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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- Essay Name : 1506.txt
- Uploader :
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Sport
- Title : Game Over!
- Grade : A
- School System : College Freshman
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : Good essay about the 1994 baseball strike
- Teacher Comments : Very good!!
- Date : November, 1994
- Site found at : Surfing around...
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- GAME OVER!
- "I don't like it. People won't be able to come to these games anymore, and I don't like that". A sad nine -
- year - old fan voices his concerns on the 1994 major League Baseball strike. The `94 baseball season has
- come to an abrupt end. Players have ceased play because they feel they are being treated unfairly with the
- owner's plan to impose a salary cap. Owners are finding it difficult to come to terms with their own
- disagreements. Small market teams are rising to power with their demands while large market team owners
- are finding it hard to deal with the teams and their issues, while still trying to please the players. In essence,
- it is a three - way battle between the two sides of large and small market owners and the players. Neither
- side is showing any sort of sympathy for the other side. They are sticking with their proposals without any
- thoughts of changing them. Confusion is setting in on both sides. They are finding it hard to lean toward a
- goal when they do not know what they want. The baseball strike involves greed, uncertainty, and lack of
- desire to resolve the issue on both sides. While confusion mounts among owners and persistence rides high
- among players, things are only going to get worse until they come to some sort of an agreement.
- The baseball strike of `94 officially hit the hearts of America on August 12, three quarters into one of the
- most intriguing seasons in a long time. A season on the verge of breaking many long standing records. As
- the strike began, the people of the world looked with sadness, as well as disgust towards players and
- owners. Officially, the strike is the players verses the owners, but at a closer look, it is much more
- complicated. Within the owners meetings, there is feuding as well. Small market clubs such as Montreal,
- Milwaukee, Cincinnati, and Kansas City, are addressing their needs which conflict the needs of the large
- market owners. The main concern the owners have is that players salaries are eating up an increased
- percentage of the owners revenues. Small market owners are now insisting that all twenty-eight ball clubs
- share their income equally, not only to maintain parity in the league, but also so the smaller clubs can
- survive.
- Money began disappearing from baseball in 1989 when owners, found guilty of collusion, boycotted free
- agent markets, and were ordered to pay players 10.5 million dollars. Then, in 1990, a huge television deal
- was set that was going to accumulate more than one - billion dollars throughout major league baseball. The
- TV package failed, and the owners lost all the money they were counting on. Finally, in 1992, Fay Vincent,
- the commissioner of baseball at the time, tried to intervene and help out with labor negotiations, only to be
- forced to resign by the owners who thought he was out of his place. Now, there is not a commissioner to
- resolve any problems that baseball has. At this moment, small market teams are coming into control. Last
- January, the small market owners introduced a revenue - sharing proposal by threatening the big market
- teams to share radio income with the small market teams. The plan would only be set forth if players agreed
- to a salary cap, which is where they are now.
- The large market teams such as Los Angeles, both New York teams, and both Chicago teams, are
- disregarding the smaller teams problems. They do not believe revenue should be shared among teams. They
- say it's a business. Revenue sharing would break the business. The truth is that teams with smaller revenues
- cannot keep up with players salaries, while the teams who can pay them more receive the high price, high
- talented players, who increase chances of winning and bring in more money. Smaller teams make a good
- point in saying that a business is not always a competition. They say that this business will not prosper until
- all aspects, and all job positions in the game are profiting. The only thing both sides agree on is that baseball
- must have a salary cap, which would reduce team's spending for salaries from 58 to 50 percent of baseball
- revenues. This would cumulate more money to please small market teams, and more profit to make the
- whole baseball industry more secure. The large market teams are proposing plans to the small market teams,
- but it is not going to matter when the large market teams do not comply with small market pleas to have
- revenue sharing. The small market owners promise to block any settlement that they believe does not let
- them compete with wealthier teams.
- "Salary cap!" Insist the owners. "NO WAY!" Reply the players. The players are not flinching on this issue.
- The players chose their strike date before spring training, rather than later in the season. This allowed
- owners to think their side through the season and time after the strike date to crack under the pressure of
- resuming play and preserve the post season. The players realize that they have control if they play or not
- when they have control if they play or not. When they stopped playing, they had already earned most of
- their 1994 salary, which averages over 1.2 million dollars per person. Next month each player will receive
- 165,500 as a part of a 200 million dollar rainy day fund. The owners are losing money over the work
- stoppage, but yet they know they will lose a lot more if these salary increases continue. The players on the
- other hand could not care less about the owners. They feel they have been cheated for years and now this is
- their time. They feel that retired players are being treated unfairly by owners because the owners did not
- deposit the tri-annual 6. million dollars into the person fund. What the players do not realize is that the
- pension money was not available because the owners are paying the players' outrageous salaries.
- The saddest moment in baseball occurred on the afternoon of Sept. 14 when Small Market owner Bud Selig
- of Milwaukee Brewers announced the cancellation of the rest of the regular season along with the post
- season. After an 89 year world series run, we can only say two words to describe the fall classic: Game
- Over. While owners are arguing the future of baseball and players do not want to break a nail on their ring
- finger, there is one party that is seemingly forgotten, the precious fans. They find it hard to sympathize with
- the people of baseball and their multi-million dollar problems when they earn a living to pay for overpriced
- tickets, soggy hot dogs, flat beer, and all of the other novelties that accompany a day at the ball park.
- America is waiting for someone to stand up, wake up to reality, and realize this is just a game. It has
- become a billion dollar business and all the parity and fun is being sucked out by people who are missing the
- whole reason America is in love with this game.
- Maybe baseball can look back to when it was a game and learn a thing or two, making some changes for the
- better. America is silently pleading with baseball to not collapse but it seems baseball does not care. On
- labor day of this year, when the players were lounging around their mansions watching television, Oakland
- A's pitcher Ron Darling said, "What do real people do on Labor Day?", wanting sympathy because of his
- own boredom. Well Ron, maybe next Labor Day, you will be playing baseball, but the "real people" of this
- land will be fed up and not watch you play.
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