Baseball Bucks

Congrats to my friend over at Short Porch in Right Field for knowing that Zip Zabel pitched 18.1 innings of relief on June 17, 1915. Today’s question is below.

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Dear, Mr. Bud Selig and MLB

I am sure by now you have seen the effect that the economy has had on baseball. Ticket prices are being frozen, fans can not afford to go to games, and even some families can not afford to sign their kids up for little league.

So I am calling MLB out right now. MLB you have to much money. While hundreds of thousands of people lose their jobs and their homes players like A-Rod, Manny, and Big Papi get paid by the millions. So while it is not baseball’s fault I want you to do something! Out of the top paid players in the three major sport leagues (MLB, NBA, NFL) Alex Rodirguez ($22,708,525) beat out Kevin Garnett ($20,000,000) and Peyton Manning ($18,700,000) for the most money that one athlete gets paid in one season.

This offseason though do to the terrible economy players like Adam Dunn, Bobby Abreu, and Ivan Rodriguez who are established veterans settled for contracts that would pay ten, five, and one and a half million a season. Some say that Dunn and Abreu took pay cuts because of their defense but then explain Pudge and I will not take the excuse that he is old. 

Now I am not saying that what the economy is doing to baseball is good. I am just saying that baseball needs a pay cut. I love baseball like the many people here at MLBlogs but I mean teachers, police officers, construction workers, authors, and doctors get paid a lot less then athletes. At the end of the day A.) half of the people who play baseball play for the money and B.) those people I mentioned earlier are a lot more important then baseball players.

I say lets see who plays baseball for the money by paying athletes the amount of money a teacher or a doctor would get for one season and whoever leaves baseball for money kick them out. These are players kids like me love to see play. If A-Rod leaves kick him out. If Big Papi leaves kick him out. If Lance Berkman leaves kick him out. Maybe with some of the extra money teams can put more money for the fans.

Some teams care about their fans. Other teams just care if their fans buy a ticket, a hot dog, and a foam finger.  Luckily I am a fan of the Boston Red Sox who treat their fans world class. I mean everyone from hotdog vendors to players to coaches to executives care about their fans. To some executives baseball is a business. To others it is a monopoly. Then to others it is a gift to be an executive and if they do not do their job and have their fans like them they will get fired. 

Now the big question comes up. Will the Red Sox continue their sellout streak? There are many tickets left right now and most of them are not bad seats because many people can not afford them. Either the Red Sox need to make more seats lowing the supply and demand or need to lower ticket prices. The only game that I am aware of right now that is sold out is opening night, Red Sox versus Yankee games, and a few Red Sox versus Rays games. I think the streak will continue though. It might have a few rough spots this season but I believe that the streak will continue this season.

Another thing that I imagine as very stressful would be owning a team that is building a new ballpark. Sure right now the only teams building one are the Mets and the Yankees, two huge market teams but still. The Marlins, Rays, and Athletics are all looking and or planing to build a new home in the next few years. Every thing is going to cost more and when your a small market team every penny matters unlike the Yankees who just throw millions out the windows.

So Mr. Selig I have one solution that will solve the baseball money problem and help horrible economy. Option A is to have a salary cap. Now what might you do with the big market teams money? Well first you could either give it to the teams that do not have enough money. Then if there is any left over (and I am sure there will be) give it to charity and to people that have lost their job are are losing their house.

Now I know Mr. Selig that I am just a kid who can not spell, does not get paid at all, and only owns about seven jersey’s but we are the next generations of fans. If you do not care about us then you might lose even more fans. The steroid era has already left its mark on baseball I do not want the economy to do the same. A few of my friends have already left baseball for the NBA, the NFL, the NHL and one even has “switched” to MMA and many are about to. I though will stay a fan for now unless you annoy us kids and do not do something. So Mr. Selig please fix this problem.

From Bob, a sixth grade Red Sox fan

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Also I plan on mailing this letter to Bud Selig. So I am doing what Julia sort of did. If you want to sign it please fell free to. If you want to comment on this entry though you can but I will not include the comment in my letter unless you ask me to. If you want to just comment but you do not want to sign you can do that also. Just tell me.

