Posted on 06/17/2020 8:04:52 AM PDT by Kaslin
Short-sighted negotiations between Major League Baseball owners and players are sabotaging the chance for a renaissance that the game desperately needs.
Each passing day without Major League Baseball stands as a stain on Americas national pastime and represents a sad failure to capitalize on a golden opportunity for the game and the country. Today, we should be distracted from our work, glued to our televisions, computers, or smartphones watching otherwise meaningless spring training games with greater interest than ever before, in anticipation of the return to normalcy of the daily drama of baseball.
At a minimum, our ailing nation could use the entertainment of skills competitions, or a reprised home run derby series. Baseball in any form, that most cherished spring-fall companion, would provide a needed respite from the mundane of the everyday grind that has only been accentuated by the effects of the Chinese coronavirus.
Instead, MLBs folly is coming into clear view as June comes and goes. Players, owners, and the league remain unable to come to terms on an agreement to play ball while engaging in an ugly, short-sighted, and ultimately damaging public confrontation.
Historically, if you are a fan of virtually any team save for the New York Yankees or St. Louis Cardinals and especially like me if you stay true to the New York Mets orange and blue June marks the transition of a once-promising season to a long, hot summer of pain, suffering, and humiliation.
For this Mets fan, my mid-month birthday stands as a milestone of franchise futility a reminder that it has been more than three decades since a summer in which a world championship club graced the meadows of Flushing, the remarkable exploits of which I never got to witness. Yet even if you are as jaded and tormented a fan as I am, I suspect you, like me, would give anything right now to once again have your hopes dashed, and heartbroken.
This year, even the most spoiled of fans, blessed with allegiances to the winningest of franchises, face agony. Through natural disasters, civil strife, economic calamity, and world wars, baseball has always marched on as a joyous diversion. No matter what was happening in your life or the world, you could always count on an unscripted three hours each night that would guarantee you something you had never seen before one installment of 162, comprising the glorious narrative arc that is a Major League Baseball season.
Today, baseball stands still. Its worse than no joy in Mudville. Theres no Mudville at all.
With each passing week, the prospects of anything resembling a season fades. At this point, even the best we could hope for is a rump schedule. The American pastime is blowing a golden opportunity to stand as the only game in town, in the process bringing a semblance of normalcy back to the nation, and positioning itself for a renaissance.
For years, even as revenues have risen, many have feared, with good reason, that baseball was dying. The game is too long, they say, and peoples attention spans too short. Some argue advanced analytics have not only generated infinite pitching changes which, in turn, lead to drawn-out games but replaced the humanity of the sport with something more automated and artificial. This is to say nothing of the scandals, including the one poised to loom over this season.
But for all of the games problems, some real and some perceived, at a time the country craves sports, that baseball could have led the nationwide restart should have been too enticing a chance to pass up. Baseball has a unique opportunity to reward loyal fans and create scores of new ones; to showcase its richness, history, and electrifying talent; to unite our beleaguered states over something that transcends our differences. We should have been preparing to celebrate July 4 with Opening Day.
Instead, what we are seeing in the acrimonious back-and-forth between the players, the owners, and MLB in the early stages of a long-term labor dispute. Make no mistake, the current baseball standstill persists because it represents the opening round of negotiations concerning the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) that governs the game, slated to expire after the 2021 season.
The gist of the dispute comes down to this: Given a truncated schedule, played in front of fewer fans than ever before, and thus where revenues and profits are going to absolutely crater, how should players and owners split the pot of substantially reduced money? There is more to it than this, of course, as there were many areas of disagreement between players and owners that had been bubbling to the surface in recent years. The current standstill represents a crescendo to the conflict thats been a long time coming.
All sides should realize the potential benefits gained for everyone involved by coming to some form of ceasefire far outweigh the costs of butchering this season. Instead, the billionaire owners, super agents, high-flying lawyers, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology physicists who run the game are imprudently throwing away among other things untold future billions of dollars by forestalling or even postponing this season.
Baseball could be growing goodwill that would accrue to the benefit of everyone involved in it by playing today. Millions of people could be being introduced to the elation of walk-off home runs, the curiosities of lineup construction and bullpen management, and the high drama of pennant races. There has long been talk of the fact that the game has not done enough to promote its stars, yet there is infinite young, exceptional talent sitting idle, all of whom could be getting unprecedented national attention.
Although purists like myself would abjure any of the numerous tweaks to the game that have been bandied about, we would have been content to see them tried, only to crash and burn in a shortened season.
Instead, baseball is tottering when it has every chance to thrive and squandering a rare chance to reinvigorate the game. Its a shame for the sport, and more importantly for the country. And for those long-suffering fans awaiting a championship, like the Brooklyn Dodgers faithful of yesteryear would say, this may well be the cruelest Wait til next year!
It’s the title of the piece which I did not write.
Well, after a few weeks, let’s just go straight to the playoffs. That’s where I get my kicks anyway.
One team I can't stand, or rather the fans of the Atlanta Braves with their stupid Tomahawk yell.
Yep, baseball is missing out on an opportunity to be the adult sports league. Instead, they have overpaid crybabies on one side and skinflint billionaires on the other.
Baseball is the one sport I pay attention to - as a Pirates fan it’s not in anticipation of a winning season but rather because I love the game. I miss it, and I will pay attention again if it comes back, but probably only through box scores so I won’t be a contributor to the revenue chain.
I have as much interest in the identity of a sports champion as I have in the location of the highest-grossing Walmart.
No. The last thing we just finished was Peaky Blinders. Very good...but subtitles are a must. It’s incredibly hard to follow otherwise.
The average minor league player makes $1500 per month when the season is active, ranging from as little as three months at the Rookie or Pioneer League level to just under five months at the AAA level.
Obviously, every player has to hold an outside job the rest of the year, just like it used to be at the major league level.
The latest proposal supposedly is for DH for 2020 AND 2021. That probably never goes away. Expanded playoffs of 16 teams in BOTH 2020 and 2021. I don’t know if they do the regional divisions in 2021. 2020 would play 60+ games in 70 days with expanded rosters I think. Regular season starts 6/19 and ends 9/27. No grievances can be filed for the duration of 20 and 21 seasons.
Seems to be a real mess, especially if they still enforce the relief pitching limits like they planned to do. That seems like just a crap ton of changes at one time to try.
Freegards
Did you know that Hall of Famer Richie Ashburn finished his storied career on that sorry team? How far back in baseball history do you need to go to find a team that finished 40-120 or worse?
I'm not sure I buy that analogy. You're saying those girls on the corner have worked for years at their craft and are the absolute best at what they do? I thought they did that because they were either trapped/trafficked, that was the only marketable skill they had to pay for a drug habit, or, in a few unusual cases, they just saw it as an easyway to make money for a few years.
They are doing the opposite. MLB is in the process of reducing the number of minor league teams each team can have. THe gut will go from about 160 to 120 affiliated teams total.
That said, some leagues my continue as independent leagues.
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