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I think you're just underestimating how much wealthier the majority owner of the Rays is, coupled with the financial advantages of the Tampa-St. Pete market versus Montreal. They're in one of the largest TV markets in the country and while the population is old, they have money and they LOVE baseball. The market itself is fine for baseball. They'd just be better off playing somewhere that's not remote like where their ballpark currently is. They won't play in that stadium another decade though. If their original plans for Al Lang Park fail, they'll possibly settle for an outdoor stadium in lieu of moving or see if he can't figure out a way to get them to Orlando, where he can probably sell out games just from building a family sized venue that could be a centerpiece project for the Disney Wide World of Sports in a decade. Who knows. But I think you're mixing apples and oranges here, with the comparisons of Montreal and Tampa Bay. The only parallels are that they're smaller market teams who have young players. And both were awful for a good period of time. That's it. A World Series would've saved the Montreal franchise. |
Both of you just repeated what I had said about Montreal. The downfall of Montreal was the timing of the player strike in 94. If that hadn't happened they would have been together longer as well. :)
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Montreal. :(
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I am sad too. My sister lives 30 minutes outside of Montreal, I used to plan trips to visit my sister for when the Braves were in town so I could go to the games :) Now, the closest place for me to see the Braves play is New york |
This Stuart Sternberg guy is the real deal. While his primary concern is profitability, he also has done a good job of getting the right guys to run the baseball end of the Rays and stays out of their way. I'm pretty sure that Sternberg will spend money on the ballclub, once there is money to spend. The Rays will likely never get to spend 1/2 of what the Red Sox/Yankees spend, but so long as they have the scouting and development that they've had, the'll be competitive.
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I don't think this is the end of story by a long shot. Let's see how it unfolds. What happens the next two years if the Rays are still this good but they can't beat the Yankees or Red Sox and miss the playoffs? What happens if all this overwhelming abundance of talent, all these high first round picks and plunder from good trades (Kazmir, Garza) amounts to one World Series run and nothing more than a bunch of near misses? How is that good for baseball? How is that fair for the Rays? As Alan T said, it's another one year fluke run where someone can point to it and say "See, there's no need for fairness in baseball. Each of the little teams gets a turn while the perennial powers are always there". SI |
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But, OTOH, I think Tampa/St. Pete is far more baseball mad than Montreal. They haven't come out in numbers because, frankly, the Rays have sucked badly until now. It isn't like the '69 Mets were breaking attendance records either. After all this is the market that built a stadium just to entire the Giants to move from San Fran. |
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Actually and hilariously enough, it was built to entice a team and White Sox were the first, in an attempt to get them to move from Chicago before new Comiskey was built. The Giants almost moved there before Huzienga protested the move with the Marlins getting ready to join the NL (moron, built in rivals..) but it was actually built for the team the Rays beat in the ALDS that got beat in the actual ballpark that would've been theirs. A Home in Florida That Nobody Seems to Want |
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But I think the point is that smaller market teams (hopefully) will have a harder time sitting on millions of revenue sharing money and crying poverty when they can clearly win. If the Rays win one world World Series and then have a bunch of near misses they'll have been way more successful in the last decade than a lot of big payroll teams. Nobody can spend like the Red Sox and Yankees, but if you look the revenue v. payroll numbers, some teams can spend A LOT more but don't, and identify scapegoats to distract their fans. But baseball, like life, is never going to be fair. The Rays players are a part of the union that assures that. |
Sox are already looking at an offer for the Padres for Peavy. Looks like Crisp, Bowden, and Buckholtz. Also I will be shocked if the Soxes don't go after Holiday not sure what they would need to give up maybe Ellsbury, Lugo, and a couple of prospects should do it. Holiday in left, Drew in center and Bay in right or we could keep ellsbury and trade Drew to the Rockies instead of Ellsbury.
