Picked up an interesting read from Bill James. What caught my attention was his answer the question about baseballs worst problem, and it was tanking. So does that mean tankers are really just making HBD more realistic?
He also was asked about solutions and made a moneyball league answer by stating MLB should remove owners that aren't successful. Of course though he gives them 15 years which is a tad more generous than moneyball does.
Here is part of an interview that is posted:
Bill James interviewWhat are the biggest issues facing baseball right now?
We’re making a lot of progress on the income disparity between the teams. We haven’t wiped that out but we have made significant progress on that. It could be that the biggest issue now is getting the -- well, I’m between a rock and a hard place here. I’ve got to make news to sell books, but not make too much news to avoid being fired. We have some franchises now that are happy to make money and don’t care whether they win. That destroys the enterprise if you get too much of it. If you get too many franchises that are just counting the cash and are not committed to the effort to win, that seriously undermines the game. At some point, we have to get a hold of that. There may be perverse economic incentives in the game that need to be restructured in order to prevent that from happening.
What are some ideas? I’ve heard people say teams that don’t reinvest their revenue-sharing money shouldn’t be allowed to turn a profit.
I don’t know, but that sounds like an invitation to creative accounting. I imagine they might find a way for some other corporation with which they have a relationship to turn a nice profit.
Salary floor? Ceiling?
It could be that the time has come to incentivize winning by the players. The players might -- I’m not sure if you’d get resistance from that, but that would be one approach. The problem with the game being too well off is that teams can make money in ways that aren’t generally intended. John Henry had a proposal about it. Another proposal was the teams that are non-competitive over a period of years could be required to sell the team. The owners of, say, the Salt Lake City Cellar Dwellers. You haven’t competed for 15 years, it’s time to sell the team. That might be one way to approach it.