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Baseball Teams Lost Half a Billion, Selig Says
New York Times ^ | 12/6/01 | By RICHARD SANDOMIR

Posted on 12/06/2001 1:41:30 PM PST by NYCVirago

Commissioner Bud Selig will testify today before the House Judiciary Committee in Washington that the Los Angeles Dodgers topped the roster of Major League Baseball's 25 unprofitable teams last season with a $69 million loss.

A report Selig will unveil will also claim that Major League Baseball lost more than a half-billion dollars last season.

Selig is seeking to eliminate two of the 30 major league teams, and his testimony will come before a committee that includes Representative John Conyers Jr., a Michigan Democrat, who is the House sponsor of a bill that would strip baseball of its antitrust exemption as it applies to eliminating or moving teams.

Conyers, who asked Selig to appear, said yesterday that the financial data in the report was inadequate. The players' union, which has a copy of the report, is likely to challenge the figures.

The figures in the report show that the Yankees were one of five profitable teams, making an $8.2 million profit from their baseball operations after deductions for revenue sharing and interest on loans and deferred salaries. The Mets lost $5.2 million, the report says.

The Yankees outdid the Mets on every financial level, the report says. The Yankees had $24 million more in gate receipts and $8.5 million more from media payments. The Yankees' player costs were almost $19 million higher. The Yankees also paid $26.5 million in revenue sharing, as against the Mets' $15.7 million.

The report says the other profitable teams were Seattle, with $14.8 million; Milwaukee, with $9.0 million; the Chicago Cubs, with $2.9 million; and Kansas City, with $1.5 million. Kansas City, a classic small-market team with only $19.5 million in gate receipts last season (the Yankees led baseball with $98 million), made a profit because of nearly $16 million in revenue sharing, the report said.

The report paints a picture of worsening finances. Revenues of $3.5 billion were offset by expenses of $3.8 billion. The operating loss, $232.2 million, rises to $344.7 million after interest expenses.

The loss widens to $518.9 million after amortization costs, which reflect how much owners paid to buy their teams. The report does not break down each team's amortization. It also shows that industry debt has nearly tripled since 1996, to $3.1 billion from $1.1 billion. The figure does not count deferred compensation to players.

The report has not been audited by baseball's accounting firms and is based on team figures that have not all been audited. A baseball official said it was too soon after the season to have audited all the numbers.

The report, which Conyers provided to The New York Times, details the sport's financial woes at a time when Selig is seeking to eliminate two teams. He has not identified the clubs, but they are believed to be the Montreal Expos and the Minnesota Twins.

Despite the wealth of data provided by baseball, Conyers said it was inadequate because it lacked specifics on stadium debt, salaries and fees paid to owners, and "related-party transactions" (the movement of money between divisions of companies that own teams).

"It's games like these that require Congress to repeal baseball's antitrust exemption," said Conyers, who in 1998 was co-sponsor of a law that overturned the part of the exemption regarding labor relations.

Sandy Alderson, executive vice president of baseball operations for Major League Baseball, said the industry exposes itself to criticism when it releases its financial figures, primarily over whether the disclosures are complete.

"You can argue about accounting principles around the edges, but the thrust of the numbers is clear," he said. "The industry is losing a lot of money. Many of the teams are on the way to financial bankruptcy. It doesn't bode well for the game."

Yet one leading expert on sports finance, Prof. Mark Rosentraub of Cleveland State University, said baseball's profits and losses, even properly audited, were irrelevant to whether the sport deserved its continued exemption from antitrust law. "What baseball is doing is framing the argument around losing money, but the real question is, how is this industry performing and what is it doing to deserve protection from free market forces?" he said.

Rosentraub said that if the antitrust exemption were fully repealed, "nothing would change unless Congress forced them to break into separate American and National Leagues that would compete with each other, so that if the American League contracted Minnesota, it wouldn't prevent the National League from going into Minnesota."

Among the witnesses today, besides Selig, will be Jerry Bell, the Twins' president, and Jesse Ventura, the governor of Minnesota, who has argued against public subsidies for a new Twins stadium. Steve Fehr, a player agent, will speak on behalf of the players association.

The report shows that the Twins lost $3.8 million last season but would have lost substantially more without $19 million from revenue sharing. Minnesota's $58.3 million in revenue was baseball's second lowest total, after Montreal's $34.1 million.

Montreal's finances provide a picture of failure: only $6.4 million in gate receipts, $536,000 in media revenue and sales from marketing, and other areas of only $2.8 million. It lost $10 million even after receiving $28.5 million in revenue sharing.

The Dodgers are a fascinating case, given their successful business history under the O'Malley family before their sale to Rupert Murdoch's Fox empire for $311 million in 1998.

The team produced $143.6 million in revenue last season (including $27.3 million in media payments, largely for the sale of its cable television rights to its owner, Fox), but had $116 million in player salary and benefit costs, second to the Yankees' $117.9 million.


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It looks like Major League Baseball has been using "Million Man March" math. We're supposed to believe that only five teams made a profit last year, and that the Yankees, the top moneymaker, only made $8.2 million? This is like when Art Buchwald sued Paramount for stealing his idea for "Coming to America," and the movie studio claimed that it lost money on the movie!
1 posted on 12/06/2001 1:41:30 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: Sabertooth; F16Fighter; KLT; BluesDuke
Pinging you...
2 posted on 12/06/2001 1:42:37 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: NYCVirago
Well, ARod has half of it. Imagine if these poor guys had to pay for their own stadiums. They'd really be in a hole.
3 posted on 12/06/2001 1:46:52 PM PST by Tacis
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To: NYCVirago
No kidding... considering the player salaries and cost of tickets, I've cooled off from baseball.
4 posted on 12/06/2001 1:48:25 PM PST by nikola
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To: NYCVirago
Next we'll discover that the owners are all vulnerable adults who need to have their teams placed into a conservatorship. Or better yet, that all of the owners had brain transplants with 8 year olds, who only understand what they want, and not the cost of what they want.

