Field of Schemes
sports stadium news and analysis

MLB Betting Lines for Diehard Baseball Fans!

Sport Nation Blog

Year after year, all US sports betting sites just wait for 1 season - NFL. By far, NFL football is the most popular sport in the United States and the heaviest in terms of betting as well.

September 01, 2010

Jets put more single-game tickets on sale with Opening Day blackout looming

The fallout from the New York Jets PSL pricing mishap continues: The team just put on sale 2,000 upper-deck seats for next week's opening-day game that became available after ticketholders there decided to upgrade to lower-deck seats after the team slashed the prices of personal seat licenses for those seats in June.

All of which wouldn't be of concern to anyone outside the Jets ticket office, except that, of course, the NFL requires TV blackouts of games with unsold seats remaining, which means Jets fans will remain on edge until a sellout is officially certified. And it could be an issue for upcoming games as well: The Jets have about 16,000 unsold seats total available right now, though the lack of a PSL requirement might make the $105-and-up price tag attractive to single-game buyers.

Jets officials, meanwhile, continue to insist that they'll be sold out for the season, and that PSL sales are now "nearly complete." Which may be true, but they're cutting it awful close — though I guess cutting it close is the best way to make sure you're squeezing every available dollar out of your fan base, rather than setting prices low enough to sell out easily and leaving cash on the table.

Hamilton mulling third site for Tiger-Cats stadium

See, I told you that Hamilton Tiger-Cats stadium deadline wasn't really a deadline:

Hamilton city council held a special meeting Tuesday and voted 13-2 to look at a new possible compromise location in the city's west end.
"We are acutely aware that this new direction may be (the) last opportunity to kick-start a stadium in Hamilton," Pan Am Games Organizing Committee chief executive officer Ian Troop said in a statement. "Our venue development work for the stadium is hard up against an immovable deadline for test events in 2014. It is critical to have the City of Hamilton and the Tiger-Cats committing to a co-operative partnership with a concrete plan presented to city council on Sept. 14."

The "compromise" location is one that emerged in the last week or so: the so-called Longwood site in Hamilton's west end, which Ticats owner Bob Young praised in a letter to Hamilton Mayor Fred Eisenberger on Monday as meeting "the essential sports stadium requirements."

Eisenberger told the National Post that he's "not confident at all" that a deal will be struck in the next two weeks, and that "there's going to have to be an awful lot of work done . . . nobody should jump to the conclusion that this is a slam drunk." (Sic — unless that's some Canadianism I haven't heard.) The big question appears to be how "concrete" the plan will need to be by then to make the Pan Am Games folks happy; if "we've agreed to focus on the new site, but don't know how much it'll cost or how it'll be paid for" is enough, clearly that's easier to accomplish in two weeks than an actual fleshed-out plan.

August 30, 2010

MLBleakgate Watch: More outrage over Marlins' profits

The Florida Marlins financial document firestorm just won't die. In the latest flareup, the Miami Herald reported on Saturday that, shockingly, the Marlins have been turning a profit solely on revenue-sharing payments from the rest of baseball:

The Florida Marlins reaped more from Major League Baseball's revenue sharing than the team paid for player salaries the last two years -- a disparity fueling the $52 million in operating income the franchise pocketed in that time, previously secret financial records show.
The team secured its profit -- which exceeded that of five other franchises whose books have also been leaked -- as it won hundreds of millions of dollars in public money for its new stadium, the records show.

Now, there are two potential reasons to be upset about this. One would be if you're opposed to low-revenue teams profiting by getting a share of high-revenue teams' cash - but then, this is all that the revenue-sharing plan was ever reasonably expected to accomplish, as it was never going to do much to reduce disparities in how much teams were willing to pay for players. As I wrote for Baseball Prospectus at the time:

Baseball is left with what might be called the "Don't make Bud come in there rule": Teams are supposed to make every reasonable effort to compete, and not just sit back and collect revenue-sharing checks. (Not too obviously, anyway.) It's a typically old-school approach for the old-boys cabal: Don't sweat what the rules and regulations say; we'll handle our own.
We'll know more about the full effects of the new CBA once the lawyers actually finish putting the general agreements made at the negotiating table into hard-and-fast rules. (There have already been some reports of things that were agreed on by the negotiators, but scrapped once they couldn't be translated into legalese.) But if you're a Royals fan hoping that "overhaul of the revenue-sharing system" means your team will finally have an incentive to spend with the big boys, don't hold your breath.

