At least one of these practices (manipulating a player's asking price toward other teams) is fairly widespread. Players with a preference about signing with a particular team are willing accomplices.
At least one of these practices (manipulating a player's asking price toward other teams) is fairly widespread. Players with a preference about signing with a particular team are willing accomplices.
The reports of Coppy being at odds with Ryan who was the residential anyalytic guy may mean that Coppy might have been the one who was not as keen on the analytics. I had thought different to be honest.
We know he was the one who was draft pick happy. He said it many times. We know he was the one who orchestrated the Kimbrel deal that involved getting a draft pick. Hart gave him credit and he happily accepted it. I'm thinking he may have been the one behind the HO trade as well. We got involved after it was announced the Dodgers and Marlins were about to complete a trade that involved their CB pick.
About a year ago Coppy said he has ownership of the Olivera trade...take that for what it's worth
The reports of Coppy being at odds with Ryan who was the residential anyalytic guy may mean that Coppy might have been the one who was not as keen on the analytics. I had thought different to be honest.
We know he was the one who was draft pick happy. He said it many times. We know he was the one who orchestrated the Kimbrel deal that involved getting a draft pick. Hart gave him credit and he happily accepted it. I'm thinking he may have been the one behind the HO trade as well. We got involved after it was announced the Dodgers and Marlins were about to complete a trade that involved their CB pick.
We are going to see many stories highlighting just how bad Coppy was.
When he was hired he was an up and coming superstar. On his way out 3 years later he is the worst GM in baseball. That is certainly a dramatic shift in a man's talents!
It's Scapegoating 101, and being done to the guy everyone hated to save jobs after the Braves badly missed revenue projections in a new ball park.
There is nothing complicated about this situation.
We are going to see many stories highlighting just how bad Coppy was.
When he was hired he was an up and coming superstar. On his way out 3 years later he is the worst GM in baseball. That is certainly a dramatic shift in a man's talents!
It's Scapegoating 101, and being done to the guy everyone hated to save jobs after the Braves badly missed revenue projections in a new ball park.
There is nothing complicated about this situation.
We are going to see many stories highlighting just how bad Coppy was.
When he was hired he was an up and coming superstar. On his way out 3 years later he is the worst GM in baseball. That is certainly a dramatic shift in a man's talents!
It's Scapegoating 101, and being done to the guy everyone hated to save jobs after the Braves badly missed revenue projections in a new ball park.
There is nothing complicated about this situation.
It could be more of a way to get rid of a guy they didn't like for cause, to avoid having to pay whatever buyout he was owed.
While I in general agree with what you are saying, where have you seen data or reporting about the missed revenue projections? The reason I ask is that the Braves drew 2.5 million in a season that was in reality pretty horrid where the teams best player (Freddie) missed a 1/4 of the season and the best pitcher (Teheran) underperformed by a significant amount. Were they projecting 3 million? If so, I would question the business acumen of the person(s) in charge of those projections since the Braves have only ever drawn 3 million 6 times in history and all in seasons where they were well into long strings of playoff runs. True, a couple of those came with the opening of Turner Field but the bounce was from the high two's into the 3's in the middle of the long playoff run and not so far away from the WS win that the average fan base had become jaded.
Coppy aside, the whole basis for increased attendance seems quite a bit contrived as if they had to paint unrealistic rosey pictures to get the stadium deal done. Anyone with any real idea of how baseball works could see that the "reload" strategy was never going to work without lots of influx of cash to quickly address holes through FA acquisition. If that was never in the cards then lots of Braves FO people have been living in the land of delusion for a while. It's as if the Braves ownership said "put fans in the seats of the new stadium and we will give you more cash to make the team better and then put more fans in the seats" while the FO was steadily trading away most of the players that the casual fan might know because they didn't have the minor league system in place in advance.
It looks to me then that the whole last 3-4 years strategy has been built on long shot unicorn type gambles (Camargo suddenly turns into Machado or Folty suddenly turns into Scherzer) with no realistic chance of actually happening. Someone needs to sit down with Liberty and lay out a real plan...this is how long it will take to build with x amount of money, y amount of money, z amount of money. This is the rate of increase that can be expected with attendance and the demographics (season ticket numbers, ticket cost, parking spend, souvenir spend, concessions spend, etc) tied to a sustainable record. One season of being good will miss the attendance bump unless it is followed by another season of being good because attendance is largely a following market.
