Is this the MLUA
Or is this the MLBPA
Read More...Rays manager Joe Maddon insisted Monday he was right — and the umpires were wrong — in the interpretation of replay rules on Sunday, saying it was “baseball anarchy” and “sandlot” for crew chief Gerry Davis to “make stuff up on the field.”
But an MLB review found that that Davis did follow guidelines properly in awarding the Rays’ Matt Joyce a home run.
...“Regardless of what they say, that rule is not in the book where you can change a double to a ...
Login to Join (0 members)
{/exp:tag:subscribed}Page rendered in 1.3389 seconds, 101 querie(s) executed
Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. Weekly Journalist posted on October 17, 2012 at 01:56 PM # hit 0 | hit 0But, yeah, it'd be a flop, and a boondoggle if they actually spend any public funds on it. Zillow says the current average house in Tampa is going for exactly half of what it went for at the height of the bubble. St Petersburg is about the same, slightly worse. The commercial vacancy rate is about 50th of the top 200 markets (tied with Flint, MI -- yeesh). So there's no actual demand for this thing, other than from the Rays, who want to make more money and not have to invest anything to do so.
I guess the counterargument is that the commercial space might get some use other than at gametime, by St Petersburg people going off to fun in Tampa on the weekend, or coming home from work in Tampa. It'd be convenient for that, I guess. And for the office park's current inhabitants. Still, if I'm a voter in Pinellas County there would be no way I'd want to go for this. Maybe I'd vote for bonds to upgrade the roads around the site in order to get people in and out, but I'd wouldn't want to put a penny of public funds into the project itself.
Seattle's stadia, including the new NBA/NHL arena that the politicians signed off on yesterday, are on the south fringe of downtown, in a light industrial area. Bars and restaurants would be better off with a few more people living nearby to come in when there isn't a game. However, I myself wouldn't want to deal with the traffic and crowds by living that close to a stadium.
EDIT: What the real estate market looks like by the time they get this designed and approved, never mind built, is another question entirely.
Then move the Rays to Flint and rename them the Tropics!
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.