Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Baseball labor peace in 2011?

It looks like there are no issues at this point for baseball's 2011 labor agreement, but with the two sides potentially not getting together until the months leading up to deal time, something could easily pop up. The Sporting News makes mention of owners potentially pushing for a salary cap.
The MLBPA, historically viewed as the strongest of all the major sports unions, has successfully beaten back efforts to install a cap system.

Nevertheless, MLB owners "have been trying for one for 20 years," said labor-side attorney James Quinn, outside counsel to the National Basketball Players Association and the NFL Players Association, who has worked for all four major players unions. "I am sure they will try again."
Here's wondering if the owners have a better shot at a cap in 2011 if the recession holds on for a couple more years. Certainly owners would argue from the standpoint that decreased revenue streams means a cap is necessary.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Mouth peace

Mouth guards are finding their way into Major League Baseball. The mouth pieces aren't necessarily designed to protect players' teeth as much as they are supposed to actually improve blood-flow to the brain and improve performance. Eric Byrnes and Dustin Pedroia are a couple of players already giving the mouth guard a try.
The Pure Power Mouthguard, which is what Byrnes wears, was developed by Anil Makkar, a Nova Scotia-based dentist who has studied neuromuscular dentistry. He told the Canadian Press last October that the mouthguard doesn't increase strength, but that it can unlock an athlete's potential by enhancing strength, balance, endurance and oxygen flow.

"The jaw joint is actually the focus of power in the body because that is the most used joint in the whole body," Makkar said. "So what we're basically doing is trying to find the most comfortable position of that lower jaw. ... It relaxes all the muscles in the face and allows you (to) use more of your upper and lower body strength."

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Barry wants to play baseball... again

Barry Bonds wants back into baseball, and with his perjury trial on delay his agent is pushing for a return.
Borris said Bonds wanted to play in 2008, but no teams were interested in signing the all-time home run king, even at the minimum salary.

"Major League Baseball was successful in conspiring in keeping Barry out of uniform in 2008. Unless they have a change of heart or see an error in their ways, I seriously doubt that clubs will give him the opportunity to play this year," Borris told the newspaper.

USA Today reports Borris has been working in conjunction with the players association to investigate the union's collusion allegation, which MLB denies.
I wonder if anything changes with teams' interest this time around. Last year I was shocked that nobody jumped on the chance to have Bonds' bat in their lineup for at least part of the season. Now I'm expecting everyone to lay off after Bonds didn't play in all of 2008. He's 44, he just missed an entire season, and he's a PR nightmare, I think.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Delino DeShields part II

Delino DeShields was a pretty good second baseman, and now his son, also Delino, is excelling as a two-sport athlete. It looks like he might end up with multiple offers to play college football, and he's likely got one to play baseball at Georgia Tech.
“Delino and his family had a one-on-one meeting with Georgia Tech’s staff on Thursday, and they extended a football offer to him,” Woodward Academy defensive backs/recruiting coach Ryan Davis wrote in an e-mail. “They will more than likely allow him to play baseball also.”
I was shocked that the former Major Leaguer already had a son ready to commit to play in college.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Mitchell: drugs are down

Former Senate Majority Leader, George Mitchell says he believes drugs are down in baseball, but doesn't believe they're necessarily down and out.
"I would be very doubtful that it is completely clean in the sense nobody is using," he said. "You don't know whether this is a temporary response because of the attention it's gotten and whether over time it will begin to resume an increase. I think that's unlikely given the aggressive nature of the response, but it's something you have to be continuously concerned about."
Mitchell's report, while fairly detailed, left a lot to be desired. He is correct not to assume anything. Drugs may be down for a period of time, but the next designer steroids are out or will be out, and if players tried them in the past with general success, they'll be looking to them again in the future.

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.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Not exactly outsourcing

Indian baseball players? This truly is a historic November.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Morrissey calls for less games

Chicago columnist Rick Morrissey explores the idea of a 130-game MLB season. Weather, as usual in these types of columns, is the culprit, according to Morrissey.
Now I know this would play havoc with statistics. Records we hold dear would likely never be broken again because of the shortened schedule. But let's keep in mind that the steroids era has taken a sledgehammer to the record books anyway. The home run records, in particular, are silly.

Anyone who has had to sit through a game in the spring knows it can be a wretched experience, at least in Chicago, especially when the wind has kicked up and the cold air hasn't received the memo about summer being somewhere on the horizon.
I agree that stats hold less meaning than ever in baseball these days thanks to performance enhancing drugs. That said, I think there is a simple solution to the beginning of April weather issues in cold-weather cities that can still allow for a 162-game season: don't play in the North outdoors until the third week of April.

Baseball should schedule the first two full weeks of games in warm-weather cities and cities with domes. By the middle of the month there is less chance for snow in Chicago or Cleveland or anywhere else they play baseball in the North. Either way, here's hoping the Twins never host an opening day in their new open-air ballpark during the first week of April. Yikes!

Update: Same newspaper, different columnist, with a similar view point to Spitting Seeds.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Big mo - no, not that Mo - with Boston?

The Red Sox will stay with the same lineup for game six as they did with game five of the ALCS.

The article talks about having offensive "momentum" going from game five to six. I'm not sure I can buy into the idea of momentum from game to game in baseball. Teams score 10 runs in game one of a double-header, then turn around and score one in the next game. I'm not sure there are any statistics to back me up on this hunch, but just from my time playing the game, there is little momentum from one game to the next in baseball.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Does a bad economy affect sports? Youbetcha

USA Today publishes this article, which deals with sports and money across the spectrum. It's a pretty interesting read. Baseball receives a blurb just short of halfway down.
Major League Baseball: Attendance fell this season after four straight record years, proving commissioner Bud Selig was wrong when he estimated the sport could break 80 million in attendance for the first time. But the economic slowdown is felt beyond the turnstiles: Team coverage in many newspapers has been cut back, leading to a decreased presence in print for teams. And MLB expects a decrease in car ads - long a major sponsor - forcing clubs and networks to search for other advertisers.

Sales of licensed goods - such as jerseys and caps - is flat when compared with last year. It would be down factoring out the All-Star game at Yankee Stadium, which produced extra revenue.
Imagine that, Bud Selig was wrong. Never!

Don't worry, Bud, Spitting Seeds will always write articles on you and baseball; there will be no shrinking column inches here. That's perhaps good for baseball, but not for you, Bud.