2013년 10월 26일 토요일

Ian Eckhardt's blog ::Great Beards in History: Relief Pitchers of Yore






Ian Eckhardt's blog ::Great Beards in History: Relief Pitchers of Yore










               By               now,               the               word               "lockout"               has               become               a               household               name               and               it's               about               time               the               players               either               give               in               to               the               owners               or               just               start               their               own               league.
               Yes,               players,               start               your               own               league               already.

Without               the               owners.

Heck,               sponsored               by               Facebook               or               even               Bill               Gates,               himself.
               Yes,               that's               right,               just               start               your               own               league               without               the               owners.
               Sure,               you               might               want               the               tradition               of               playing               for               the               Cowboys,               Redskins,               Colts,               Patriots               and               Bears,               but               today               is               a               different               era               and               you've               shown               over               the               past               few               months               you're               capable               of               doing               things               on               your               own.

Every               quarterback               in               the               league               formerly               known               as               the               NFL               has               led               some               form               of               organized               workout/practice               so               it's               clear               you               don't               need               management               around               to               tell               you               what               to               do               and               how               to               do               it.
               DeMaurice               Smith               should               at               least               put               the               scenario               of               a               "players               league"               out               on               the               table               to               get               a               bigger               piece               of               the               pie               for               you,               the               players.
               The               infrastructure               is               there.
               There               are               a               ton               of               stadiums               around               the               country               available               that               NFL               owners               don't               own               and               have               exlusive               rights               to               so               there's               one               major               hurdle               cleared.

And               you've               clearly               demonstrated               over               the               past               few               months               how               knowledgeable               you               are               about               the               inner               workings               of               the               NFL.
               If               the               NFL               owners               don't               give               you               what               you               want               and               deserve,               you               could               simply               turn               your               backs               on               them               and               create               your               own               league.

As               outlandish               as               it               may               sound,               it               isn't               as               difficult               as               it               may               seem.

When               William               "Pudge"               Heffelfinger               received               $500               to               play               for               the               Alleghany               Athletic               Association               on               November               12,               1892,               it               began               the               long-lasting               relationship               between               the               athletes               and               the               people               who               could               pay               for               athletes               to               compete.

Back               then,               football               clubs               and               associations               wanted               the               best               players               available               to               win               games,               which               would               give               their               cities               some               fabric               of               civic               pride.

The               owners               of               these               clubs               and               associations               needed               to               pay               for               the               best               talent               similar               to               how               today's               game               operates.

As               professional               football               grew               and               eventually               blossomed               into               a               business,               owners               were               needed               even               more               because               they               had               the               money               to               provide               salaries,               they               were               instrumental               in               getting               stadiums               built               for               the               increasing               number               of               fans,               they               knew               how               to               use               their               business               savvy               to               market               the               organizations,               they               had               the               economic               capital               to               withstand               dips               in               revenue               and               they               had               the               connection               and               relationship               with               the               radio               and               television               industries               to               make               a               boatload               of               money               with               broadcasting               deals.
               Flash               forward               to               today               and               players               actually               have               a               Heffelfinger-type               of               upper               hand.

Heffelfinger               had               a               reputation               as               a               beast               of               a               player               and               every               club               and               association               wanted               his               services.

Other               players               played,               but               he               was               a               star               and               he               could               pick               and               choose               who               he               played               for               whenever,               wherever.
               The               stars               of               the               modern               game               fuel               the               popularity               of               the               sport               much               like               Heffelfinger               did.

Going               back               to               Halas               and               Namath               and               Unitas               and               Bradshaw               and               Staubach               and               Theisman               and               so               forth               and               so               on,               these               names               made               the               NFL               and               they               helped               their               teams               define               the               area               where               they               were               situated.
               Fans               today               are               drawn               to               Tom               Brady,               Brett               Favre,               Chad               Ochocinco               and               Michael               Vick               in               similar               ways,               but               more               and               more,               it               is               because               of               their               star               status               and               not               because               they               wear               a               particular               jersey.