The more legitimate gripe is that Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria covered up his profits in order to cry poor in stadium negotiations with the city of Miami. Unfortunately, it seems unlikely that there's much to be done about that now after the fact, though some local electeds are trying.

South Florida Sun-Sentinel columnist Michael Mayo, meanwhile, goes so far as to say that the fault lies not with Loria's shrewd bargaining on the stadium deal but with the government "enablers" who let him get away with it:

The Marlins simply did what every sports team — and any shrewd business — could do. They milked the public to the max. They'll pay a fraction of the overall cost yet keep nearly every dollar in revenue from the stadium, which will ultimately cost taxpayers billions in bond repayments. ...
"The Marlins aren't to blame for this," said Norman Braman, the Miami auto magnate who sued unsuccessfully to stop the project. "The fault lies with the politicians."
Politicians like Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez and former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz, who could have at least demanded to see the Marlins' books before agreeing to such a lopsided deal.
"If you read the depositions in the suit, you'll see they never even asked," Braman said. "Alvarez said, 'I didn't think it was necessary.'"
That's just bad business, and bad leadership.

While I get Mayo's point, there's plenty of blame to go around here; one doesn't have to let Loria off the hook just because all the other kids were doing it. There's plenty of blame to go around here, both for those who hid their finances, and for those who didn't think to look at the books.

Meanwhile, Marlins president David Samson's insistence that the team's profit wasn't really profit — it was for improved minor-league facilities, see, and saving up for the team's share of stadium costs — rings increasingly hollow as more news outlets uncover line items in the team's finances that make it look like Loria was simply pocketing money. The Herald reports that in addition to $16 million in cash that Loria took out of the team in 2008 and 2009 (Samson insists this was repayment of a loan), the Marlins paid $5.4 million over those two years to the Double Play Company, a separate company owned by Loria and Samson.

All this is likely to raise eyebrows not only at Miami city hall, but in Major League Baseball, whose other teams can't be happy that they're sending money to Florida just so that Loria can fatten his wallet. Normally I'd say that you'd expect the other teams would have had access to this information already — if the insurer who's thought to be the source of the document leak had it, then surely it was available to baseball insiders — but as we've seen this week, sometimes people have to be slapped across the nose with numbers before they notice what they mean.

Canada official: No money for Quebec arena, except for maybe money for a Quebec arena

First line of a story in Saturday's Montreal Gazette:

Quebec City shouldn't look to a deficit-fighting federal government to help fund a new arena that would enable it to lure back a National Hockey League franchise, Treasury Board President Stockwell Day said yesterday.

Four paragraphs later:

Day did allow that federal money could possibly go toward funding a new NHL-calibre arena. "Different municipalities have different plans in terms of infrastructure and I can't comment directly on those plans," he said.

Boi-oi-oi-oing. Even after scouring the Internet, I haven't found any indication of what the heck Day meant: That federal money could be used for arena infrastructure, but not for an arena itself? That Quebec City could use existing federal revenue streams, but not ask for new money? Any native Canadian speakers who can help me out here?

In any case, it looks like the plan to lure the NHL back to Quebec with a new $400 million publicly funded arena is alive again. Or not.

August 27, 2010

Columbus Crew owner says 11-year-old stadium's days are numbered

I've heard of one-upping, but this is getting ridiculous:

[Columbus Crew owner Clark] Hunt said 11-year-old Crew Stadium, which his father funded and built, remains "a fantastic venue to watch a soccer game." But the team must look at its long-term facility needs, he said, including a new stadium.
McCullers also said the Crew is closely watching the Columbus Blue Jackets' effort to improve its lease at Nationwide Arena through a possible public purchase of the privately owned venue. One of the financing scenarios under discussion is tapping tax revenue from the new Columbus casino to fund an arena buyout by Franklin County and the city.
"My message to those that have an ongoing interest in that," McCullers said, "is we shouldn't just fix the Blue Jackets' situation but fix the professional sports infrastructure situation in Columbus. That includes us."

