Sunday, November 16, 2008

There's no crying over recessions in baseball

Here's a NY Times article on the buoyancy of baseball during economic down times.
Sports leagues like the N.B.A., the N.F.L. and Major League Baseball are fairy-tale lands, an otherworld of packed stadiums, charter flights, multimillion-dollar training facilities, multimillion-dollar player contracts paid by multibillionaire owners.

Yet in a time of severe economic crisis, the leagues, at least for now, are holding forth, if not completely thriving.

Several theories explain why these sports leagues — especially baseball — thrive when money is tight. Baseball, to a greater extent than the N.F.L. and the N.B.A., is dependent on gate receipts. When families begin to feel the economic pinch and stay home rather than take a long trip, many choose to attend baseball games.
I think each moment such as this is different than one that came before it. Baseball needs to be careful. Ticket sales were down last year, and tickets are as pricey as ever at most parks. There's more out there entertainment-wise than ever before, so baseball better not just rely on the economics of yesteryear and think that they'll float through the lean times as easily as before.

Proefrock Phils' assistant GM

The Phillies signed a new assistant GM to fill the vacancy left by now General Manager Ruben Amaro, Jr.
The Phillies selected Proefrock over Jim Duquette, a former GM with the Mets and Orioles; Wayne Krivsky, a former GM with the Reds; and Muzzy Jackson, a former assistant GM with the Royals.

Proefrock, a native of Wilmington, De., will play a major role in contract negotiations and other administrative duties. Prior to joining the Orioles in Oct. 2005, he spent 10 1/2 years in a similar capacity with the Rays.
Sounds like the Phillies got the guy they wanted. I'm guessing that happens when you win the World Series.

K-Rod not in Mets future

So much for the K-Rod to the Mets rumors. Both the team and Rodriguez's agent refute rumors that he's headed to the Big Apple.
A Mets official who preferred his name not be used characterized the report in El Universal as "not true," and agent Paul Kinzer said his client was in Venezuela and that the report was inaccurate.

Mets general manager Omar Minaya didn't respond to a telephone call.

"Unless I know nothing about it, there's no truth to it," Kinzer said via cellular phone from the Atlanta area. He said he had spoken with his client, who had told a reporter in Venezuela of the need for a flight for business purposes. "But it wasn't for a physical," Kinzer said. "It didn't involve this."
Kerry Wood Mets rumors should start to fly any time now.

Northside Unit

Paul Sullivan of the Chicago Tribune wonders if the Cubs should pick up Randy Johnson.
Is it really crazy stupid?

Johnson has a career 91-35 record in day games, and his 2.41 earned-run average in the second-half of 2008 suggests he’s not cooked yet. But he also served up 24 home runs, and is a fly ball pitcher like fellow lefty Ted Lilly. We all know he’s not exactly a warm and fuzzy guy, but that shouldn’t matter to Hendry if Dempster leaves and he has to find a replacement.
But he's 45 and unreliable from a health standpoint. That means he's a stop-gap option at best. Johnson will not be a Cub if they can get anyone else of ability.