If               Brady               played               for               the               Browns               or               the               Chiefs               or               the               Texans,               he               would               be               picked               first               in               the               fantasy               draft               just               as               often               as               he               would               if               he               were               wearing               a               Patriots               jersey.
               But               the               stars               of               today               have               it               better               than               Heffelfinger               did.

Unlike               the               first               professional               baller,               they               have               the               understanding               of               how               to               manage               the               game.

They               have               the               knowledge               of               how               a               league               works               and               how               to               operate               it.

And               most               importantly               they               have               stadiums               to               play               games.
               So               here               in               a               nutshell               is               how               you,               the               players,               could               make               it               on               your               own:
               1.

Seek               a               major               sponsor               to               fund               the               entire               league               to               make               up               for               any               start-up               costs.

If               players               decided               to               go               their               own               way,               they               could               do               it               through               private               investors               who               could               front               the               start-up               costs               based               upon               figures               already               in               place               from               the               NFL's               numbers.

The               $9.3               billion               in               question               wouldn't               have               to               be               divided               between               players               and               owners;               it               could               be               divvied               up               amongst               the               players               based               on               a               formula               made               famous               by               economist               Gerald               Scully               (see               below).

It               could               be               called               something               like               the               Google               Football               League               or               the               Players               Football               League               sponsored               by               Facebook.

Imagine               all               the               Like's.

While               the               initial               money               available               wouldn't               approach               the               $9.3               billion               in               question,               the               players               would               no               longer               have               to               be               concerned               with               debating               whether               50               percent               or               47.5               percent               or               49               percent               or               whatever               percent               was               the               most               reasonable               percent.

Even               if               the               initial               money               available               dropped               by               $2               million,               the               $7.3               billion               available               would               easily               exceed               half               of               $9.3               billion.

In               addition,               sponsorship               deals               on               uniforms               similar               to               European               soccer               clubs               would               bring               a               substantial               amount               of               money               to               any               start-up               scenario.

2.

Use               stadiums               that               either               are               publicly-funded               entities               or               use               other               venues               that               are               vacant               and               house               other               professional               sports.

Stadiums               in               St.

Louis,               Oakland               (which               was               renovated,               not               constructed,               for               $128               million),               Baltimore,               Tampa               Bay,               Cleveland               and               Cincinnati               were               built               primarily               with               public               funds               and               could               be               used               contractually               with               the               stadium               authority               that               runs               each               structure.

Meanwhile,               the               Houston               Astrodome               now               sits               empty               with               $32               million               in               public               debt               on               it               and               the               Silverdome               in               Detroit,               which               was               recently               bought               through               an               auction               by               Canadian               real               estate               developer               Andreas               Apostolopoulos               for               $550,000,               is               looking               for               tenants.

Or               to               avoid               any               conflict               whatsoever,               the               players               could               seek               alternative               structures               for               their               games.

College               football               was               played               at               Yankee               Stadium               and               Tropicana               Field               last               year               and               could               easily               house               a               professional               football               team.

CitiField               in               New               York               already               played               host               to               a               soccer               match               --               the               Greek               national               team               against               Ecuador               --               that               was               well-attended               and               could               easily               be               the               new               home               for               the               new               team               formerly               known               as               the               Jets.

You               have               plenty               of               college               football               stadiums               to               choose               from,               including               Boston               College's               Alumni               Stadium,               Penn's               Franklin               Field               and               Washington's               Husky               Stadium.

And               Los               Angeles               could               have               its               football               back               with               teams               playing               in               the               Coliseum               and               the               Rose               Bowl.

3.

Find               the               highest               bidder               for               the               new               television               contract,               then               reap               the               profits.

Currently,               the               NFL               has               contracts               with               CBS               ($3.73B),               NBC               ($3.6B),               Fox               ($4.2B)               and               ESPN               ($8.8B)               that               provides               a               combined               total               of               $20.4               billion               to               the               economic               pool.

