I'm shocked at the number of people who suggest there isn't tanking in baseball. There 100% is and the Cubs and Astros made it more popular when they won World Series titles after doing it. Baltimore is 100% tanking. Their front office is actively trying to lose major league baseball games. As Trov pointed out, tanking in baseball isn't necessarily about getting the #1 pick. Its about adding prospects by trading many of the legitimate major leaguers you have for any prospects you can, getting a bigger draft money pool, bigger international free agency pool, comp picks, revenue sharing $, etc.
Baltimore isn't playing young players to build for the future with those players or they'd have called up Adley Rutschman to get him ready for the future. They're not going to sacrifice his years of control on teams they aren't trying to win with, though. There is motivation in many forms in MLB to not play your best players or try to bring in better players. It's a huge problem and is part of what is killing the sport.
The NFL undoubtedly has the most parity in the major US sports (even with the Patriots being crazy good for so long). They're able to achieve it by having large rosters (part of their game) where 1 person can't win all on their own (despite what we are lead to believe about great QBs), and a salary floor/cap situation that stops the accumulation of super teams (despite what the Rams have been trying to do). Their draft isn't a perfect science, and getting higher picks helps, but because their rosters are so big and there's so many players that need to contribute it doesn't play a huge role in teams suddenly getting good. You'll always have the Jets, Lions, etc. of the world as their owners are just terrible at identifying quality FO personnel and coaches so they're simply bad at building teams. That's very different than the Orioles hiring Mike Elias and him refusing to bring in real major leaguers.
The goal isn't to get rid of teams that lose 100 games, it's to get rid of teams trying to lose 100 games. Not the players, but the FO. The players are always trying to win. Tanking is bad. Baseball has far more problems than just the draft order that lead to tanking. Namely financial disparity. The rules are largely put in place to aid low budget teams by creating rules on how much a team can spend in certain areas so the big money teams can't control things even more through their financial advantages. Until the finances are more evenly dispersed the problems won't be fixed. Baseball orgs need enough players to contribute throughout a season that they could reach NFL style parity if they'd balance the payrolls. But they never will so the rest will just be shuffling deck chairs on the Titanic.
You can post now and register later.
If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.
You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Twins community on the internet.
Jose Rodriguez was the Twins Daily short-season minor-league hitter of the year. He is at the Dominican facilities for spring training now but will likely join Extended Spring Training in Fort Myers.
I really hold back what I would like to say about then payroll arguments here. The fact that people don't accept the amount taken in dictates the amount going out requires one of two things. Extreme financial ignorance or fanatical bias that prevents the acceptance of something some basic. I did not change the argument. It's the same idiocy over and over. Do you really want to be on the side that suggests revenues does not determine spending capacity?
Recommended Posts
Posted by chpettit19,
I'm shocked at the number of people who suggest there isn't tanking in baseball. There 100% is and the Cubs and Astros made it more popular when they won World Series titles after doing it. Baltimore is 100% tanking. Their front office is actively trying to lose major league baseball games. As Trov pointed out, tanking in baseball isn't necessarily about getting the #1 pick. Its about adding prospects by trading many of the legitimate major leaguers you have for any prospects you can, getting a bigger draft money pool, bigger international free agency pool, comp picks, revenue sharing $, etc.
Baltimore isn't playing young players to build for the future with those players or they'd have called up Adley Rutschman to get him ready for the future. They're not going to sacrifice his years of control on teams they aren't trying to win with, though. There is motivation in many forms in MLB to not play your best players or try to bring in better players. It's a huge problem and is part of what is killing the sport.
The NFL undoubtedly has the most parity in the major US sports (even with the Patriots being crazy good for so long). They're able to achieve it by having large rosters (part of their game) where 1 person can't win all on their own (despite what we are lead to believe about great QBs), and a salary floor/cap situation that stops the accumulation of super teams (despite what the Rams have been trying to do). Their draft isn't a perfect science, and getting higher picks helps, but because their rosters are so big and there's so many players that need to contribute it doesn't play a huge role in teams suddenly getting good. You'll always have the Jets, Lions, etc. of the world as their owners are just terrible at identifying quality FO personnel and coaches so they're simply bad at building teams. That's very different than the Orioles hiring Mike Elias and him refusing to bring in real major leaguers.
The goal isn't to get rid of teams that lose 100 games, it's to get rid of teams trying to lose 100 games. Not the players, but the FO. The players are always trying to win. Tanking is bad. Baseball has far more problems than just the draft order that lead to tanking. Namely financial disparity. The rules are largely put in place to aid low budget teams by creating rules on how much a team can spend in certain areas so the big money teams can't control things even more through their financial advantages. Until the finances are more evenly dispersed the problems won't be fixed. Baseball orgs need enough players to contribute throughout a season that they could reach NFL style parity if they'd balance the payrolls. But they never will so the rest will just be shuffling deck chairs on the Titanic.
Well said.
Recommended by Squirrel
0 reactions
Go to this post
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.