Two lessons here: One, the only thing stopping team owners from demanding new stadiums every year, as economist Rod Fort once suggested, is the limits of their chutzpah. And two, when considering a bailout to one of your city's sports teams, you really need to watch out for that camel's nose.

MLBleakgate Watch: Miami mayor threatens Marlins garage money

Okay, now it's the mayor of Miami (not to be confused with the mayor of Miami-Dade County — that wacky Florida!) who wants to see about getting money back from the Florida Marlins on their stadium deal, now that it's official that the team has been earning big profits. And Mayor Tomas Regalado knows just what money he wants to recoup: the $100 million Miami is set to spend on parking garages for the new stadium.

Regalado asked city attorney Julie Bru whether the city -- which recently declared a state of "fiscal urgency" amid dwindling revenues and a gaping budget hole -- has authority to reopen the parking contract. ...
As a commissioner, Regalado voted against the stadium deal.
Now, citing leaked financial reports showing the team turned a $49 million profit the past two years, the mayor wants the city to receive 100 percent of the advertising revenues from signs that would adorn the garages. The deal now calls for a split.
"If the answer is in the positive, I would like to bring this issue to the city commission in September or October," Regalado wrote to Bru. "If the answer is in the negative, what recourse do we have to expose those who misinformed the commission and public during a public hearing?"

It seems pretty unlikely that Miami will be able to wriggle out of its garage commitment, but it'll sure be interesting to see Regalado try. If nothing else, Jeffrey Loria and David Samson can expect to be beat up plenty more in the local media so long as they insist on sticking to the original terms of the deal — but somehow I think they'd rather pay that price than one with dollar signs attached.

Cal senate won't move on Kings arena until more questions answered

Looks like the Sacramento Kings arena land swap plan has hit a stumbling block in the form of California state senate president pro tem Darrell Steinberg, who's actually (gasp!) asking questions about the deal before he'll consider enabling legislation. Among the items that Steinberg wants more info on:

  • Whether Cal Expo actually wants to relocate its state fairgrounds to the Arco Arena site. (A report on this is due next month.)
  • Whether the cost estimates for a move are reliable.
  • What laws would need to be changed to allow the land swap.

Now, Steinberg did say that once those questions are answered, he'd consider introducing a bill in December. But the Kings arena plan still comes down to: Until Cal Expo signs on and they figure out a way to pay for, this ain't going nowhere.

August 26, 2010

MLBleakgate Watch: Miami official demands more stadium cash from profitable Marlins

The fish are really hitting the fan in Miami now over those revelations that the Florida Marlins owners weren't really losing money when they sweet-talked local governments into giving them $478 million for a new stadium:

  • Miami-Dade County Commissioner Rebecca Sosa called for the Marlins to cough up more dough for the stadium, now that the team's profits are revealed. (It was actually a letter to Mayor Carlos Alvarez asking that he "explore alternatives to the possibility of securing a greater financial contribution from the Marlins towards the stadium construction," but I like my wording better.)
  • Marlins president David Samson shot back that "a contract is a contract" and insisted no more money would be forthcoming from the team. He also told a local sports radio interview that he "absolutely never" lied about the team's finances (as when he said in 2007 that owner Jeff Loria was "committed to stop losing money"), and that all that annual profit actually went to "pay down debt," save up for the team's own stadium costs, and build up the team's minor-league operations.

Meanwhile, more on yesterday's argument from St. Petersburg Times sports columnist John Romano that the documents show the Tampa Bay Rays are likely losing money, as they were shown making a slim profit in 2008 and their payroll is up since then while revenues are down. Noah Pransky of WTSP-TV writes on his Shadow of the Stadium blog:

In making his argument about the Rays' limited television revenue, Romano ignores the fact that the problem is likely to remedy itself in a few years.
From 2009 to 2010, Rays' television ratings have soared more than 70 percent. And while it doesn't mean a ton of extra money right now, it will in 2017 when they begin a new yet-to-be-negotiated television contract.