ESPN's               deal               equates               to               $1.1               billion               annually               for               the               NFL               and               the               money               made               annually               from               the               terrestrial               networks               ranges               between               $600               million               (NBC)               to               $712.5               million               (Fox).

In               addition,               DirectTV               ($3.5B)               just               had               its               five-year               contract               with               the               NFL               end               after               last               season.

Other               major               deals               that               the               NFL               has               profited               from               over               the               past               five               or               six               years               include               $600               million               from               Sprint,               $300               million               from               EA               Sports,               $220               million               from               Sirius               Satellite               Radio               and               $120               million               from               Westwood               One.

The               total               combined               revenue               from               these               contracts               approaches               $4               billion               annually.

Based               on               these               figures,               the               players               could               negotiate               with               new               suitors               and               then               use               the               projected               income               to               fulfill               players'               salaries               and               operating               costs.

4.

Use               Gerald               Scully's               formula               to               determine               player               contracts.

Scully,               an               economist               who               passed               away               in               2009,               wrote               an               article               in               a               1974               edition               of               the               American               Economic               Review               entitled,               "Pay               and               Performance               in               Major               League               Baseball,"               shortly               after               the               1972               baseball               season               opened               with               the               first               players'               strike               in               baseball               history               and               after               a               lockout               threatened               the               1973               season               (it               never               transpired),               that               could               play               a               huge               role               in               determining               players'               salaries               today.

In               the               1974               article,               Scully               devised               a               formula               to               figure               out               a               player's               worth               to               the               organization,               both               in               the               won-lost               column               and               the               team's               receipts.

He               used               a               variety               of               statistical               measures               like               slugging               percentage               for               hitters               and               the               strikeout-to-walk               ratio               for               pitchers               and               combined               them               with               a               complex               formula               for               determining               team               revenue               based               additionally               on               a               team's               won-lost               percentage,               the               attendance               figures               and               the               marketability               of               a               franchise               through               the               popularity               of               a               player.

For               example,               according               to               Scully,               Hank               Aaron               had               a               $520,800               value               to               the               Atlanta               Braves               in               1968               and               Sandy               Koufax               $725,000               to               the               Los               Angeles               Dodgers               in               1966,               which               was               his               last               season.

By               comparison,               Aaron's               top               salary               never               exceeded               $250,000               a               season               in               his               23-year               career               and               Koufax               earned               his               highest               salary,               $130,000,               in               his               last               season               as               a               pro.

Players               like               Tom               Brady,               Drew               Brees,               Ray               Lewis,               Adrian               Peterson               and               Peyton               Manning               would               certainly               profit               off               this               formula.

Scully               also               theorized               that               "mediocre               players               contribute               in               excess               of               $200,000               to               team               revenues"               and               this               statement               came               back               in               the               early               1970's.

Role               players               based               on               this               formula               would               come               away               with               a               better               piece               of               the               pie               than               what               has               been               speculated               in               the               ongoing               negotiations.

In               addition,               the               rookie               pay               scale               would               decrease               initially,               but               would               skyrocket               based               on               performance               and               popularity.

Proven               players               have               been               burdened               over               the               years               by               rookies               who               have               been               given               large               sums               of               money               without               professional               merit.

By               changing               the               rookie               salary               structure,               teams               would               avoid               having               to               pay               out               big               guaranteed               money               and               the               money               "saved"               would               be               used               in               turn               to               reward               the               ones               who               have               lived               up               to               expectations.

               5.

Organize               a               board               of               directors               including               former               and               current               players               and               coaches,               elect               a               C.E.O,               and               construct               an               organizational               structure               similar               to               the               WWE               or               the               Green               Bay               Packers.