You're 100% right about the Yankess. I find it extremely hard to believe that with their cable contract (worth over $80 million) that they only made a profit of $8 million. Bunch of crap!!!!!

By the way, keep me in mind for future pings. Thanks.

5 posted on 12/06/2001 1:49:55 PM PST by GreatOne
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To: NYCVirago
Baseball Teams Lost Half a Billion, Selig Says

Selig has got to be a DemocRAT, the Lying Stinking piece of dreck.

6 posted on 12/06/2001 1:53:04 PM PST by jackbill
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To: NYCVirago
The Twins, an elimination candidate, made $536,000 after revenue sharing.
7 posted on 12/06/2001 1:54:42 PM PST by Fulbright
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To: GreatOne
You're 100% right about the Yankess. I find it extremely hard to believe that with their cable contract (worth over $80 million) that they only made a profit of $8 million.

When you factor in TV and radio contracts, ticket prices, parking, food, merchandising, luxury boxes, etc., it's even harder to believe that the Yankees made under $9 million in profits. Their merchandising alone is a multi-million dollar industry.

As for pinging, I will add you to my list, which consists of people whose names I remember from baseball threads!

8 posted on 12/06/2001 2:01:01 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: NYCVirago
Here's a question for Bud: If all these teams are losing money why are the franchise values keep on going higher and higher??? These numbers are bogus. For example, how much does the owner pay himself. When a media company owns the team like FOX owns the Dodgers FOX can arbitrarily decide how much money it pays for their own right to broadcast Dodger games. FOX can decide to pay the Dodgers $1 for the broadcast rights since they are just shuffling money from the right to left pocket.
9 posted on 12/06/2001 2:05:46 PM PST by mjk19
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To: NYCVirago
I remember reading somewhere that the profits from sale of clothing, etc in not counted in these numbers.
10 posted on 12/06/2001 2:06:41 PM PST by mjk19
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To: NYCVirago
30 teams at $200 million per copy is a $6 BILLION enterprise that losses 500 million per year.

WOW I can hardly wait to invest....BARF.

11 posted on 12/06/2001 2:10:39 PM PST by Agent Smith
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To: NYCVirago
As far as I am concerned major league baseball ought to go out of business entirely. These absurd salaries make no economic sense at all. Then these owners come crying to the taxpapers about how hard they have it and want to build new stadiums after playing in them 10 or 20 years. I say good riddence!
12 posted on 12/06/2001 2:14:38 PM PST by RichardW
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To: nikola
Player salaries have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with ticket prices. The owners do all they can to perpetuate this laughable myth, however.
13 posted on 12/06/2001 2:20:41 PM PST by John H K
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To: NYCVirago
Selig is so full of crap he's been declared a Superfund site.
14 posted on 12/06/2001 2:22:09 PM PST by SoDak
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To: mjk19
I remember reading somewhere that the profits from sale of clothing, etc in not counted in these numbers.

It looks like a lot of items aren't counted in these numbers. If baseball is doing so poorly, and Bud Selig is its commissioner, wouldn't the owners be ready to hang him? Instead, he just got a three-year contract extension!

15 posted on 12/06/2001 2:22:10 PM PST by NYCVirago
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To: NYCVirago
Bud- let's look at that demand curve again. You can charge more $$$ and serve a smaller customer base or you can charge less and serve a large customer base. You need to put the working crew (aka ball players) on an incentive program... perform on and off the field like regular folks.
16 posted on 12/06/2001 2:23:47 PM PST by pointsal
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To: pointsal
Currently the only incentives allowed in contracts are for winning awards or making the All-Star team, or for "games played" or games started for pitchers, etc.

It's currently illegal to have incentives for specific statistical achievements and I hope to god it stays that way. You start having incentive clauses for homers, stolen bases, etc. and you'll warp the game. Guys will be stealing in the 7th inning with their own team down by 8 runs, etc.

17 posted on 12/06/2001 2:30:12 PM PST by John H K
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To: NYCVirago
Think if they'd cut players salaries they'd break even??
18 posted on 12/06/2001 2:31:38 PM PST by Robert Lomax
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To: NYCVirago
>>>>>It looks like a lot of items aren't counted in these numbers. If baseball is doing so poorly, and Bud Selig is its commissioner, wouldn't the owners be ready to hang him? Instead, he just got a three-year contract extension!

Exactly. No one plunks down 100-300 million of their own money and watches it lose money year after year. They do fine. There is no reason for the antitrust exemption. Why they get special rights is beyond me.

patent

19 posted on 12/06/2001 2:33:13 PM PST by patent
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To: NYCVirago
Now I know where the President learned his funny math. JUST JOCKING!!! Don’t waste your time flaming. I think Bush and team is the best thing that has ever happened to this country. Now, as for baseball, this makes no sense at all. Try to buy a team lately? If they were losing so much money, you think they would be giving them away.
20 posted on 12/06/2001 2:37:06 PM PST by paul51
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