear... oh. Well, the could if they just wanted to. That's it, they don't WANT to win.
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