Nobody ever says a team can't win unless they spend money. People just say it's easier for teams who can afford to have humongous payrolls.And now for my main point. I have become increasingly annoyed at teams who play the salary card. All teams have money to spend, some pocket it(Marlins), and some spend it all (Red Sox). Others just have an exorbitant amount of money altogether(Yankees). What annoys me is people bickering over how one team is better than another, and people pull out the Salary Card, and whammo! a stupid argument ensues.
....
But anyway, back to the salary card. If a team tanks for 3-5 years, builds up their farm, and becomes successful, that's just good moves running a team. But a team in a large market spending their money to win is theivery and cheating. In my opinion, anyone who connects Free Agency to Lost Allegiance to Less Fans to Less Money to Worse Baseball has to seriously go **** themselves. Funny how when someone lands a huge free agent and their in a small market, it's their team putting money back, but when a large market team does it, everyone pulls out the Salary Card.
Every team has an equal ability to draft the right players and develop them, so whether or not a team does or doesn't do that right is moot to this debate.
Where salary and the ability to have a huge one comes into play is free agency.
And this has a two fold effect.
1) When the big names hit the free agent market more often than not they're going to be signed by the bigger markets.
and
2) when those players the smaller markets develop become elligable for free agency, unless they have loyalty to the team that developed them more often than not they're going to split. (this is assuming the small market team doesn't anticipate this and trade him for value before that becomes an issue...or lock him up for a smaller contract than he'd get in FA...which the player isn't always willing to do.)
The counter-arguments to this, as alluded to in the quoted text, is to point out that
1) Smaller markets do make big acquisitions from time to time
2) The Yankees don't win the world series every year, and haven't even done so since 2000
and 3) "Maybe the owners in the small markets shouldn't pocket so much money"
Well, these arguments are flawed as such.
1) True a small market will make big acquisitions from time to time. They don't exactly have penny sized payrolls either. (well, maybe the Marlins) The difference between the Yankees and the Padres (as an example) is that the Yankees can afford to dish out another huge contract to make up for a previous mistake, wheras the Padres are forced to stick with the mistake and hope to God they turn it around. (*cough* Phil Nevin *cough* Ryan Klesko *cough* )
2) This is an irrelevant argument for 2 reasons.
- even when you're spending a helluva lot of money you still have to give it to the right people. The Mets and Dodgers have both shown that it is possible to spend a lot of money and still lose. This is a testiment to bad general managing not taking proper advantage to resources other teams don't have.
- The Yankees, with their huge payroll, are always in the playoff hunt and when was the last time they missed the playoffs? They may not always win the world series, but thanks to having the world's largest payroll, no cap on how much they're able to spend, and a GM that knows how to use that money they're always in the hunt.
3) This is the most flawed argument of them all. Some people seem to not have an understanding of the concept of income vs outcome.
Like it or not baseball is a business, especially in the minds of team owners. And, like in all businesses, the owner of that business would prefer to maintain a profit.
Here is where the problem lies, because your average team doesn't bring in half as much money as the Yankees, or to a lesser degree, the Red Sox.
"Well, why don't they market their team as well as Steinbrenner does?" you ask.
Haha, the Yankees are rich in tradition and that will never change. You're smoking some serious crack if you think any team can reach the popularity levels of the Yankees.
Sure the Padres can develop a World Series team and that would bring in more fans and more revenue, but they still wouldn't match up anywhere near the levels of the Red Sox, Yankees, Dodgers, or even the Mets because sports are funny like that in that people attach themselves to one team and the popularity of teams only fluxuates so much with bandwagoners.
All I ask for is a more level playing field so that if the Padres enter an offseason where they'd really like to acquire a big bat for their line up and Carlos Lee is the only one available they have a reasonable shot in hell at signing the guy because other teams aren't able to throw a contract at him for more than he's worth just because they can.
Or so that when players they develop reach free agency the Padres aren't S.O.L. if all the guy wants is the largest contract someone will offer him.
Ok, now fire away.