Instead               of               the               current               system               in               which               a               conglomerate               of               filthy               rich               owners               dictate               how               the               money               is               divided,               how               it's               managed,               how               the               rules               and               regulations               are               formulated               and               then               spawn               it               onto               the               players               to               take               it               or               leave               it               --               listen,               Adrian               Peterson               may               have               overstated               the               whole               slavery               word,               but               he's               got               a               point               in               how               the               owners               have               a               pretty               heavy               hand               --               with               the               new               league               and               organizational               structure,               players               will               have               a               say               in               what               an               illegal               hit               is,               how               a               player               can               celebrate               in               the               end               zone,               how               much               a               player               should               be               fined               (if               at               all)               if               he               does               something               illegal               in               the               world               away               from               the               game               and               how               many               games               should               be               played               during               the               regular               season.

The               World               Wrestling               Entertainment               company               is               a               publicly               traded,               privately               controlled               company               run               by               a               majority               owner               who               pays               his               wrestlers               based               upon               performance               and               popularity.

"Triple               H"               (Paul               Michael               Levesque)               is               the               highest               paid               wrestler,               according               to               Forbes,               and               had               over               $3               million               in               his               2011               earnings               with               John               Cena               coming               in               a               close               second               at               $2.5               million.

The               WWE               had               $119.9               million               in               revenue               last               year.

The               Packers               are               unique               in               sports               as               the               only               non-profit,               community-owned               franchise               in               the               major               American               professional               sports               leagues.

They               have               a               45-member               board               of               directors               which               includes               a               seven-member               Executive               Committee               that               governs               the               organization.

This               committee               includes               a               president,               vice               president,               treasurer,               secretary               and               three               members-at-large.

Surprisingly,               this               ownership               structure               violates               the               current               league               rules               stipulated               by               the               NFL               owners               --               a               limit               of               32               owners               of               one               team               with               one               owner               having               a               minimum               of               30               percent               stake.

Using               these               two               models,               the               new               players'               league               could               organize               into               a               structure               that               elects               a               commissioner,               a               board               of               directors               and               an               executive               committee               that               governs               the               entirety               of               the               teams               as               a               whole               instead               of               on               an               individual               approach               for               each               entity.

Major               League               Baseball               has               provided               evidence               over               the               past               two               years               in               which               it               took               control               of               the               Texas               Rangers               to               save               the               organization               for               the               betterment               of               the               League,               the               players,               the               employees               and               the               rest               of               the               teams.

It               is               now               in               the               midst               of               deciding               whether               to               completely               do               the               same               with               the               Los               Angeles               Dodgers.

               6.

Reduce               the               amount               of               teams               and               players,               add               new               markets,               make               two               divisions               in               two               conferences,               change               the               preseason               and               add               playoff               games               to               add               more               revenue,               lower               ticket               prices               and               boost               salaries.

The               NFL               suffered               a               decrease               in               attendance               for               the               third               straight               year               this               past               season.

Ticket               sales               for               the               league's               32               franchises               had               a               drop               of               1               percent               to               2               percent               and               total               season               ticket               sales               were               down               by               5               percent.

The               three-year               decline               coincided               with               the               country's               depression               and               the               economy               doesn't               appear               to               be               changing               anytime               soon.

Add               the               lockout               to               the               angst               and               things               may               get               gloomier               quicker               than               rosier.

Finally,               the               improvement               in               television               technology               has               made               going               to               a               game               less               of               priority               in               terms               of               experiencing               the               game.

The               new               league               needs               to               take               advantage               of               areas               that               have               proven               they               can               provide               an               audience               during               an               economic               downturn               and               the               league               needs               to               address               going               to               places               that               have               exhibited.

Using               attendance               figures,               unemployment               figures,               the               rankings               of               the               top               50               media               markets               and               analysis               from               reports               by               the               Boyd               Company,               a               Small               Business               &               Entrepreneurship               Council               and               the               Milken               Institute,               which               ranks               the               Best-Performing               Cities               in               terms               of               how               well               they               are               creating               and               sustaining               jobs               and               economic               growth.

