Ain't gonna be no miracle. Manfred is having a news conference now to blame the players.Unless a miracle happens it looks like spring training / beginning of season in jeopardy.
Any guesses if / when they’ll settle, start of spring trading and number of regular season games they’ll end up playing?
Ain't gonna be no miracle. Manfred is having a news conference now to blame the players.
My guess. Settle by April 1, begin a 140 game season on May 1.
Billionaires, yes. Some players are millionaires. Others aspire to be but will never get there.Billionaires and millionaires duking it out. I guess they never learned the lessons from 1994.
You are way overreacting.This is known as killing the goose that laid the golden eggs.
Which is to say, it is the best union in sports.We'll be lucky to get a 140 games. The baseball players union is the worse (or best if you are a player) in sports. Nothing is ever easy with them.
the old saying holds true.Billionaires and millionaires duking it out. I guess they never learned the lessons from 1994.
THEY DID LEARN! See my prior post.the old saying holds true.
Those who don't learn from history are bound to repeat it.
fans might not think anyone learned and the owners might have pushed casual fans away fromTHEY DID LEARN! See my prior post.
I don't agree. Labor strife turns fans off, and baseball has enough of a problem with that already. In addition, this is clearly not the small market owners acting alone; it's all the owners, large and small.You are way overreacting.
More like the small market owners deciding that it's worth it to them to sacrifice a month of games at a time of year when interest is relatively low anyway.
When in doubt, root against the union. That is always the right answer!Billionaires and millionaires duking it out. I guess they never learned the lessons from 1994.
The only good union is a busted union! Until the MLBPA agrees to a revenue split/salary cap system like all other major sports have, they can go f themselves. That's the problem with the baseball.How anyone would side with the owners on this one is beyond me.
The players are 100% right to ask for a generous increase in the luxury tax. The owners want it to be stagnant for years while the players want it to increase significantly year to year. The penalties being proposed by the owners for going over the limit are absurd.
You have a guy like Hal Steinbrenner who owns a team worth 5 billion dollars and is interested in tying his team's hands and limiting his team's ability to spend their revenue on payroll. His Dad would be ashamed of him. The goal is to win and not maximize profits.
Isn't that anti-capitalism? You limit the earning potential of the players.The only good union is a busted union! Until the MLBPA agrees to a revenue split/salary cap system like all other major sports have, they can go f themselves. That's the problem with the baseball.
Split revenue 50-50. The MLBPA can then solely figure out the best system for player salaries and structure. Seems like a way the players can take control of their livelihood.Isn't that anti-capitalism? You limit the earning potential of the players.
You know I'm f*cking with you.
I agree.Split revenue 50-50. The MLBPA can then solely figure out the best system for player salaries and structure. Seems like a way the players can take control of their livelihood.
How'd I know you were going to side with the owners?The only good union is a busted union! Until the MLBPA agrees to a revenue split/salary cap system like all other major sports have, they can go f themselves. That's the problem with the baseball.
Even if the Patriots and BlueClaws don't play we have 2 independent teams who will play, the Sussex Miners and New Jersey Jackals. Not the best ball but keeps me entertained on a Saturday night.So I read somewhere the minors are still going to play.
Is this true?
Even if the Patriots and BlueClaws don't play we have 2 independent teams who will play, the Sussex Miners and New Jersey Jackals. Not the best ball but keeps me entertained on a Saturday night.
MLB's revenue split is a massive split in favor of the owners side.The only good union is a busted union! Until the MLBPA agrees to a revenue split/salary cap system like all other major sports have, they can go f themselves. That's the problem with the baseball.
A buck or 2. More bucks for beer.And I'm sure a helluva lot cheaper!
Well, their Instagram makes it seem like they are not affected by this.Even if the Patriots and BlueClaws don't play we have 2 independent teams who will play, the Sussex Miners and New Jersey Jackals. Not the best ball but keeps me entertained on a Saturday night.
I think the Thunder are a college type team thingy now.Well, their Instagram makes it seem like they are not affected by this.
I miss the Thunder, btw.
Billionaires, yes. Some players are millionaires. Others aspire to be but will never get there.
The billionaires most certainly did learn the primary lesson (from their perspective) from 1994. That is - don't let players begin the season without a labor agreement in place. Lock them out instead.
Forbes’ estimates have MLB clubs in the black at an average earnings ( before interest ,taxes , depreciation and the spreading out loan payments ) of $800 million since 2010Baseball players are some of the highest paid athletes in the world. Very few players in MLB aren’t millionaires. The average salary last season was $4.2MM.
Yeah, players not on the 40 man roster are not affected by this lockoutSo I read somewhere the minors are still going to play.
Is this true?
And then you have the MLBPA rejecting outright the minimum salary floor. So the players are cool with an ever expanding ceiling, and zero floor (besides the minimum individual player salary).How anyone would side with the owners on this one is beyond me.
The players are 100% right to ask for a generous increase in the luxury tax. The owners want it to be stagnant for years while the players want it to increase significantly year to year. The penalties being proposed by the owners for going over the limit are absurd.
You have a guy like Hal Steinbrenner who owns a team worth 5 billion dollars and is interested in tying his team's hands and limiting his team's ability to spend their revenue on payroll. His Dad would be ashamed of him. The goal is to win and not maximize profits.
Yes it is true. Players on the 40 man won't play though so might be missing some name prospects if they were close to the majors or already had played there. Everyone else will play since they're not in MLBPA at that point.So I read somewhere the minors are still going to play.
Is this true?