As entertaining as all this is, all of this debate about "how much do teams have" is still a bit beside the point: Regardless of whether they're turning a $10 million profit or showing a $10 million loss (and likewise regardless of whether those numbers mean anything real — one Miami accountant notes that the Marlins' financials appear to show $10 million a year in "costs" that are really salary payments to team owner Jeff Loria), anyone rich enough to own a sports franchise can "afford" to buy a stadium the same way you or I afford to buy a house: You go to the bank and borrow the money, then pay it off from your income over the years. That's true whatever the profit-and-loss baseline is that you're starting from.

Or to put it even more simply: If the added revenues the Rays (or the Marlins, or whoever) expect to get from a stadium are enough to pay off the stadium debt, then shouldn't they be paying for it? And if they're not enough, then what's the point in building a new stadium in the first place, other than as an excuse to bail out the team's finances with public dollars?

Minnesota gov candidates all want Vikings stadium, hedge on how to pay for it

The Minnesota Vikings' flagging stadium campaign got a boost yesterday, when all three Minnesota gubernatorial candidates declared their support for state aid in building a new Vikes stadium. As for what that state aid would look like, though, they were pretty vague:

  • Independence Party candidate Tom Horner wants to add slot machines at racetracks to pay the state's share, notwithstanding the repeated failure of such a plan in the state legislature. Horner also says the Vikings should pay 40% percent of the stadium cost, and let the state get revenue from non-NFL events.
  • Republican Tom Emmer says he wants a Vikings stadium, but doesn't want to use general fund money to pay for one. Emmer mentioned using tax money currently going to the Minneapolis convention center once that debt is paid off — yet another plan that went down in flames last legislative session — but didn't actually say whether he endorsed it.
  • DFL candidate Mark Dayton says, "I'd work with all entities to put together a deal."

Either way, the state still faces that $6 billion deficit, and the NFL is still looking at a likely lockout in 2011, so the Vikings have to be looking at an uphill battle to get a stadium passed next year. Still, stranger things have happened.

Forbes: Jets and Giants will make a mint, barring lockout

The freshly validated Forbes team value estimates for the NFL are out, and there are two main stories: One, average team values have fallen for the first time on record, thanks to the sucky economy. And two, the New York Jets and Giants are worth more thanks to their new stadium, but the debt they took on for it puts them at risk if there's a lockout in 2011:

Every team would suffer, but "a lockout would affect the Giants and Jets probably more so than any other NFL franchise," [Forbes senior editor Kurt] Badenhausen said.
"The Giants' and Jets' built-in costs of servicing debt are so much higher. If we have a lockout, they still have to pay the interest on their debt, even if nobody's buying a ticket."

Of course, the other way to look at this is that here's another benefit of teams putting up their own money for stadiums: They have an incentive to actually play football, instead of shutting down the sport every time they want to win a bargaining victory over the players' union. Not that the Giants and Jets owners are likely to have that much sway over NFL labor tactics, but we can dream of world where franchises pay their own stadium debts, and take on their own risks...

August 25, 2010

MLBleakgate Watch: Wait, Marlins weren't really going broke without a new stadium?

Okay, the Great Baseball Financial Document Foofaraw is taking a weird turn. Today's meme is that the fact that the Florida Marlins have been turning a profit shows that they didn't really need that $478 million in public stadium subsidies after all. As Yahoo! sportswriter Jeff Passan put in a column last night:

Most harrowing is the takeaway that baseball's biggest welfare case could have funded a much greater portion of the ballpark. In 2009, when the Marlins started spending some of their profits on their portion of the stadium, they still had an operating income of $11.1 million. The team fought to conceal the $48.9 million in profits over the last two years because the revelation would have prompted county commissioners to insist the team provide more funding. Loria, an art dealer with a net worth of hundreds of millions, wouldn't stand for that. He wanted as much public funding as possible - money that could've gone toward education or to save some of the 1,200 jobs the county is cutting this year.

