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Sportsbiz

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Another Baseball Owner in Favor of Salary Cap

by Sportsbiz
created December 31, 2008, last edited April 07, 2009
6
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The response of baseball owners to the Yankees' unprecedented free agent spending spree continues as another owner has joined the call for a salary cap. The difference this time is that the owner does not represent a small market club as did most of those who pushed for a cap in the past and as did Mark Anastasio of the Milwaukee Brewers who was the first to call for one this time around. Count Houston Astros owner Drayton McLane in the salary cap camp. In fact, he believes one would already be in place were it not for the opposition of the players union. “We would love to have a salary cap, but the (players’) union has been very resistant to that,” McLane said this past week.

Of course, opposition by the players union is a formidable obstacle to the imposition of a cap since it can't be imposed unilaterally but must be a part of a collective bargaining agreement. The Players Association believes that the Yankees free spending drives up salaries throughout baseball, although I'm not convinced that is really the case. I'll concede that the salaries of the stars have risen out of all proportion to any reality, but what about those on the middle rungs? When all the money is being doled out at the top, is there enough left to spread around the middle?

Opposition to a cap generally also takes the form of: "baseball has competitive balance, so who needs a cap? Just look at the number of different World Series participants, the number of small market/small payroll participants and how long has it been since the Yankees won it." All of these points are valid but they miss the fundamental point. It is bad for the game when the Yankees, and to a somewhat lesser extent the Red Sox and the Mets, are essentially guaranteed right of first refusal to any free agent that hits the market. Sure, the Rays can happen in any given year, but no team can build consistent and long-term success when its best players can leave for pinstriped shores in three years or so, just when they are hitting their prime.

The reason there have been so many different World Series competitors is that no team is able to build consistency and maintain a roster over an extended period. The Rays may actually be an exception to this as they have aggressively attempted to sign their young players to long-term deals, but unless Tampa Bay gets a new stadium built, and soon, even those attempts will fall apart in a couple of years. Without a cap to rein in big spending teams, there is no hope for small market teams to keep their best players beyond free agency, or at least more than a couple of them. That cannot be good for the long term competitive health of the game no matter how many ways New Yorkers try to spin it.


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KelsdadAll-Star
316 days ago
Score 2+-
If the season were to start tomorrow, and the Yanks made no additional moves, their payroll would be approximately 26 million LESS than last year.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
316 days ago
Score 1+-
Many people have neglected that fact.


At the same time, however, they've committed a great deal of money over the next couple of years.
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RomiezzoLegend
316 days ago
Score 1+-
I could believe that. I mean, you've got Jason Giambi's 23 million+, Mike Mussina's 11 million+, Pavano's 11 million, and Andy Pettitte's 16 million... and none of them have be re-signed.

CC Sabathia will earn 23 million+ will cancel out Jason Giambi right there. Burnett's 16.5 million/year will replace Andy Pettitte's contract. And Mark Teixeira's 22.5 million/year contract will replace Mike Mussina and Carl Pavano's contracts combined. Then you've got Bobby Abreu's 16 millionand I can't seem to find the other 10 million though...

However, that still doesn't change the fact that the Yankees are spending a whole lot of money (or at least making big offers) to a bunch of free agent/player in the market. It's not just CC, Tex, and AJ: it's all the players that could have a huge change to your lineup/rotation. Jake Peavy... Ben Sheets... Manny?

With the Yankees able to sign all these players, they are ruining the chances for several other teams to acquire these players (and I don't think it's just the Red Sox I'm talking about here; the Dodgers, Angels, Rangers, Brewers, Blue Jays?). It's a good strategy, I guess, to buy everyone in the market (if you can afford it). However, I think it's unethical. Therefore, it's only fitting to have a salary cap (someday... when there's a maximum amount you can spend on a player: per year AND for one contract signing).
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
316 days ago
Score 2+-
I wouldn't go so far as to say it's unethical. There's no rule against spending money. And the Yankees are going to do everything they can to win, just like any other team. If the Rays somehow found $1 billion, they'd probably get some big ticket free agents too without considering the "ethics" of trying to win.
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RomiezzoLegend
316 days ago
Score 0+-
You're probably right, Rawb. It probably is wrong to use the word unethical. After all, all is fair when it comes to signing free agents. I probably said it's unethical only because they are using their payroll to their advantage to get whoever they want. However, it is business, and I can see where the Yankees are coming from due to the fact that they have fans come to their games and it isn't fair to just not spend money anymore... but like everything else (IMO), there has to be a limit when it comes to spending. Acquiring all these huge free agents, and maybe one or two more (or another big trade or something) just isn't right.

Give other teams a chance to actually participate in buying the stars. That's all...


And because of this, I may say that it is somewhat unethical since the Yankees are (whether directly or indirectly) not letting other teams participate in huge signings as well.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
315 days ago
Score 1+-
But wouldn't it also be unethical to pocket the money they get from their fans instead of reinvesting it in the team? That was my big criticism of the Boston Bruins' owner before the salary cap encouraged his type of miserly spending.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
316 days ago
Score 1+-
Owners calling for a salary cap is not shocking. The Red Sox would probably vote to approve a cap if it was at $125 million or so. And rich men clamoring for a rule that limits wages is not something to stop the presses over.


I still like the luxury tax, I just think it needs to be harsher and perhaps based more on percentages. For instance, if team X has a payroll 50% higher than the league average, then they pay one luxury tax rate, while team Y with a payroll 70% higher than average would pay another tax rate.
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Steel TownDraft Pick
316 days ago
Score 0+-
Not only does the luxury tax need to be harsher, but the moneys doled out by the luxury tax need to have mandates attached. The Pirates are a recipient of that money, but the money doesn't end up being invested in players, it pads the owners pockets as they cry poor. You could even say it is an incentive to not put a good team on the field. We see it every year in Pittsburgh. Homegrown talent is traded away when the price gets too high.


You mentioned the NHL in another comment. One of the best parts of the NHL cap is the payroll minimum they created also. I do believe this could be a useful tool in getting the PA to go along with a cap.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
315 days ago
Score 0+-
A payroll minimum would go a long way to get the "lower and middle class" of the PA to support a salary cap.
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RawbeezeitzMajor Leaguer
316 days ago
Score 0+-
Also, saying we need a cap is one thing, but the actual implementation is another. First the players have to go along with it. Then the numbers have to be worked out. Lots and lots of details need to be hammered out.


And remember what it took for the NHL to implement a cap: a year without hockey and thousands of lost fans.
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KelsdadAll-Star
316 days ago
Score 1+-
The left side of the Yankees infield made more than six teams last year, INCLUDING the American League Champions.

The luxury tax they pay helps every other team. If I'm Pittsburgh, for example, the extra 1 point whatever it was million could make the difference between resigning a top player, or not having to layoff employees.

If the owner takes that check along with his family and friends on a 21 day Mediterranean cruise, then THATS the problem. MLB should dictate how these teams use their revenue tax payouts.
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Steel TownDraft Pick
316 days ago
Score 0+-
Exactly Kels, that's what I was getting at. I don't blame the Yankees for putting the best possible team on the field and I don't blame the players for getting all they can. It's owners like the nuttings that can't ever seem to find money for the players that are the problem. It should be absolutely mandated that the money goes somewhere other than the chief officers of the teams. Maybe even have percentages that must be followed. X amount to players salaries and another amount to scouting and development and so on.
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Sportsbiz | December 31, 2008 | December 2008 | MLB Opinions | Baseball Opinions | New York Yankees Opinions | Houston Astros Opinions | Boston Red Sox Opinions | New York Mets Opinions | Milwaukee Brewers Opinions

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