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NYCTK

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Everything posted by NYCTK

  1. I don't think parity drives success for these leagues, and I don't buy that the NBA has more parity than MLB, mostly due to the fact that one superstar can literally win championships. We saw the same NBA Finals on repeat for this reason. The NBA is successful because it's cool and exciting for children. Thanks to its superstars. I think the Ohtani obsession is over the top, but it might be just what the league needs to bring in a new generation of fans. Lastly, the Twins don't suck because the Yankees spend more money. The Twins have sucked because they care only about money.
  2. You think the NBA was ever upset LeBron (regardless of team) or those super teams in Golden State made the finals? Absolutely not. It was great for the sport, and great for the league. Basketball fans weren't disappointed they didn't get to see the Minnesota Timberwolves... Same thing with baseball. This World Series will be the most watched, perhaps in decades, and a great thing for the sport of baseball. Ohtani, the best player in history, in the World Series is great for baseball.
  3. Hoping a 25 year old suddenly figures out how to play defense is a great way to waste time. Austin Martin is a bad player and will never be worthy of a major league role.
  4. Most watched recent finals were LeBron vs Steph so thank you for making my point for me.
  5. I stand by it. A super team is good. Two super teams in the World Series helps grow the sport way more than, for example, last year's dull Rangers vs Diamondbacks series that no one watched. People are going to be watching Yamamoto, Ohtani, Betts, Judge, Soto, and Cole and be reminded that baseball is great actually. And this is good for every single team in the league. Even if the diehards hate these two teams and will not watch.
  6. True, true. But the commentary with the graphic wasn't accurate, which is why my, and I assume others, reading of it was wrong.
  7. But we saw them not win last year and there was no real drop off. So...what are you talking about? There is such a thing as changing the culture of an organization, changing the market for a club. Similarly, the Twin Cities are, rightfully, done with the cheap Pohalds. They're done with the bitchass billionaires exploiting them for everything they're worth with no respect to the product on the field. A new owner has a chance to come in and make the Twins cool again, like Seidler accomplished with the Padres.
  8. Coming back to this chart, it's probably right, but ignores that MLB is sharing the 48% outside of the white Central Revenue. So, its entirely worthless in terms of comparison to the NBA and NFL. It points out that those leagues ARE more central, with better national contracts, but doesn't mean anything in terms of haves and have nots.
  9. We don't know that. Let's say they did increase payroll by $50 million last offseason instead of slashing it by $40 million. It's impossible to guess how that team would look. They might have been in the ALCS. They could potentially be playing on Friday. They could have drawn 35K every night and made up for the payroll in revenue. It's impossible to say. But thankfully the Pohalds were able to right size their business so they could maintain healthy profits, winning be damned. Glory be!
  10. I don't think forcing a great player to remain in a terrible organization is best for the game. As much as you may hate it, it's actually quite good for the sport that Ohtani left a terrible organization and now we have a Judge vs Ohtani battle in a NY vs LA World Series. The late 90s Yankees were awful and I hated them...and they were incredibly good for the sport of baseball. I am actually fine increasing Luxury Taxes. Teams aren't actually eligible for this revenue sharing unless they're making efforts to increase their own team, and like you pointed out, like half it funds MLBPA efforts. If I'm not mistaken, the Twins will receive none of that money because they're so poorly run as a business. And that's good. But miss me with pro owner BS like a salary cap or limiting player rights in any way.
  11. Define "low revenue". Because to me that just sounds like **** organization. Why are we suddenly concerned about saving **** organizations that have made no effort to improve their brand? That's why I am viewing it through the lens of their market size, because that's something that's not up for the owners to change. So you're looking at the bottom 10? No, they aren't small market. It features some, but also features New York and Detroit. And this terrible analysis ignores the success of Cleveland, Milwaukee and St. Louis.