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I do love trades when everyone forgets that there are two teams involved. "Sure, we don't like Crisp/Lugo but other teams will be beating down our door for him. He's just not good enough for us." SI |
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15 years ago, Boston was nowhere near 2nd in revenue. They've just been run very well in that time, particularly marketing-wise in the past 5 years. Yes, we all hate the bandwagon fans, but they, the increased Asian revenue, and good player acquistion/departures (allowing Pedro/Damon/etc to leave and drafting/developing guys like Ellsbury/Buchholz/Lester with those picks is why they're still good - and we haven't had the Top 5 picks TB did) is what's turning the Red Sox into a perennial contender - but even there an example like Atlanta or even a Cleveland shows how a perennial contender can fall back in a short time if they don't consistently renew personnel. This is the 2nd biggest problem with revenue sharing (after owners like Pohlad pocketing profits) - market sizes aren't static, and why should Boston be punished more than a team in a similar size market that is doing a poor job generating revenue. Quote:
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I'd throw Matt Holliday into the same category of very good, borderline all-star whose stats and perceived talent are inflated by the home stadium. Quote:
For additional references, also look at Gabbard, Murphy and Engel Beltre for Gagne and Hanley Ramirez for Josh Beckett. We've been giving as good as we get in trades (the guys we gave Pitt weren't good, but we gave up Manny and paid his salary - blame LA if they got shafted there, which I still think depends on if Laroche ever hits the way he should in the majors.) Crisp would have a lot of value for an NL team in a spacious park like SD. I will agree that no one is taking Lugo unless we pay about $15 of the $18 million left on that contract, which I do think and hope we do. |
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Really? Boston shouldn't be considered a perennial power? You're like the couple with the combined income of 200K that calls themselves "middle-class". There's no reason Boston shouldn't be a perennial power. You cite the infusion of...Asian money? How many Asians were on the team before they dropped how-many-mill on just the rights to talk to Matsuzaka. They weren't even paying him. They paid more for the chance to negotiate than what half of MLB teams spend on payroll in a given year. Don't pretend your Sox are a middle-of-the-road market that got to the top purely through good decision making. Yeah, if you have deeper pockets than anyone else, it's easier to make good decisions. Yeah, I know Lester, I know Ellsbury, I know Pedroia. So what? The Yankees grew most of their dynasty-era talent through their farm system. That doesn't make them the Kansas City Royals. |
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Yes, it was a risk to take, but any team that did the same would have turned a profit on that transaction. Quote:
If you have very good young players come up, you'll do well for a few years, regardless of financial situation. The Royals and the Pirates have become the punchline of these jokes, because unlike the numerous other "poor, uncompetitive" teams, they've been incredibly poorly run, had some bad luck and blown the high draft picks they've gotten. The Red Sox become reviled for being successful when there are 10-12 other teams in the same sized or bigger markets spending the same amount of money. Unlike you claim, we don't have deeper pockets than a number of less successful teams, and we certainly didn't when our success began. *The Red Sox had a bit more of trading involved, but it was still often good prospects for established pitchers - Pedro/Beckett. |
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It is better to look at his ERA+ the last two seasons. In 2007, he had an ERA+ of 157 and 137 this year. He may have a good pitchers' park, but obvious he's a very, very good pitcher regardless of that fact. Quote:
Same thing for Holliday. His OPS+ the last 3 seasons: 137, 150, 139. That's 8th, 6th, and 7th in the NL in OPS+. A bit more than just "borderline all-star". |
It makes me wonder what passes for All-Star if Peavy is just very good and Holliday is a borderline guy.
I'll just take Peavy. First off, Peavy's stats are skewed a little by an injured 2006 where he still threw 200 innings but it turned out he was pitching hurt all year. Still turned in a league average performance. His ERA+ over those 5 years: 171, 134, 99, 159, 137. That said, how many more pitchers would you rather have and how many would you put on par with him? Santana- best pitcher in baseball, hands down; definitely better than Peavy Sabathia- he's pitched well and consistent for the last 4 years and showed a lot in Milwaukee this year; slightly better than Peavy Halladay - good and great years, but injury tainted; if not for injuries, better than Peavy Webb - hasn't been as dominant as Peavy's best years but more consistent; on par with Peavy Oswalt - hasn't been as dominant as Peavy's best years but more consistent, slightly worse than Webb; slightly below Peavy Zambrano - had a really good 4 year stretch but innings have taken toll the last 2; below Peavy Hamels- 2 good years, still hasn't matched Peavy's 2 best years; no (I need to go dig up my ace thread from a few months ago- I had some good data there) There are many guys who have shown 1 great year (Matsuzaka) or are way too early to tell (Lincecum, Lester). But, c'mon- "not *that* good of a pitcher"? How many guys would you take right now that are better? We're not talking about TNSTAAPPs. Real, live pitchers who we have actual data on. SI |
ESPN - Five reasons to embrace Phillies-Rays matchup - MLB
A little over the top cheerleading, but I'm happy with our World Series matchup. I thought that going into the playoffs that the Rays were the most sexy team without a hundred year curse on them. We could open up the line of reasoning about how MLB only promotes the large market teams during the regular season so it's any wonder why no one knows/cares about other teams but I suppose that's another argument for another day. SI |
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Hell, it's a good argument for today :D. Back in the 80s, plenty of players on smaller market teams were promoted and well known (Brett, Yount, etc). It seems the focus on players like A-Rod, Jeter, Beckett, Ortiz, Manny has hurt when you have two teams filled with great players, INCLUDING one of them that probably will have 3 straight NL MVPs. The fact that Howard and Utley (I realize Rollins was the other MVP, but he's not as impressive, IMO, as Howard and Utley) aren't household names is a failing of MLB. I can understand why say Kazmir, Shields, Longoria, Upton, Pena weren't as hyped since they are relatively young (though Pena hit a ton of Homers last year which barely anyone noticed). |
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I'll take Hamels over Peavy any day. A lefty pitching in CBP and putting up the numbers that he does, I'll take that any day over a right hander throwing in a pitcher friendly park. Peavy's 1st 3 seasons: 33-24, 3.53 ERA, 458.1 IP, 425 H, 197 R, 180 ER, 419 K, 168 BB Hamels: 38-23, 3.43 ERA, 543.0 IP, 473 H, 227 R, 207 ER, 518 K, 144 BB Post season for career: Peavy: 0-2, 12.10 ERA, 9.2 IP, 19 H, 13 R, 13 ER, 5 K, 4 BB Hamels: 3-1, 1.86 ERA, 28.2 IP, 16 H, 6 R, 6 ER, 29 K, 10 BB |
One more day to enjoy my dreams of a World Series title.....until dashed by reality.