Equally outraged are Miami-Dade county commissioners — or at least, the ones who voted against the stadium deal in the first place. Commissioner Carlos Gimenez told the Miami Herald: "[The idea] is horrible and the financing is even worse. And now you see they took us for a ride ... I tried to make it a condition on the contract that we see the books. This shows me they could have put more into the stadium than they did. We could have sold less bonds." Added Commissioner Joe Martinez: "None of us were aware of this. ... I do believe that if some people had known they were taking a profit, they would have voted differently."

Not to say "I told you so" or anything, but... seriously, didn't anybody bother to read Forbes before this? You know, the magazine that estimated that the Marlins were turning a $43.7 million profit in 2008, as against the leaked documents' $39.2 million? If, as Martinez insists, "none of us" on the county commission were aware of this, then that betrays a pretty serious failure of background research by Miami's elected officials.

The real news, as the South Florida Sun-Sentinel's excellent Sarah Talalay makes clear in her blog post today, isn't that the Marlins were making a profit, but that team execs were lying when they claimed they weren't. Writes Talalay:

Each time Forbes released its annual team valuations, Samson disputed the figures saying he didn't know Forbes sources, but he also insisted the team wasn't making a profit, and if there was one, team owner Jeffrey Loria would put it back into the team.
There are several examples of this, but here's one from 2007, when Samson was asked about Forbes' reporting the Marlins had the highest operating income of the leagues' 30 teams at $43.3 million and with a league low payroll of $24.8 million:
"Very often the mistake that's made is they look at revenue sharing numbers and the team's payroll and take the difference and see profit without looking at our expenses," Samson said.
Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria "would want any dollar extra going into payroll," Samson said.
"What's happened is he committed to stop losing money, but he has never said he makes his living from the operation of the Florida Marlins. He simply doesn't want to lose all his money."

Finally, on the journalistic flip side, you have St. Petersburg Times sports columnist John Romano, who argues that the documents really show that the Tampa Bay Rays do need a new stadium, because while the team is turning a profit, it's only doing so because it's getting revenue-sharing money, and winning while spending less than the Yankees and Red Sox.

So let me see if I can follow the logic: Tampa Bay taxpayers should give money to the Rays for a new stadium because, even though the team right now is both winning and turning a profit, there are other teams that are able to win the same and turn a profit while spending more? Does Florida have some sort of citizen right to throw $16 million a year at A.J. Burnett that I don't know about?

UPDATE: Romano points out that his main argument was that if the Rays turned a $14 million profit in 2008, when they went to the World Series, they likely lost money last year, when they missed the playoffs and had a higher payroll.

That's a fair assessment, but it still makes for a weak case for a new stadium, which is still not going to put the Rays into the same spending echelon as the Yanks or Red Sox. At best, it might afford the Rays an extra $20 million or so a year — call it one Carl Crawford, or 1.2 A.J. Burnetts. Or, if they ran their team like Jeff Loria, a couple of Picassos.

August 24, 2010

MLBleakgate Watch: Did Marlins' stadium costs price them out of keeping Cabrera?

I've been trying to avoid the foofaraw over the leaked MLB financial documents, in part because I don't believe even internal sports financial docs are worth the paper they're printed on (cf. then-Toronto Blue Jays VP Paul Beeston's famous statement, "Under generally accepted accounting principles, I can turn a $4 million profit into a $2 million loss, and I can get every national accounting firm to agree with me."), but because they're not really anything new. Forbes' annual estimates of franchise profits had teams like the Pirates and Marlins raking in roughly the same amount as the leaked documents reveal — so if commentators are going to be up in arms that teams are turning a profit on revenue sharing money instead of spending in on player payroll, aren't they a couple of years late?

That said, this latest from the ever-quotable Marlins president David Samson in today's New York Times just cries out for comment:

Samson said the Marlins' decision to maintain a modest payroll and trade a star like Miguel Cabrera after the 2007 season was to save money to help finance its $645 million, retractable-roof ballpark, which is to open in 2012. The team must pay about one-quarter of the cost, with Miami and Miami-Dade County providing the rest. "We could have had Cabrera, but no ballpark," he said. "That's what I tell fans."

