Except that the owners are the villain “in EVERY SINGLE SCENARIO”, so ...
Yep.
Except that the owners are the villain “in EVERY SINGLE SCENARIO”, so ...
The owners made Johan Camargo a $1.36 million player and Luke Jackson a $1.9 million player for 2021?
Raise your hands if you think that if they'd have been free-agents and told their representation that they weren't playing for less than that this season they'd have jobs. Playing baseball that is - not as comedians.
People are paid what the market values them at. There is absolutely nothing wrong about players wanting a bigger share of the pie. Why should the players allow the owners more revenue from an expanded playoff if there isn't incentive to do so? How does potentially playing more games for the same pay benefit them?
And that makes them different from every business owner in the world how?
Seriously folks, it's time to stop trying to paint the owners as the villain in EVERY SINGLE SCENARIO. If the players were only interested in playing for "the love of the game" and the cheers from the loving fans, none of them would need agents and corporate accounting specialists. They could live quite nicely with significantly less than the average salary of $5 million.
Donald Trump spent the last 4 years doing EXACTLY what everyone expected him to do - try to change every rule and law to benefit himself, his family, his friends and his investors. The thing that embarrasses everyone is that if they were in the same situation they'd have done exactly the same thing - the only difference is that they'd have tried to do it on the down-low without thumbing their noses at everyone else that had some level of power in the hope that they'd let him get away with it since he showed them ways to cut more corners and keep more of their own money.
Donald Trump spent the last 4 years doing EXACTLY what everyone expected him to do - try to change every rule and law to benefit himself, his family, his friends and his investors. The thing that embarrasses everyone is that if they were in the same situation they'd have done exactly the same thing - the only difference is that they'd have tried to do it on the down-low without thumbing their noses at everyone else that had some level of power in the hope that they'd let him get away with it since he showed them ways to cut more corners and keep more of their own money.
Players who were in danger of being non-tendered and agreed to deals for far less than they would've gotten aren't being paid "market value". Camargo accepted ~ $700,000 less than he was expected to get had he gone to arbitration because he realized that if he didn't take the deal he might not be an MLB player next spring - if he'd have been a free-agent in this environment the absolute best he could have hoped for was that someone offered him a minor league deal with an invite to spring training and a chance to make a roster. There's no way he'd have received guaranteed money from anyone when teams cut guys like Travis Shaw/Hanser Alberto/Danny Santana/Daniel Robertson.
Yeah, no. Not at all.
.......But sure, I don't really feel sorry for the MLBPA or think they're the good guys. They're just a different group of fairly wealthy people that are trying to get more for themselves without doing a whole hell of a lot for the little people.
I don't see the point in taking sides.
They are 100% the villians.
They are billionaires who are acting miserly.
The players are the league.
The owners are watching franchise values skyrocket and revenues increase but they are unwilling to lose any money elsewhere. In other business you ride out the good and the bad. They have billions of dollars but don't have enough stored away to deal with one down year.
They won't make a decision for the good of the game without getting something in return.
if he'd have been a free-agent in this environment the absolute best he could have hoped for was that someone offered him a minor league deal with an invite to spring training and a chance to make a roster. There's no way he'd have received guaranteed money from anyone
Yep. Musicians, actors, artist, politicians (most of them) and professional athletes. Bestowed with a unique talent and are enabled to cash in. Who can blame them? Same can be said for the owners and their wealth, who can blame them?
this is not even close to true.
Maybe 75%.
Yes. That's what rich people do.
If every current major leaguer magically disappeared, and the next level came up to take their places, the sport's popularity would remain close to the same. It's the level of relative competition that fans want to see, rather than the individual prowess.
The owners as a group are being short-sighted. Any money they save right now will be given up in greater animosity during labor negotiations. The 1994 strike damn near killed the sport. It's worth it to take a little bit of a short term loss to avoid the chance of that happening again.
Nor will the players. When was the last time they willingly gave up something altruistically? MLBPA is just another corporation trying to maximize value for its shareholders at the end of the day...same as the owners. Neither side holds any moral high ground to anyone except for those who like to engage in class warfare.
They are 100% the villians.
They are billionaires who are acting miserly. The players are the league.
The owners are watching franchise values skyrocket and revenues increase but they are unwilling to lose any money elsewhere. In other business you ride out the good and the bad. They have billions of dollars but don't have enough stored away to deal with one down year.
They won't make a decision for the good of the game without getting something in return.
On how many occasions has the Players' Union admitted to illegally colluding against the owners?
PawPaw and Dirk have already addressed this, so there's not much else that needs to be said. Name the last "decision for the good of the game" the players helped make that didn't benefit them in some way. I'll make it easy for you - you can't find one.
The players have less wealth than the owners just like in all other areas of our society where workers have less than managers who have less than owners. It's always much easier to side with "the little guy" and complain when the "haves" are doing everything they can to keep as much of their wealth as possible rather than simply giving it away to the "have nots" - that's human nature. It's much easier to take the easy way out and scream that they have so much that they should be the ones to sacrifice so that things are easier for the rest of us. The question is "why?" The owners didn't create this virus so they could shorten the season and pay players less money any more than they created the arbitration process or put the DH rule in place - all these things were collectively bargained, so why should the owners bear more responsibility or pay players to play games when there are no fans in the stands?
If players were truly being paid "market value", there would be no such thing as guaranteed or multi-year contracts, much less arbitration. You want to make money playing baseball? You become a free-agent at the end of every season and every team can bid on you. Change to that situation and you'll find that market value is quite different than what it has always been perceived to be. Small sample size or not no one played a full slate of games in 2020, Johan Camargo is coming off the worst season of his career, and he's been spiraling substantially downward since his career year. As Enscheff likes to point out, we know who Camargo is - and that's just not even an average MLB player.
The fact that he signed and snatched the contract the Braves offered so quickly is all the evidence we need to prove that he knows that as well and that his representation had already told him that there wasn't going to be a better offer out there. The arbitration process consistently requires teams to offer below-average players more than they're worth to the market if they want to keep them around to stash on the bench, and the worst part of it is that they have to keep them on their roster. I'm not sure the figure is tracked anywhere, but it would be really interesting to see how many millions of dollars are paid to players who are performing terribly (negative WAR) but they get to keep their job because their contracts are guaranteed.
i'm not sure what neo libertarian argument is going on.
There is little in life that is a total free market. Teams do not want player resigning every year. They want control. Players would make a ton more money in that system because young guys like Acuna would already be making 10s of millions.
Players played last year. That was good for the game. Yes they got paid. But they said they'd show up and do whatever to play.
Not all organizations have adversarial relationships with labor on every issue.
The billionaire owners are the ones using the pandemic as an excuse to lay off office staff.
Not all rich people act miserly. There is a difference between miserly and conservative.