  12. You could make that argument for the Padres, but the Padres haven't been a free spending organization for more than 5 years. I don't know how San Diego will treat the Padres once they go through some rebuilding phase. We do know they still averaged 40,000 fans during last years disappointment year, and more than the Twins did in their 2023 division winning season when they lost 96 games in 2018. So...I don't know how you can just suggest San Diego fans are only glory chasers? And then comparing them to the Phillies, who have been to 3 World Series and another 2 LCS in that span, is just foolish.
  13. This doesn't seem to show what you think it does. In fact, plotting 95+ win seasons against metro population, there appears to be no correlation at all. So...why are we here complaining about the how unfair the current system is?
  14. Fair. I guess my point is, no one would prefer to be the A's over the Padres or Phillies so it's a weird comparison to draw.
  15. Phillies won a pennant and Padres have a very good team that is adored by sell out crowds. Using these two teams as if they're examples of poorly run clubs is weird.
  16. Quite the assumption that hurting players to the benefit of the billionaire owners would be good for the league. I'm against the draft, period. Why would I want it expanded? You seem to be under the impression that what's good for the evil billionaires is good for society. Anyways I assume everyone here is in favor of massively increasing taxes, in a context where this actually matters and not as welfare to billionaires?
  17. My point here was if you're going to share an info graphic, I would prefer it be accurate. If I shared a graph that underestimated team payroll by 50% I hope you'd call me out!
  18. The Miami Marlins have famously blown up their team multiple times showing no desire to actually retain interest. They're the perfect example of how to destroy a brand. As for billionaires willing to deficit spend, have you ever heard of Silicon Valley? Plus Steve Cohen and Peter Seidler famously lost a lot of money in their cashflow, and neither actually lost any money ironically. So...
  19. Probably endorsing the underlying sentiment that we should eat the rich. Why would anyone support the owners over the players?
  20. Yes. And they share literally half of it. The parity is there to protect the cheap pohlads. Don't worry about them so much. I assure you they can afford to put food on the table.
  21. Sounds like it's the pohlads fault for owning the team for 40 years yet still suck at producing revenue. Thank God they're selling. There are only like 3 teams that are actually in a really difficult situation (Milwaukee, Kansas City, Cincinnati). Minnesota is nowhere near a small market team but a lot of fans have bought the BS argument anyways.
  22. I'm not suggesting they aren't making money. They're very good at making money clearly. That doesn't mean they're good at running a baseball team. Nor do I feel bad for the owners from smaller markets who make a little bit less money. And I'm happy the players are pushing for those things. Paul Skenes getting away from Pittsburgh is good for baseball. Not because Pittsburgh sucks. I actually really like Pittsburgh. But because Pittsburghs owner cares only about making money. I am for the redistribution of wealth from the **** owners to the players. 100% I'm for forced removal of wealth from the owners if we're being completely honest, but that's sadly not on the table.
  23. If you had a particular skill, were arguably the best in the organization at doing it and thought you should have more responsibilities, how do you think you'd feel if they told you to stfu. If they refuse to even try, I hope Jax enjoys his next team. And hopefully soon. As for the Twins reputation, I can assure you no one thinks of the twins as a good organization. We're not the Pirates but they are that next tier. Rightfully so. There are only two teams that have won fewer LCS games than the Twins this century. Quite seriously, if the Twins refuse to even entertain the idea, they deserve to lose 100 games next season.
  24. Is David Festa a top 100 prospect level talent? He's fine, but 150 IP in the high minors, with a 1.376 WHIP and 4.13 ERA. He's a quintessential 4th starter prospect. Valuable in his own right, but not top 100. His numbers are pretty pedestrian if we're being completely honest.
  25. After some research...I don't buy these numbers. MLB shares 48% of local revenues, and then the national revenue as well. National broadcast revenue is about $60 million per team annually right now, so I have a hard time believing the share from local broadcast deals and other local revenue as designated from the 2022 CBA is only $35 million. I've seen a figure closer to $200 million in revenue sharing from other sources, which seems a lot closer to reality. Which, if accurate, would be something like 55%.
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