Thursday, November 15, 2012

The Loria Problem

With many baseball fans, executives, players, etc. upset about the Marlins/Blue Jays trade, Jeffrey Loria is really coming under fire. People are calling for him to be kicked out of baseball. After he threatened to move the Marlins out of Miami if the tax payers didn't help pay for a new stadium, promising to increase payroll if they complied, this action is seen as reprehensible by most. Loria held the city hostage, teased the fan base last winter, and is now ripping the big league club apart. There will probably be more moves and I am guessing that Giancarlo Stanton will be the lone recognizable name on the Marlins roster come opening day.

While the uproar and attention goes to Loria, once again, the real problem with the game is being ignored. Bud Selig has embarrassed and stained the game of baseball beyond words. From the labor wars to the  steroid era to the embarrassing acts of owners Selig is the man in charge and he is responsible for all of it. Removing Loria, a close friend of Selig's, won't fix this problem. The only solution, for the good of the game, would be for Selig to step down or be removed. Unfortunately, I am now convinced that he will be in office until he or the game dies.

For those who don't know, Loria is not the first friend of Selig's to embarrass the game. You don't have to go back far to find the last either. Frank McCourt, another friend, was a stain on the Dodgers franchise for five years before an ugly, public divorce finally got forced him to sell the team. Selig did a lot to get McCourt the Dodgers after his failed attempt to by the Red Sox. McCourt was just another stain on the game brought to you by Bud Selig.

Major League Baseball has a revenue sharing program that gives each team upwards of 120 million dollars annually. The rules of this agreement state that owners are required to reinvest most of this money into the baseball team. Selig continues to allow owners, like Loria to dance around those requirements and pocket money that is supposed to go into building up the game of baseball. As long as Selig is around, this will remain a problem. Loria has done this before, with the Expos and Marlins, and he will do it again. What is the purpose of getting rid of him if you are just going to allow another one of Selig's friends take over?



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