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2004 23 SDP NL 15 6 27 27 0 0 0 0 166.3 146 49 42 13 53 173 11 1 694 4 1 2.27 3.88 171 1.196 2005 24 SDP NL 13 7 30 30 3 3 0 0 203.0 162 70 65 18 50 216 7 3 812 3 1 2.88 3.85 134 1.044 AS 2007 26 SDP NL 19 6 34 34 0 0 0 0 223.3 169 67 63 13 68 240 6 4 898 5 0 2.54 4.04 159 1.061 MVP-7,CYA-1,AS 2007 23 PHI NL 15 5 28 28 2 0 0 0 183.3 163 72 69 25 43 177 3 5 743 4 0 3.39 4.61 136 1.124 CYA-6,AS 2008 24 PHI NL 14 10 33 33 2 2 0 0 227.3 193 89 78 28 53 196 1 0 914 7 0 3.09 4.47 145 1.082 Peavy strikes out more batters per inning, walks about the same, has a higher ERA+, and lower ERA. And those were age 23 and 24 seasons. But Peavy has already thrown together another great year and an injury-based mediocre one. Talking strictly track record, Peavy's is better but we won't know if Hamels will eventually be. SI |
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It's funny because I think the same way. After being kicked in the nuts so many times as a Philly fan, you just expect the worst. |
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Might not want to point to the 80's too much, as that's when the sharp decline for WS ratings really got into gear. World Series Television Ratings Breakdown World Series television ratings - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia After a well watched 1980 (KC-PHL), TV share dropped below 50% in 1981 for only the third time since 1968 and has never returned to that point. The decline was sudden and steep, with nearly 1/3rd of the audience gone by the mid-80's. By 1985 (KC-STL) ratings were up a bit but the share dropped to 30% for the first time. Braves & Twins pushed it back to 39% in 1991 but by 1996 the Yankees-Braves plumbed new depths with a 29 share. From there it's been a fairly steady decline, with occasional bumps upward in years when the Red Sox or the Yankees were involved, and not even that is a guarantee as 2000 showed with an all-time low (at that time) rating. Thought at the time to be the floor for ratings, 4 of the next 7 WS have been even worse. There's a reasonable argument to be made that it isn't the teams that caused the decline, that it's baseball itself (and perhaps even moreso the changes in the U.S. viewing public). Having 4 straight Series end in 5 games or less hasn't helped either. But it's also hard to deny that matchups like White Sox-Astros or Cardinals-Tigers don't even draw as many viewers as this a mid-season episode of Dancing With the Stars Results Special and Series featuring the Red Sox or the Yankees have still managed to at least meet that threshold. edit to add: Also worth nothing here re: players on smaller market teams were promoted and well known (Brett, Yount, etc) that both Brett & Yount got their respective teams to a World Series along with MVP seasons while Howard & Rollins have combined for a one three-game at the hands of the Rockies in their MVP seasons to date. Pretty big difference in those two situations. |
Yeah, this is going to be as bad as the Cavs Spurs series a year ago. I was all stoked, and then my fave team got swept.
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I wish that Wikipedia had the broadcast times. I wonder how much of this is due to baseball transitioning to a night game, and games stretching WAY into the late night hours on the east coast (I don't think I caught the end of a single Sox/Rays game due to a need for sleep...)