Also I would like to thank all of you very much! You guys recently voted me on to the next round of Max Madness! It was really close and I think the final vote was 52% to 48%. Elizabeth you did very well and I was hoping that it would tie at 50 to 50. Facing a friend sounds easy till you actually have to do it.

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All right here is todays trivia question. “Who replaced Lou Gehrig in the Yankees lineup the day his consecutive games played streak ended?”

17 comments

  1. shortporch

    Bob,
    you can count me in as well! Being a Yankees fan, I know what it feels like to see inflating ticket prices. We have some seats that are going for $2,000! Thats insane! Some people are not even botering to renew season tickets! I hope mr. selig listens to your letter. Also, I hope he talks to the Sreinbrenner’s and forces them to cut prices. Put my comment in the letter. by the way, Babe Dahlgren replaced Gehrig at first base.
    shortporch http://shortporch.mlblogs.com/

  2. kmcleod

    Well said! Something has to be done. Staduims are going to be very empty this year.

    I imagine the worst of the economy isn’t even upon us, and some of these players are making 200 – 300 million??????

    The really hard part is what if the revenue for these teams crashes? Teams like the Yankees have near 70 million going out to three players for the next seven years?

    It would be fitting to see the team that created the mess of high saleries and free agents go bankrupt.

    http://kmcleod.mlblogs.com/

  3. jimmy27nyy

    Hi, Bob …

    “Excellent” thoughts on a very important issue !!!
    .
    MLB needs to lower the prices in all areas of our great American Pastime, Baseball, to make it more affordable for all fans to enjoy following and rooting for their favorite teams and players !!! … Hopefully, Bud Selig will take this message seriously, and do all that he can to insure that the future fans of the game, [the young fans of today], will not be priced-out of the enjoyment of becoming lifetime fans of our great game of Baseball !!!
    .
    Sincerely,
    “Life-long / “Die-hard” New York Yankees fan …
    — Jimmy Curran, [27NYY], “BY&L”
    — “Baseball, The Yankees, and Life”
    http://baseballtheyankeesandlife.mlblogs.com/

  4. shortporch

    Ok I posted a notice on my blog telling people to sign my letter. Now, can you read my post on My Experience With The Nation. I am trying to see how people have interacted with fans of the Sox. when I was at Fenway, I had a funny experience. Have you experienced anything like it? Please read it. It is second to last post on the page.
    shortporch http://shortporch.mlblogs.com/

  5. Lissi

    Great letter Bob. I agree something needs to be done. Being an Indians fan I am about to see what this economy will do to my team in the next few years. Cities like Cleveland, Toronto, and even Boston are going to be hit hard by this economic downturn and it will show in the ticket sales. Count me in!
    Melissa Horton
    http://clemsongirlbaseball.mlblogs.com

  6. AJRoxMyWhiteSox

    Count me in, Bob; feel free to take the whole comment or bits and pieces for your letter…whatever you think makes it stronger. Something needs to be done. There are a lot of players who make ridiculous amounts of money. That’s great for them, but there are so many regular people who are struggling while the baseball players are making more than we can even imagine. Roger Goodell, the NFL commissioner, took a pay cut to help the regular people working in the NFL. Granted NFL players aren’t necessarily doing that, but where is Selig’s voluntary pay cut? I don’t see it.
    Jen at A Diatribe from a Law Student: Baseball Edition
    http://ajroxmywhitesox.mlblogs.com

  7. Elizabeth D

    Bob,
    Excellent post! I think the salary cap is a feasible option, but there would need to be an entire plan, and then like you said, the players can either take it or leave it. Baseball is more than just a business, we have to remember why we loved it so much in the first place way back in the 1800’s.
    Elizabeth
    http://redsoxgirl46.mlblogs.com

  8. .

    Baseball was created with the idea that the players don’t make any money playing ball. They play to play the game and that was it. No profits, no media, no advertisements, etc. Baseball is for the smell of fresh cut grass and hot dogs, not dirty pieces of paper with Benjamin Franklin printed on them. In a way, I’m highly against Wilpon and what he’s doing with my money, to be honest. Count me in, Bob!

    – Donnie
    http://donnieanks.mlblogs.com/

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