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It's Going to Get Worse Before It Gets Better

 

Indulge me if you will…

I have zero experience running a pro sports franchise (making me glaringly similar to the McCourts before they bought the Dodgers, but that's not the point of this post), but I do have a bit of experience with divorce. 

Like the McCourts, my parents divorced after over 24 years of marriage (25 in their situation).  You would hope that a couple of 40-something adults (in the McCourt's case, 50-somethings) would be able to act as civil human beings and keep in mind the feelings of the other family members also affected by this traumatic event.  In my parents' situation, this simply didn't factor into anything.  My four siblings and I were casualties in the nastiness that went on between my parents, and while we were somewhat spared in the aftermath because we didn't "choose sides", I was truly amazed how some of my uncles (my mom's brothers) were ostracized because they actually acted civilly to my dad; someone whom they had known and come to love for almost 30 years. 

My point in this post is not for sympathy, but to hopefully help all of you here at TBLA understand that we have not even begun to see how bad it is going to get.  It is embarrassing now; it will turn to ugly before we know it. 

For all the crap Frank McCourt has taken among some of the local media (hello, TJ Simers), I believe that he has done an awesome job in his tenure owning the Dodgers.  He has invested in a baseball shrine, Dodger Stadium, that was, quite frankly, growing somewhat under disrepair under previous owners (including Peter O’Malley).  He re-did parking  and got hammered for it but, other than sellouts, it’s actually easier to get in and out of Dodger Stadium than it has been in the past.  He improved bathrooms (which were getting scary) and replaced 56,000 seats.  The team has improved dramatically under his ownership.  He brought in a HOF Manager.  I don’t know about you, but before the divorce crap hit the news I was feeling extremely better about the Dodgers and their potential than I was before he got here.

The above paragraph is not a pro-Frank, anti-Jamie statement.  My point is we’re in the middle of what I think is a Dodger re-awakening.  And I am, or was, damn excited about it. 

But today I sit here and wonder what the hell is really going to happen with this team.  My beloved Dodgers are on the edge of jumping into the upper tier of baseball, and have the potential to be there for awhile.  Unfortunately, given the crap of the past few weeks all that has the potential to crumble before our very eyes. 

So what do I see?  A few options:

1.       Dodgers declared community property and they are forced to sell the team.  Pray for Mark Cuban in this scenario.  No, he hasn’t won in Dallas but who the hell were the Mavericks before he showed up?  Also pray for no Daniel Snyder wannabe. 

2.       Frank keeps them, but loses his ass in the divorce and has to sell a stake.  Peter O’Malley, anybody?  Or how about Philip Anschutz?  I’m fine with both.

3.       Jamie gets them in an upset.  Gulp.   Sorry, but I don’t see the positive here.  I’ve never heard her really say anything that screamed “leader”.  Frank may piss me off and come off very whiney sometimes, but he’s a big step up from her. 

I’m sure there are other options, but even the ones above spell trouble for my team.  We’re 3 months away from pitchers and catchers reporting.  And my upgraded optimism about the team of my youth is getting worn down each and every day. 

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I can’t wait for the day when Jamie McCourt spends a night going through old team photos cutting Frank out of pictures

by Eric Stephen on Nov 7, 2009 8:13 AM PST reply actions  

you are reading my mind.

by KellyStephen on Nov 7, 2009 1:18 PM PST up reply actions  

guys like Broad and Cuban would spend bigtime $$

I’d just worry that a guy like Cuban might want big time FA’s at every position and we’d see our farm system get traded away. Obviously a lot of hypotheticals, but should be interesting to see how this plays out.

William Doolittle at your service, a.k.a. will do.

by Ollie on Nov 8, 2009 11:49 AM PST reply actions  

Cuban is a very very sabermetric friendly owner. He has hired one of the top NBA saberist… actually a blogger as his stats guy. I have no idea how much of the Mavericks success since Cuban has owned the team is due to the saberist philosophies of the team. My guess is that he’s have a similar approach to the sport of baseball. Sabermetrics + higher payroll. Ned would probably be short lived.
vr, Xei

by Xeifrank on Nov 8, 2009 7:02 PM PST up reply actions  

My concern with Mark Cuban

Is that he is accustomed to working in areas with things change faster and significant improvements can be made quickly: the computer/software business especially in the dot.com days, the NBA, television. He would certainly be an interesting owner and we would probably be reading and writing a lot about him, but I worry that he would get impatient and try to change the team too quickly with disastrous results; think Ned’s early moves to the nth power.

Totally agree with you, Kelly, on several of the points. Both you and Phil have correctly pointed out the many improvements the McCourts have made to the stadium itself. We may get critical about the delays – financing problems in the recession? – but the results so far have been positive.

The commenter formerly known as El Lay Dave.

by David Young on Nov 8, 2009 12:20 PM PST reply actions  

I also think Cuban would get how nesscary a farm system is.

I can just imagine Cuban spending $10 million on some 40th round draft pick just to prove a point. =P

by Tripon on Nov 8, 2009 9:12 PM PST up reply actions  

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2011 Dodgers Spreadsheet Project

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2012 Dodgers Payroll

Italics denote estimates
Pos No Player 2012 Salary
C 17 Ellis $500,000 team control
1B 7 Loney $6,375,000
2B 14 Ellis $2,500,000
3B 5 Uribe $8,000,000
SS 9 Gordon $485,000 team control
LF 21 Rivera $4,000,000
CF 27 Kemp $10,000,000
RF 16 Ethier $10,950,000

IF/OF 6 Hairston $2,250,000
OF 10 Gwynn $850,000
2B/3B 3 Kennedy $800,000
C 18 Treanor $850,000
IF 12 Sellers $485,000 team control

SP 22 Kershaw $6,000,000
SP 58 Billingsley $9,000,000
SP 29 Lilly $12,000,000
SP 35 Capuano $3,000,000
SP 44
Harang $3,000,000

CL 54 Guerra $485,000 team control
RHP 74
Jansen $500,000 team control
RHP 55 Guerrier $4,750,000
RHP 60 Coffey $1,000,000
RHP 66 MacDougal $650,000
LHP 57 Elbert $485,000 team control
RHP 36
Hawksworth $500,000 team control

TJ 41 De La Rosa $485,000 team control



Manny $8,087,432 deferred


Andruw $3,375,000 deferred


Pierre $3,050,000 deferred
Furcal $3,000,000 deferred
Kuroda $2,000,000 deferred
Garland $1,500,000 option buyout
Blake $1,250,000 option buyout

Totals
$112,162,432

For more detailed information, click here.

Players on 40-man roster used as roster
fillers until moves are made.

Current 40-man roster count: 40
(not including Belisario)

2012 Non-Roster Invitees

No Player Age*
63 Jose Ascanio rhp
27
61 Alberto Castillo lhp
36
56 Matt Chico lhp
29
33 John Grabow lhp
33
59 Angel Guzman rhp
30
47 Wil Ledezma lhp
31
72 Shane Lindsay rhp
27
62 Fernando Nieve rhp 29
73 Scott Rice lhp 30
70 Will Savage rhp
27
71 Ryan Tucker rhp
25
28 Jamey Wright rhp
37

30 Josh Bard c 34
82 Griff Erickson c 24
81 Matt Wallachc 26
67 Jeff Baisley 3b/1b 29
65 Luis Cruz ss/2b 28
37 Josh Fields 3b 29
64 Lance Zawadzki if 27
56 Cory Sullivan of 32

*Age on June 30, 2012

NRI count: 20

For more info, click here.


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