Some               areas               that               could               take               advantage               of               several               areas               prospering               economically               with               a               solid               base               for               sports               attendance               include               Birmingham,               a               city               that               had               a               team               in               the               United               States               Football               League               which               was               one               of               the               better               run               and               more               viable               franchises               during               the               second               professional               league's               existence.

Birmingham               is               in               a               state               doing               very               well               economically               with               eight               areas               ranked               in               the               top               100               nationally               in               the               Milken               Index.

Oklahoma               City               ranks               No.

21               nationally               in               the               Milken               Index               and               has               a               fan               base               worthy               of               recognition               after               helping               the               NBA's               Thunder               rank               in               the               top               15               each               season               since               the               team's               arrival               from               Seattle.

Salt               Lake               City               is               25th               nationally               and               has               supported               the               Utes               in               droves               during               the               college               football               team's               success.

Jacksonville,               Miami               and               Tampa               Bay               have               each               finished               in               the               bottom               third               for               attendance               over               the               past               two               seasons               and               one               team               needs               to               go               or               possibly               two.

While               college               football               reigns               supreme               in               the               Sunshine               State,               professional               football               has               had               a               difficult               time               sustaining               success               over               the               past               few               years               because               of               the               recession.

The               best               solution               should               be               to               create               one               team               that               represents               the               entire               state               and               place               it               in               Orlando,               which               ranks               in               the               top               100               in               the               Milken               Index               and               has               been               named               as               the               nation's               least               expensive               cities               to               launch               a               corporate               headquarters.

The               state               of               Ohio               would               be               better               off               with               one               team               located               between               Cincinnati               and               Cleveland,               two               cities               with               teams               that               have               not               had               full               attendance               over               the               past               few               seasons.

Columbus               will               have               to               deal               with               the               demise               of               Buckeye               football               after               the               impending               NCAA               sanctions               and               could               use               a               boost               from               professional               football.

Los               Angeles               is               a               given               naturally               because               of               the               NFL's               resistance               to               revisit               the               area               without               a               new               stadium.

The               addition               of               new               areas               in               blossoming               markets               along               with               teams               in               traditional               places               like               Boston,               Chicago,               Dallas,               New               York               and               Washington,               D.C.

would               bring               excitement               to               the               new               league               that               would               separate               it               from               the               NFL.

With               the               tweaks               and               additions,               the               new               league               would               have               24               teams               divided               into               two-division               conferences               --               Eastern               and               Western               --               with               the               Atlantic               and               Sunbelt               Divisions               in               the               Eastern               Conference               and               the               Central               and               Pacific               Divisions               in               the               Western               Conference.

Six               teams               would               comprise               each               division               and               those               teams               would               play               each               other               twice               on               a               home-and-away               schedule               and               the               other               six               conference               teams               once               for               a               16-game               season.

The               structure               of               each               division               would               address               travel               situations,               which               in               turn               would               save               money               for               teams               in               terms               of               airline               costs               --               think               green!!

For               example,               the               North               Division               in               the               Eastern               Conference               would               include               Boston,               New               York,               New               Jersey,               Philadelphia,               Pittsburgh               and               Columbus               with               the               farthest               flight               time               between               Boston               and               Columbus               at               eight               minutes               over               two               hours               and               800               flight               miles.

In               fact,               the               farthest               distance               would               exist               between               the               Seattle               and               Phoenix               markets               in               the               Pacific               Division               of               the               Western               Conference               at               1,114               miles               or               a               little               under               three               hours.