If you aren't going to get to see the end, why bother watching more than bits here or there? MNF has been battling ratings issues as well, so it's not just a baseball problem. |
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It's an interesting theory, not sure how much (or how little) impact it had. Best I can find with some Googling is that it looks like the WS went from virtually all days (first night game was 1971) to weeknights & weekend days from '73-'84, then all night from '85 forward (with the exception of Game 6 in 1987, the second lowest rated game of the seven game series). |
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This setup gives them more prime-time hours nationally than starting the games earlier. If they'd get more viewers a diffferent way, they'd do it. |
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I think this has as much to do with it as anything. 200 channels provides a lot more viewing options than 4 channels. And the saturation of baseball on TV now versus the 70's (remember when Joe & Tony on Saturday afternoon was a big deal?) almost certainly robs the post-season of some luster. |
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Which takes us to something I mentioned earlier, the changes in U.S. habits over the past 30 years. Later starts are more important now than ever, as a larger percentage of the workforce simply doesn't get home as early as they used to. |
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Ratings for EVERYTHING are down from 5 years ago, 10 years ago, 15 years ago, etc (except NASCAR) Attendence is a better number to look at for interest over time. |
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Can't really use the NASCAR exception any more either, off over 20% from 2005 to 2007. And live attendance is off significantly in quite a few areas. Although that seems to be more related to the changes in the event itself than anything else. Not sure about live event attendance being a real benchmark either, unless you factor it relative to the total population over the same period (and even then you'd have to try to account for sold out venues/games so as not to penalize the overall numbers for simple population growth when available tickets didn't grow by the same rate). |
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Well, it's just that I think the Rays have more talent than the Phils do. I think that if we were to play the series 100 times, the Rays would likely win 80' of em'.
I'm just holding on to that hope that the Phils can strike the dice on one of those other 20 times. :) Either way, it's been a great and exciting season for the Phils. As I told my friends after they clinched: "At the very least, the Phils will be relevant up until the final game of the season." |
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You'd be hard pressed to find many people that gave the Phils a chance against the Dodgers too. |
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I feel you're underestimating your team here. It'd be something like 55-45 Rays IMO. |
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Hamels has three seasons, you are trying to pick the best three seasons from Peavy to compare. That is not exactly a fair comparrison. Hamels has gotten better each year and he has been clutch in the post season. Peavy got rocked like a little bitch in the post season and his first three seasons are worse than Hamels'. Add the fact that Hamels is a lefty who pitches in the VERY hitter friendly CBP while Peavy pitches in a very pitcher friendly park and it's not even a close arguement on which pitcher you would rather have. |
1st 3 seasons:
Peavy 8.22 K/9 Hamels 8.59 K/9 Peavy 3.30 BB/9 Hamels 2.39 BB/9 Peavy 11.64 BR/9 Hamels 10.22 BR/9 Again, he tops Peavy in ALL stats over his first three seasons. Strikes out more, walks fewer and allows fewer base runners. Better ERA, better winning percentage, you name it. |
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Don't let Dan anywhere near Peavy. He ruined his career in the RWBL by hitting him in the shoulder with a crescent wrench. |
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Oh I need to pull up my Peavy numbers from when he played for me! |
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Counting 2002 as 1/2 a season gives us 65.2 at home and 88.8 away from home. (For reference, Tim Wakefield averages around a 90-95 for $4m/y.) More strangely/worryingly, his walk rate doubles away from home and his K rate dips. Yes, he's better than average, but not a big enough increase over, say, Derek Lowe to be worth trading multiple prospects, and worse than CC Sabathia if we're going to be spending $15m+/y on a pitcher. Holliday also has huge sOPS+ splits - 158/145; 195/130; 185/116; 160/98; 158/74. Even with that, I'll admit he's more than a borderline all-star - I didn't realize how bad it had gotten for NL corner outfielders, and I think I was still including Berkman if not Pujols among LF'ers. Without doing any comprehensive look, I don't think B-R weights park factors correctly when measuring OPS+/ERA+ Quote:
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LET'S GO PHILLIES!!!!
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Could they have picked anyone gayer to do the anthem?
Also did anyone see the one Simpson's episode where they are at an Isotopes game and the anthem takes 20 minutes? Thats what that felt like. |
Is anyone watching the series other than people in TB or Philly? Fox was predicting that they would be breaking the rating s record for WS viewinng in the is series?
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I'm watching, Game 1 anyway. Nothing else is on...
/tk |
I'm watchin\
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dola- I'm watching because my wife isn't home. If she was we would most likely be watching something else and I would be following along online
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I'm watching but wanting to mute these first two games because of the bandwagon idiots and their cow bells.
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Presumably you mean the all-time record low for viewing. |
been a fun game to watch so far
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