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Paul Ladewski

Mon, February 8, 2010 @ 3:57PM
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Saints Alive! MLB Can Use a Few Who Dats


                The strangest thing happened when I woke up this morning. The New Orleans Saints were still the Super Bowl champions.

Dat's right -- the New Orleans Saints!

Baseball purists don’t want to hear this, but the fact that a team such from teeny, tiny market has even a remote chance to dominate its sport explains the popularity of football throughout the country these days. Super Bowl XLIV attracted a record 106.5 million television viewers -- or slightly less than the number that watched the six games of the 2009 World Series combined.

In the last five seasons, mid-market teams from New Orleans, Phoenix, Seattle, Indianapolis and Pittsburgh appeared in the Super Bowl at least once. In MLB, at least one of the usual suspects took part in 11 of the last 12 World Series -- Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and New York.

Seriously, what will happen first – a Milwaukee Brewers-Seattle Mariners Fall Classic or Sauerkraut Saul to be eaten alive?

Here’s the part that I don’t understand: Unlike the NFL, which believes it is only as strong as its weakest link, MLB allows four franchises to dictate the rules for the 26 others, basically. Team president Frank Coonelly conceded as much at PirateFest the other day. The Boston Red $ox, New York Yankee$, Los Angeles Angel$ and Los Angeles Dodger$ were the only teams that opposed a salary cap, he said, while the others were in favor of one to various degrees.

At any rate, the collective bargaining agreement is scheduled to expire after the 2011 season, which leaves the players association and the club owners with a decision to make soon. Do they still want to cater to the select few that give them the most bang for their buck right now? Or do they want to do what’s best for the sport as a whole and ensure its growth and stability in the years to come?

Bet I know how at least 106.5 million people would vote right about now.

Member Comments

View Comments: | 1-5 | Post a comment
PiratesReport
02-16-10 9:49 PM
Hostinpiller: Even with a salary cap, the larger markets would have built-in advantages. At some point, MLB has to think big picture, one would think. Thanks for the input.

Hotsinpiller
02-15-10 9:31 AM
Great article! I completely agree, baseball has big problems that need and have needed fixed for years. Sadly, it will likely take a work stoppage to get it done. I would love to see a salary cap, but I don't see it happening anytime soon.

PiratesReport
02-15-10 12:32 AM
Arizonabruce: The MLB policy has come a long way in recent years, but there's still ground to be covered here. If it takes government intervention to get it right, then so be it.

arizonabruce
02-09-10 10:30 AM
The federal government should step in and say all TV revenue is shared equally among all teams. All gate revenue is taken by the individual club. All sports have a hard cap every year regardless. All sports get fined a dramatic amount if any of their players are taking performance enhancing drugs. The player taking performance enhancing drugs is suspended from all sports for 2 years. This is the type of legislation that would make a dramatic differnce for the better.

SuperMario66
02-09-10 1:59 AM
The Luxury Tax the Yankees have paid six times most likely amounts to more than all Pittsburgh sports teams use cumulatively in a year. The MLB couldn't possibly institute a salary cap, how could they cap entertainment? How could they possibly cap big city viewers and big city investors (media outlets). Baseball is as predictable as the NBA now, and funny enough as popular as hockey once was (to the rest of the America, because Pittsburgh has the #1 fan base for currently the two most exciting sports).

Baseball has a long way to go. I say out with the money and in with the kids!

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