While I in general agree with what you are saying, where have you seen data or reporting about the missed revenue projections? The reason I ask is that the Braves drew 2.5 million in a season that was in reality pretty horrid where the teams best player (Freddie) missed a 1/4 of the season and the best pitcher (Teheran) underperformed by a significant amount. Were they projecting 3 million? If so, I would question the business acumen of the person(s) in charge of those projections since the Braves have only ever drawn 3 million 6 times in history and all in seasons where they were well into long strings of playoff runs. True, a couple of those came with the opening of Turner Field but the bounce was from the high two's into the 3's in the middle of the long playoff run and not so far away from the WS win that the average fan base had become jaded.
Coppy aside, the whole basis for increased attendance seems quite a bit contrived as if they had to paint unrealistic rosey pictures to get the stadium deal done. Anyone with any real idea of how baseball works could see that the "reload" strategy was never going to work without lots of influx of cash to quickly address holes through FA acquisition. If that was never in the cards then lots of Braves FO people have been living in the land of delusion for a while. It's as if the Braves ownership said "put fans in the seats of the new stadium and we will give you more cash to make the team better and then put more fans in the seats" while the FO was steadily trading away most of the players that the casual fan might know because they didn't have the minor league system in place in advance.
It looks to me then that the whole last 3-4 years strategy has been built on long shot unicorn type gambles (Camargo suddenly turns into Machado or Folty suddenly turns into Scherzer) with no realistic chance of actually happening. Someone needs to sit down with Liberty and lay out a real plan...this is how long it will take to build with x amount of money, y amount of money, z amount of money. This is the rate of increase that can be expected with attendance and the demographics (season ticket numbers, ticket cost, parking spend, souvenir spend, concessions spend, etc) tied to a sustainable record. One season of being good will miss the attendance bump unless it is followed by another season of being good because attendance is largely a following market.
I don't see how we missed any projections either. We went from 22nd to 13th with a 25% increase while fielding a losing team. Also of those 2.5M fans I'm not sure how many are drinkers, but the ones that are were drinking in the battery instead of the parking lot. That's not taking in to account food since you had real restaurants like Antico that I ate every time I went.
I'm not sure how much revenue was predicted, but I don't see where we missed either all things considered.
The Braves weren't 22nd in attendance when they decided to move to Cobb. They were drawing 2.5 million when that decision was made, and I'm confident the move wasn't made to draw the same attendance they were drawing at Turner.
But like I said, folks disagreed with me months ago when I predicted this, so it's no surprise they still disagree.
No, the move was made to maximize profit off of the attendance. Yes, back before the rebuild when they were winning they were drawing 2.5. They're not winning right now. I don't know the projected numbers, but I'd guess they're happy with the 2.5M and the extra revenue that came with it in a losing season fielding a team of stopgap players. We may top 3M a year or two if we're winning, but I doubt we're going to compete with the big boys and regularly draw in over 3M. The key is to maximize the revenue of the attendees.
OK bud. Do I need to link you the article talking about how moving to the center of their fan base would increase attendance?
Remember when the Braves said the new park would allow them to have a Top 10 payroll? Remember all the rosterbation that went on here when folks thought the payroll would be $160M+ in time to make a run at the huge FA class next year?
Well guess what? The payroll is going to decrease from $120M last year and be Bottom 10 next year. The "big target" this offseason was stated to be 1-2 BP arms.
So why is the payroll going to be $110M rather than $160M? Because they badly missed projected revenues. Hugely missed. Bigly missed. Sad.
No matter how much you want to talk about what you think is going on with revenue, every single thing that has happened points towards revenue being far below projections. Exactly as I predicted months ago.
I do believe that moving to Cobb County will increase attendance. I think having the access roads finished and a winning team will really help that.
I do recall something about having a top 10 payroll. I don't recall them saying it would be after the first season though. If they did, that was misleading and political bs to get people through the lean years. It's not something I ever focused on since rebuilding through the draft and trades is more prudent than free agency.
I have not read anything about payroll being at $110M next season though. That sounds like conjecture to fit a narrative. If I had to guess I'd say it's going to be around $120M.
Once again, nobody puts their eggs in the basket of immediate profit in year 1 of an undertaking this size. That's rather naieve thinking. I'm not sure where you're getting that we had such lofty revenue projections. That would be irresponsible to the board and stock holders if it were pitched that way.