Samson didn't say whether he tells fans this with a straight face, but you have to wonder. The Marlins are putting up about $160 million towards the new stadium, which comes to somewhere around $12 million a year in debt payments over 30 years. A large chunk of that is expected to come from naming rights, which the Marlins kept for themselves — even in today's depressed market, something like $5 million a year in naming rights isn't unreasonable — and another large chunk can come out of stadium revenues, which the Marlins also kept for themselves. The Fish are getting full control over a $645 million stadium for the bargain price of $160 million, and you don't turn down a deal like that whether you're saddled with a first baseman with a large contract or not.

On top of that, though, let's take a look at Miggy's contract itself: Under the extension he signed when he was traded to Detroit, the likely AL MVP candidate is set to earn $20 million and some change each year for the next six. That's real money, certainly, but just like the Marlins' stadium cash, it's an investment, not just an expense: A prodigious slugger like Cabrera puts fannies in the seats, which puts dollars in the cash registers, and helps defray the cost of paying his salary.

Now, admittedly nobody's coming to see the Marlins now, with or without Cabrera — but that's all expected to change once the new stadium opens in 2012. (Or fervently hoped to change by Samson and Co., anyway.) So really, Cabrera is more worth the investment when you have a new stadium than without one, since suddenly having an attendance draw means you can actually draw attendance.

In other words, it would have been more honest for Samson to say: "Sorry, but we weren't sure about this whole stadium thing back in 2007, so we figured we could make more money by dumping salary and collecting revenue-sharing checks than by trying to sell tickets to our invisible fan base. We'll try to do better once the new stadium opens, if it looks like fans will actually show up to see star players." That's the kind of thing that makes you sound like a selfish plutocrat, though — so better to just blame your minimal stadium costs for forcing you to sell off your best players, even if it doesn't make any economic sense.

Astrodome: To raze or not to raze?

A Houston Chronicle opinion piece published today suggests either fixing up Houston's Astrodome, at considerable expense, or tearing the darned place down.

The piece, written by Richard Justice, suggests that a teardown might be more likely, stating, "If Yankee Stadium and Tiger Stadium can go, then the Astrodome can go, too." Nevertheless, he recommends trying to save it, suggesting a full-scale renovation and a conversion into vast retail and hotel space so that it becomes a place "where people stop and stare and remember the spirit of a great American city."

But stopping and staring and thinking about a city's spirit is not likely to get the cash register ringing to the degree that might be needed to save the place, so Justice opens the floor to democratic alternatives, stating, "If my vision is the wrong one, that's fine. Let's hear yours. Let's work together and come up with a consensus and see if there's a way to save it." Generally, when stuff of this nature hits the papers, it is a precursor to demolition, but time will tell.

August 23, 2010

Carolina Panthers prez says 14-year-old stadium's days are numbered

From the "Once you take off the shrinkwrap, it's used" department:

For the first time, the Carolina Panthers are discussing publicly the eventual need for a major renovation of the 14-year-old Bank of America Stadium, or perhaps a replacement stadium.
"You would have to think we're in the middle of a normal NFL stadium cycle," said team President Danny Morrison, who was hired last September. "The two options you would have somewhere down the line, in 10 or 15 years, would be a major renovation or something new."

And why, exactly, does Morrison think the Panthers will soon need a new stadium, other than the obvious that it's always nicer to have this year's model? The Charlotte Observer gives several reasons:

  • All the other kids have one: "Of the 32 stadiums in the NFL, only 13 are older than Bank of America Stadium," notes the Observer. "And of those 13 older stadiums, several have recently undergone major renovations that cost upward of $100 million each."
  • Their old stadium doesn't have enough parking: Former Panthers president Mark Richardson apparently griped about this three years ago, though a whole new stadium seems a bit like overkill when all you want is more parking spaces.
  • There's a new stadium! And it has a hat! Forbes editor Kurt Badenhausen says the Panthers' stadium is still "very financially viable," but pales in comparison to the new Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants and Jets stadiums, especially in terms of added money-makers like sports bars.

