Jump to content

Playoff Shares


Can_of_corn

Recommended Posts

7 minutes ago, backwardsk said:

Do the teams get a pot of money and then decide how many full shares to hand out which determines the amount per share? Is that how it works?

I don't know for sure but I think it is by tiers.

So the Orioles would have received the same pool as the Dodgers, Braves and Twins.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder how much the Orioles received.  Not the players, the team.   It’s a share of the gate receipts from the 3 games the team played in.  Not that big a share, after the players and MLB get their cut.  The way it works, the players only get a share of the receipts from the minimum number of games that can be played in that series.   So, a sweep doesn’t hurt the players’ share, but it hurts the team’s share a lot.  If I had to guess, the O’s probably only made $1-2 mm from the 3-game ALDS.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Frobby said:

I wonder how much the Orioles received.  Not the players, the team.   It’s a share of the gate receipts from the 3 games the team played in.  Not that big a share, after the players and MLB get their cut.  The way it works, the players only get a share of the receipts from the minimum number of games that can be played in that series.   So, a sweep doesn’t hurt the players’ share, but it hurts the team’s share a lot.  If I had to guess, the O’s probably only made $1-2 mm from the 3-game ALDS.

You think it's that little?  You've thought about it more than me but seems really low.

45,000 tickets at 300 a pop is like 13.5 million dollars.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, Frobby said:

I wonder how much the Orioles received.  Not the players, the team.   It’s a share of the gate receipts from the 3 games the team played in.  Not that big a share, after the players and MLB get their cut.  The way it works, the players only get a share of the receipts from the minimum number of games that can be played in that series.   So, a sweep doesn’t hurt the players’ share, but it hurts the team’s share a lot.  If I had to guess, the O’s probably only made $1-2 mm from the 3-game ALDS.

Plus parking and concessions.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Pickles said:

You think it's that little?  You've thought about it more than me but seems really low.

45,000 tickets at 300 a pop is like 13.5 million dollars.

The tickets don’t cost $300 a pop.  I think I paid $237.50 and those were good seats 13 rows behind 1B.  Most tickets cost significantly less.

i looked it up.  The players take 60% of the first 3 games and the commissioner’s office takes 15%.   Then the two teams divide the remaining 25%.  So even by your numbers the Orioles only would get 12.5% of 13.5 mm = $1.675 mm.   And it’s probably significantly less.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Frobby said:

The tickets don’t cost $300 a pop.  I think I paid $237.50 and those were good seats 13 rows behind 1B.  Most tickets cost significantly less.

i looked it up.  The players take 60% of the first 3 games and the commissioner’s office takes 15%.   Then the two teams divide the remaining 25%.  So even by your numbers the Orioles only would get 12.5% of 13.5 mm = $1.675 mm.   And it’s probably significantly less.

Well, lucky you.  I paid 200 to sit in the nosebleeds.

I bought from the team when they opened them up to the general public online.  I was lucky to get them.

So we're talking more like close to 5 million for the tickets for the series, not to mention concessions, which at 25 a head comes to 2.5 million for the two home games, and parking at 60 (yes) bucks a car times 20,000? comes to almost another 2.5 million for the two home games.

I think it's very safe to say the O's made more than 1-2 million.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, Pickles said:

Well, lucky you.  I paid 200 to sit in the nosebleeds.

I bought from the team when they opened them up to the general public online.  I was lucky to get them.

So we're talking more like close to 5 million for the tickets for the series, not to mention concessions, which at 25 a head comes to 2.5 million for the two home games, and parking at 60 (yes) bucks a car times 20,000? comes to almost another 2.5 million for the two home games.

I think it's very safe to say the O's made more than 1-2 million.

First of all, I messed up my math a little in the post you replied to, because I forgot to multiply by three for the three games.  But let’s say tickets cost $200 on average.  That’s 45,000 * 200 * 3 * 12.5% = $3.375 mm.

It’s interesting to hear that the general public got charged $200 for nosebleed seats.  Season ticket holders did not pay those kind of prices.  Not only was I able to get my regular seats for $237.50, but we were offered additional seats in the lower deck, behind 3B but further back than my other seats, and I think the price was $155.  Also, I paid $45 for parking, in the Lee lot which is closer to the stadium than most of the lots.  Glad to know that being a season ticket holder actually gets you advantageous pricing during the playoffs.

I’d imagine far more seats were sold at the prices offered to season ticket holders than were sold at the “general public” prices.  
 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Posts

    • Do you actually the MLB postseason?  Most teams get their starters out by the 6th inning.
    • The whole “the key with Crochet” is exactly why trading for him makes no sense. On top of that, how does he bounce back next year after throwing so many more innings than he ever has? Im not questioning his talent, his upside, age, service time or anything.  It’s all on the side of the team that has him. But they are going to want multiple top 50 type prospects for a guy with ace potential and a lot of service time.  His name shouldn’t even be mentioned imo.
    • Suarez has not had one single quality start this season. While I love what he has given us, he is the classic definition of a “5 and dive” pitcher, which is fine, especially for the regular season as long as you have other starters (like Burnes) who can give consistent length. The problem with that for the post season is that forces your middle relievers into the game against teams with the best offenses. I’m not confident that the odds are necessarily stacked in our favor in some of those matchups. But hey you never know, Akin sure surprised me on Friday with a stellar outing.
    • What do the Rangers do at the deadline? Do they just stand pat and hope next year goes better?
    • I don’t think he’s worth Holliday/Mayo/Basallo level just because of the injury/innings limit concerns, but he’s pitching this year like one of the best SP in baseball and has 2.5 years of control (which will be cheap years in arb, considering he’s gone through once at just over league min).  The key with Crochet is he has to still be starting in the playoffs to get full value from him then. That means either you let him keep rolling and hope the innings don’t catch up, or you do load management by some combination of skipping starts, pitch count limits and/or shifting him to the pen. I could see a team using Crochet as a RP until September and then stretching him back out before the playoffs when you have expanded rosters to help bridge the innings during the initial shorter starts. But it’d be pretty wild to see a team pay what it’s going to take for him to then immediately shelf him like that. 
    • This has been discussed a ton over the years.  It hasn’t been many but there have been a few. Jared Weaver was one. Searching through here or on google will give you the info.     But none of that matters imo. He’s not turning down that contract.  There is nothing but upside for him with that type of deal.  Now, maybe instead of 7 guaranteed years, we now get 6 (ie, we didn’t sign him to the deal before this season started, so that’s one less guaranteed year on the deal) but he’s not turning it down. 
    • Zero chance he turns it down.  The money in that deal is essentially his best case scenario. Zippy chance.
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...