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Where is the missing money $$$$$


Redskins Rick

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One "T". I had nothing to do with this. :D
I don't know if you were a victim of AutoCorrect on this one, but I think "cow toweling" is my new favorite phrase.

I need to step away from one of my keyboards today. Way to much O's discussion while responding to emails and engaging in conference calls. It's impacting my sanity and my grammar, though the second I am blaming on the AutoCorrect.

Sad thing is one of my business partners was an English major in undergrad so dealing with the grammar police everyday at work usually keeps me in check. He's the best at saying nothing but doing it with some beautiful verbiage.

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I don't buy that. I do however think that when looking at the top free agents available not many fit our current needs.

Right. And when top free agents DO fit our current needs, they're far too expensive - the market is spiraling out of control, etc. etc. In other words, it's a Catch-22.

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Right. And when top free agents DO fit our current needs, they're far too expensive - the market is spiraling out of control, etc. etc. In other words, it's a Catch-22.

So skip the top free agents, and go after the mid tier calls, not troll for castoffs, not when this team had a good core six and was on the fringes of making the playoffs.

Webb and Lough, I get, good pickups, but the rest.

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They need to emphasize developing their own players and trading relievers for prospects, like what was done with Davis and Hardy. They need to buckle down on that strategy. I understand not wanting to go $200m on a free agent. But Angelos needs to enter the $100M++ era, or they'll lose every good player they have.

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You know you could be reading a thread from 2007 or from 2014, and the apologists still spout the same nonsense to defend one of the greediest, worst owners in all of professional sports.

Go look at the archives, same old same old. Every. Single. Year.

Or it could be the same Whiney complaining posters that think the only way to win is by throwing gobs of money at players. I repeat for the 100th time. 5 of the 10 teams that were in the playoffs last year, had payrolls that were lower then the Orioles. There is more then one way to skin a cat. 100 Million is plenty of money. Just spend wisely.

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Or it could be the same Whiney complaining posters that think the only way to win is by throwing gobs of money at players. I repeat for the 100th time. 5 of the 10 teams that were in the playoffs last year, had payrolls that were lower then the Orioles. There is more then one way to skin a cat. 100 Million is plenty of money. Just spend wisely.

There are actually 3 options here.

#1 - Throw globs of money

#2 - Spend money, while managing fiscal responsibility.

#3 - Play small moneyball, when the team can afford better.

I think there are many us of in the #2 option, smart spending is doable. There was good tier 2 guys available and affordable, but they didn't even try.

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You know you could be reading a thread from 2007 or from 2014, and the apologists still spout the same nonsense to defend one of the greediest, worst owners in all of professional sports.

Go look at the archives, same old same old. Every. Single. Year.

I am not apologizing for Angelos. I think he shoud make a decent amount of money with his ownership of the team. I think 100 million is a fair amount for payroll. My problem with him is his micromanaging. Set a budget and let DD do with what he pleases on the player front.

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I am not apologizing for Angelos. I think he shoud make a decent amount of money with his ownership of the team. I think 100 million is a fair amount for payroll. My problem with him is his micromanaging. Set a budget and let DD do with what he pleases on the player front.

How do you know this is not happening?

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Most objective analysis of revenue distribution in MLB has found it to be less than all other professional sports leagues that have salary caps and revenue distribution guarantees. In 2010 the revenue percentage to player salaries was 45 percent, well below the 50 percent in the NFL and NBA. It has been declining from a peak of 61 percent in 1994 to 43 percent last year. The costs of other salaries in the Orioles organizational parts, minor leagues, scouting, etc. have come nowhere near increasing by this near 20 percent shift of total revenue out of player salaries over the last twenty years. Some agents, even Boras, have talked about the possibility of a negotiated revenue distribution/salary cap structure given the continued pattern of increased revenues going more into owner pockets. And, as already mentioned, none of this factors in the MASN revenue nor does it factor in the speculative rise in value of franchises.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/04/why-baseball-players-are-actually-underpaid/255512/

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Most objective analysis of revenue distribution in MLB has found it to be less than all other professional sports leagues that have salary caps and revenue distribution guarantees. In 2010 the revenue percentage to player salaries was 45 percent, well below the 50 percent in the NFL and NBA. It has been declining from a peak of 61 percent in 1994 to 43 percent last year. The costs of other salaries in the Orioles organizational parts, minor leagues, scouting, etc. have come nowhere near increasing by this near 20 percent shift of total revenue out of player salaries over the last twenty years. Some agents, even Boras, have talked about the possibility of a negotiated revenue distribution/salary cap structure given the continued pattern of increased revenues going more into owner pockets. And, as already mentioned, none of this factors in the MASN revenue nor does it factor in the speculative rise in value of franchises.

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/04/why-baseball-players-are-actually-underpaid/255512/

The rise in value of the franchise has nothing to do with this conversation.

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