So, basically, it's nicer to have this year's model.

Morrison says he's talked with Charlotte City Manager Curt Walton about the stadium issue, but that their discussions were only preliminary. Still, this is why speculation that the new stadium boom is over "because everybody already has one" is invariably wrong: There's always some team waiting to go back to the head of the line and ride again.

August 21, 2010

Vegas mayor promises MLB team for some, miniature American flags for others

Oscar Goodman has been mayor of Las Vegas for 11 years, and in that time probably his most defining characteristic is that he's never met a sports franchise he didn't like. (And that's saying something, given that this is a guy whose Wikipedia entry includes an entry for "Controversies: Thumb amputation and caning.") He's publicly wooed the Montreal Expos, Florida Marlins,San Diego Chargers, and Pittsburgh Penguins, all without the barest hint of where these teams would play if they relocated to Vegas.

Still, even Goodman had never done what he did last week: told reporters that he was in "very serious" talks to built a 45,000-seat domed stadium and that Las Vegas had been "designated an American League city." By whom, Goodman wasn't saying — I'm pretty sure the last time baseball divvied up territories by league was during expansion discussions in the early 1960s, so it'd be pretty bizarre for MLB to revive the concept now.

Baseball business observers likewise greeted Goodman's pronouncement with skepticism, noting that MLB says it doesn't intend on moving any teams across state lines anytime soon and that Vegas doesn't really need a baseball team to compete with the casinos as an attraction.

Still, even merely hinting that he was going to lure a major-league baseball team was enough to get Goodman's name in the papers — and even got our old friend Zennie Abraham speculating that clearly it's the Oakland A's headed to Nevada. Which doesn't seem very likely, but if it does happen — even if in the year 2050 — Goodman was vague enough that he'll be able to claim credit. That's always a good way to pad your Wikipedia entry, and nobody even has to lose their thumbs.

August 19, 2010

Giants reverse course, offer PSL-free seats for sale

Hey, remember how the New York Giants swore that they'd be able to sell out their high-priced PSLs by opening day? Well...

After insisting for months they had no more non-premium PSLs available and fewer than 1,200 premium PSLs left, the Giants yesterday quietly announced plans to sell single-game tickets without PSLs through Ticketmaster.
The sure-to-be-controversial plan starts today, when existing PSL holders get first dibs on what the team described in a news release as "a limited number of individual game tickets for the Giants' eight 2010 regular season games."
What is certain to cause hard feelings will come Monday, when fans who did not buy PSLs -- which started at $1,000 for the Giants -- will have the chance to buy single-game tickets without the PSL requirement.

The controversy, of course, is that Giants fans have been buying PSLs after being told by the team that this would be the only way to get tickets. This won't be as bad as 15 years ago, when the Oakland Raiders only managed to sell half their PSLs and ended up selling the rest of their seats as individual tickets, but it's still likely to anger many PSL buyers, and potentially open the door to lawsuits.

Giants owner John Mara tried to downplay the controversy, insisting that these were just a handful of extra seats held back to comply with ADA rules and ensure that all season ticket holders had seats, and adding, "We never said that we wouldn't sell single-game tickets. But we didn't advertise it." Which would be a better defense if the Giants hadn't posted this on their own website in 2008:

The so-called PSLs, one-time payments that guarantee the purchaser associated rights to purchase Giants season tickets, will be part of the purchase price for every stadium seat in the new building.

If nothing else, it'd be interesting to see what the FTC has to say about this.

Older news items

More News

CONTACT US FOR AD RATES

Bet at Belmont.com for the best in sports betting. Prime football season is coming up and there no better place to be than Belmont.com. Belmont.com prides itself in providing the best in football betting. So check it out!

Visit Sports-Gambling.com, your online Gambling Sports site for live Super Bowl Odds, unique wagering Sportsbook Gambling options, numerous NFL Gambling prop wagers and more!