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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, January 28, 2010
The Tampa Bay Rays may not be able to afford staying in Florida much longer. NESN baseball analyst Peter Gammons reports on MLB.com that the Rays eventually could be forced to move to a more profitable market.
With spring training drawing closer and teams putting the finishing touches on rosters, Tampa Bay faces a bigger challenge than filling in its second-base hole. While the Rays have enjoyed success against big-market teams such as New York (Yankees), Philadelphia and Boston, their on-field success has not translated into revenue.
“There are smart people in the Major League Baseball offices wondering if there’s hope of even discussing a potential move of the Rays to New Jersey or Southern Connecticut over certain protests from the Yankees, Mets, Red Sox and Phillies,” writes Gammons on MLB.com.
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Never underestimate the public's ability to be great big giant suckers on this, or the state's ability to get this done without going to a public vote.
Man, that'd suck. I'm likely going to be moving to Milwaukee in a few months, and I'm relying on the Brewers to provide me with some sort of buffer from Chicago baseball. (If I could just find some way to ignore the Packers while there, too, I'd be set.)
Yeah, good luck Rays.
I thought that was weird too, but the linked article says that Zobrist might end up moving to right field.
Or a state's ability to get it done despite a public vote denying funding, as did the State of Maryland after a referendum for funding Oriole Park at Camden Yard was rejected by voters. They just sold a bunch of scratch off lottery tickets to pay for it. I wish I was joking...
Montreal is also available.
Hey, at least you can opt out of that "tax".
Probably the same people who think Tampa Bay is going to move.
I presume this is just super-low grade bluster to help TB get a new park, keep big market clubs in line, and - I dunno - stay in the news?
Anyway, it ain't happening.
****
What is the Montreal of which you speak? We have always been at war with Eurasia.
There are a half-dozen reasons that moving a Major League franchise to Las Vegas would be a terrible idea, but the reason it won't happen is that the city can't justify a taxpayer-funded stadium.
I and others have said it for a long time, but if you want to cure baseball's woes regarding inequality, MLB should put three additional teams in the NY metropolitan area and one more in LA. Done and done.
San Antonio, Austin, and Las Vegas are out because they will have no water in a few decades and their populations will decrease by 80%. Climate change may make Portland a boom town but Charlotte and Nashville are less likely.
Rejkjavek is lovely this time of year.
The Rays up and move, like the Baltimore Colts, middle of the night, to Trenton (there's a stadium, but temporary, eventual intent is to build a real stadium near Jersey City))
MLB finds out about it as it's served with a Federal Court Preliminary Injunction (District of New Jersey) barring them from intervening in the move or penalizing the Rays for doing it)
I can then more easily switch allegiance from the Mets to the Rays (I don't really have to "switch"- different leagues and all that)
Because it makes so much sense to move an excellent defender from a middle infield position to a corner outfield position?
Sure, maybe, if you're replacing him with another excellent defender in Reid Brignac or the potential of Sean Rodriguez. Do I think they should? No, not particularly, but they may want to get one (or both) of them some serious major league experience.
Why does Portland keep getting included in these lists? Our AAA team will be homeless next year, and nobody cares. I know having a major league team is different, but unless the owner is willing to pay for a new stadium himself, I don't see any way a team moves here.
Unless you don't sell enough tickets in which case the money comes out of the general fund. Or if the municipality routinely takes out new loans to pay for the old loans in which case the money will still be coming out of your pocket.
And as the Pirates did. If the right politicians are pulled in, it'll get done.
-- MWE
It is very likely that one or both will be on the major league roster come opening day. Aybar could also fill in at 2B as well.
I really don't think that the Rays have a "hole" at 2B, or really anywhere if Zobrist maintains most of his improvement of a year ago.
-- MWE
So today I learned that apparently 'reports' and 'speculates' are interchangeable. How about that.
Staying true to history and tradition (as opposed to aligning geographically):
32 teams.
AL East: Yanks, Sox, Orioles, Rays.
AL North: Jays, Tigers, Indians, White Sox.
AL Central: Twins, Brewers, Royals, Rangers (Brew Crew belongs in AL).
AL West: Angels, A's, Mariners, Hollywood Stars.
NL East: Mets, Phillies, Nationals, and Expos/Brooklyn.
NL North: Cubs, Cards, Reds, Pirates (tip o' the hat to NL tradition).
NL Central: Rockies, Astros, Braves, Marlins.
NL West: Dodgers, Giants, Padres, Diamondbacks.
Yankees play AL East 16 each (48 games).
Yankees play other AL divisions 8 each (32+32+32 = 96 games).
Yankees play alternating NL division 3 each (12 games).
Yankees play rival 6 games.
162 games.
or if no interleague (preferably),
Yankees play AL East 14 each (42 games).
Yankees play other AL Divisions 10 each (120 games)
Six playoff teams in each league. Top 2 in each league get a bye.
3 plays 6; 4 plays 5; series are best of 3.
DS is best of 5.
CS is 5 (preferably) or 7;
WS is 7.
The small divisions will allow the Pirates and Royals to STFU about having no chance at the playoffs. I'd buy that for a dollar!
Still a better idea than Vegas, though. I never understand why people insist on listing that one as a viable market. Makes no sense whatsoever.
I always presumed that the reason was that the city wasn't very big until quite recently. That people only talk about UT sports is a chicken and egg problem. If you gave them a team there, people might very well take to it.
It's a big city without a team, and which is far enough from the other teams that it wouldn't be a problem to move a team in there. It has some major corporations (e.g. Intel) that could buy luxury boxes.
No, it really doesn't. Nike is the only Fortune 500 company based in the area.
Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
How exactly could the Mets/Yankees/Phillies prevent a team from moving to New Jersey, as long as it's outside the 75-mile (or however much it is) limit? Isn't New Jersey, like, a whole seperate state? Same story with Connecticut.
I and others have said it for a long time, but if you want to cure baseball's woes regarding inequality, MLB should put three additional teams in the NY metropolitan area and one more in LA. Done and done.
Amen.
Portland is all of 172 miles from Seattle, and in terms of population density the top seven states in the country are all located between Delaware and Massachusetts. Washington State's population density is barely above Alabama's, and Oregon is below Iowa and Oklahoma. You'd have to be clinically insane to try to put a baseball team in that city.
Why would you call the NYM/PHL/BKN/DC division the "NL East" and the ATL/FL/HOU/COL the "Central?" And why on earth would you spread that last division out over three time zones? I see that you're going with tradition over geography, but that seems a little overkill.
Well, every team in the former division is much farther east than every team in the latter division, for one thing.
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