Following               is               an               idea               of               what               the               model               could               look               like,               the               areas               where               teams               could               play               based               on               certain               economic               and               media               criteria               and               the               stadiums               that               could               be               used:               The               Players               Football               League               (PFL)
               2               Conferences:               Eastern               and               Western
               Eastern               Conference:
               ATLANTIC               DIVISION
               New               York               (Yankee               Stadium,               52,325)
               New               Jersey               (Rutgers               Stadium,               52,454)
               Boston               (Alumni               Stadium               --               Boston               College,               44,500)
               Philadelphia               (Franklin               Field               --               Penn,               52,593)
               Pittsburgh               (PNC               Park               --               Pirates,               37,898)
               Columbus               (Ohio               Stadium               --               Ohio               State,               102,329)
               SUNBELT               DIVISION
               Washington               (RFK               Memorial               Stadium,               56,454)
               North               Carolina               (Raleigh               --               Carter               Finley               Stadium,               NC               State,               57,082)
               Birmingham               (to               replace               Atlanta,               Legion               Field               --               UAB,               71,594)
               Orlando               (Florida               Citrus               Bowl,               70,188)
               Louisiana               (Baton               Rouge               --               LSU,               92,400)
               Atlanta               (Sanford               Stadium               --               UGA,               92,746               or               Bobby               Dodd,               GT,               55,000)
               Western               Conference:
               CENTRAL               DIVISION
               Chicago               (Ryan               Field               --               Northwestern,               47,130)
               Missouri               (Faurot               Field,               Columbia               --               62,000)
               Indiana               (Memorial               Stadium,               Bloomington,               53,500)
               Oklahoma               City               (Gaylord               Family               Stadium,               Norman               --               OU,               82,112)
               Houston               (Rice               Stadium,               70,000)
               Dallas               (Cotton               Bowl,               92,200)
               PACIFIC               DIVISION
               Denver               (Coors               Field,               50,449               or               Folsom               Field,               the               Buffs,               53,750)
               Arizona               (Phoenix/Tempe,               Sun               Devil               Stadium,               73,379)
               Los               Angeles               (the               Coliseum,               USC,               93,607               or               Rose               Bowl,               92,542)
               San               Francisco               (Memorial               Stadium,               Cal,               73,347               or               AT&T               Park,               41,663)
               Seattle               (Husky               Stadium,               72,500               or               Safeco               Field,               47,116)
               Salt               Lake               City               (Utah               Utes,               46,500)
               Each               team               will               have               a               max               roster               of               60               players               (with               a               7-person               practice               squad).

The               official               roster               total               for               the               league,               excluding               practice               players,               will               equal               1,440               --               a               drop               of               256               players.
               SEASON               STRUCTURE:
               The               season               will               feature               the               following               schedule:
               A               2-game               exhibition               season               starting               with               games               in               mid-August               and               finishing               the               weekend               before               Labor               Day               weekend;               A               16-game,               17-week               regular               season               beginning               with               games               on               Labor               Day               weekend,               Sunday               and               Monday               and               running               through               to               late               December               or               early               January;               and               A               24-team               single-elimination               playoffs               beginning               in               January,               culminating               in               the               Big               Game               in               early               February.

Games               will               be               played               primarily               on               Sunday,               Monday               and               Tuesday               nights.
               The               playoffs               will               include               every               team               with               the               four               best               records               in               each               conference               receiving               a               first-round               bye.

Having               every               team               make               the               playoffs               would               ensure               even               more               profitability               for               the               league.

The               winning               teams               of               the               wild               card               playoff               would               then               play               against               the               top               four               seeds               and               if               there               are               any               upsets,               playoff               matchups               would               be               based               on               the               higher               seed               left               against               the               lower               seed,               continuing               throughout               the               postseason               until               the               Big               Game               championship.

The               final               game               would               be               played               the               first               weekend               of               February               in               warm-weather               states.

The               All-Star               festivities               leading               up               to               the               Big               Game               would               replace               the               NFL's               Pro               Bowl               in               a               punt,               pass               and               kick               type               of               competition.
               So,               players,               either               man               up               and               start               your               own               league               or               just               sign               the               darn               collective               bargaining               agreement               already.

We're               ready               for               some               football.




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