![]() |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Okay, enough is enough! MLB has to institute a salary cap! It just plain
isn't fair! The Yankees, yes the dreaded Yankees who many love to hate, are simply being given a raw deal here. The Yankees players are being put in the very difficult position of having to defeat opponents who actually love what they're doing more than the money they're being paid to do. This simply isn't fair to the Yankees. A salary cap would eliminate the psychological disadvantage the Yankees have to endure year after year under the present unfair system. So for the Babe's sake... let's have a cap! gig www.mindyourminddesign.com ("Home of the T-Shirt T-Shirt T-Shirt") |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
I think they should have 7 pay levels. Period.
Example: Rookies = $.1 - .5 mil. per year 2-3 year = $1mil 4-6 year = $3mil 6-10 yr = $4mil over 10 yr = $5mil God = $7mil Better than God $9mil #1...All levels get an automatic 5% yearly increase. #2...5 man arbitration board.(there are always a few exceptions to the rule: Ken Griffey III, or Ryan Howard, etc) After 2 full seasons a player can appeal to skip one level if he's really good. But "The Board" decides if he's worthy. Or a team may want to move a player down one level if he's a real dork. Maybe the guy just got lucky one year. Again, "The Board" decides. Some 10yr players (Bonds)are "better" than other 10yr players, and some young guys are better than some old guys. "The Board" decides if they're worthy. And if a player switches teams (his request), he drops two levels and must wait a full year for any board action. Who to have on the board? Naturally me, and 4 Cubs fans. Take the names of all Cubs season ticket holders (what a waste of money), put them in a hat, draw out 4 names. (I picked the Cubs because they would know what a looser looks like). We would meet every Tues night at the Nome, ND bar after my darts match. Highway is usually deserted after 8pm. No problem for a small plane. This system would eliminate holdouts, players moving from team to team, or having a team 'buy' a pennant. And most importantly, it doesn't matter which team you're on, you get the same pay. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Hank Jr" <Bart@bartland.com> wrote in message
news:4BCWg.234336$QM6.192481@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net... Quote:
Works for me. :-) ....Actually, I always though if I was starting a league from scratch, I'd pay everyone a base salary, say 2.5 million dollars. Then I'd pay by performance. So much for a single, so much for double, a homer, etc., etc. If you're not playing, your still get a base salary of 2.5M, so who could complain after that? Then have individual team bonuses for each win. Increase them in the playoffs. This system would pay the best players and winningest teams the most money, while even the worst players and teams would still earn a pretty good living. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hank Jr <Bart@bartland.com> wrote in message news:4BCWg.234336$QM6.192481@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net... Quote:
How would you decide which rookies would make the maximum and which the minimum? By the round in which they were drafted? By their rankings in Baseball America? If that were the case, David Eckstein would have made the minimum in his rookie year, Dewayne Brazelton the maximum -- and who had the better year? The standard minimum salary for rookies is one thing about MLB's salary structure that actually makes sense. Howard, the Rock Cats fan |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hank Jr wrote: Quote:
But you still ahve the problem of a guy having a great year and then getting a great contract, and then sucking air for the rest of his career. So how about this: Everybody gets a minimum (say $300,000). At the end of the season, each player is paid according to his numbers for that year. As a lineup player you get so much per rbi, so much per hit, per walk, per stolen base. Then maybe you get deductions for strikeouts and caught stealings and errors. Pitchers would be compensated using the same sort of method. In fact, to make it really fair and create great incentives every day, you could have a machine on the clubhouse wall. After every game, each player's statistics are fed into the machine, and it issues checks right then and there. Brian J |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Oct 11, 8:49*am, "Brian J" <firstp...@turtlecreek.net> wrote: Quote:
Yep, that'll build teamwork. Can you imagine the whining everytime someone was asked to sacrifice bunt? |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
powrwrap wrote: Quote:
Heck, pay 'em double for a sac bunt or sac fly. Oh wait. No, then they'll all be doing it. Brian J |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|