Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Most bang for the buck -- MLB team wins measured by total payroll

     Tampa Bay led the Majors in 2018 -- paying a mere $760,000 per victory, measuring by total team payroll. Oakland was the only other team below a million per win -- $827,000. Contrast that with the bottom of the barrel -- San Francisco spent $2.8 million per win -- almost four times what Tampa spent. The sad Baltimore Orioles spent $2.7 million per win.
    Contrast that with division champs like the Brewers -- who spent $1.13 million per win -- and the Braves, who came in at $1.45 million.
    The last place Marlins paid as much per win as the first-place Braves, but that's a bit misleading. According to spotrac.com (which I use because he keeps updating its payroll throughout the year), the Marlins spent a mere $43 million on players on their 25-man roster -- out of a total payroll of $91 million. The rest of that money? $16.5 million to injured players -- most of that going to Prado. A stunning $34.5 million was paid by the Marlins to players on other teams or out of baseball (led by Edison Volquez $13 million).
    For those interested in the team by team measures, it's attached as a spreadsheet.  You'll see that Cleveland, Colorado and Houston all made the playoffs while spending less than the MLB average of $1.7 million per win.




Payroll Wins $Million / Win
Tampa Bay 68.4 90 0.76 1
Oakland 80.3   97  0.8272 2
Pittsburgh 90.8 82 1.10731707317073 3
Milwaukee 108.9 96 1.134375 4
Chicago WS 71.8 62 1.15806451612903 5
Philadelphia 104.3 80 1.30375 6
Atlanta 130.5 90 1.45 7
Miami Marlins 91.8 63 1.45714285714286 8
Minnesota 115.5 78 1.48076923076923 9
Cincinnati 100.3 67 1.49701492537313 10
San Diego 99.8 66 1.51212121212121 11
Cleveland 142.8 91 1.56923076923077 12
Colorado 144 91 1.58241758241758 13
Houston 163.5 103 1.5873786407767 14
League average 139 81 1.71604938271605
Arizona 141.7 82 1.7280487804878 15
NY Yankees 179.6 100 1.796 16
Seattle 160.9 89 1.80786516853933 17
St. Louis 163.8 88 1.86136363636364 18
NY Mets 150.2 77 1.95064935064935 19
Detroit 130.9 64 2.0453125 20
Chicago Cubs 194.3 95 2.04526315789474 21
Toronto 150.9 73 2.06712328767123 22
Texas Rangers 139.8 67 2.0865671641791 23
Boston 228.5 108 2.11574074074074 24
LA Dodgers 199.6 92 2.1695652173913 25
LA Angels 173.8 80 2.1725 26
Washington 181.2 82 2.20975609756098 27
Kansas City 129.9 58 2.23965517241379 28
Baltimore 127.6 47 2.71489361702128 29
San Francisco 205.6 73 2.81643835616438 30

Friday, January 5, 2018

Looking Inside the Loria-Jeter Sale

    In the mess that the new owners are making of the Miami Marlins, some revealing information is emerging.
    Let's start with a conspiracy theory: Derek Jeter, Mr. Yankee, is destroying the team because he wants to move the Marlins somewhere else,

helping top shareholder Bruce Sherman make a quick, huge profit by flipping the team.
    Thanks to County Commissioner Xavier Suarez's staff, I've seen the various contracts the team signed with the city and county in order to get their shiny new ball park (which was supposed to fix all their revenue problems). Not well versed in legalize, I found key provisions confusing, so Suarez's staff boiled it down to this:
    Marlins have vowed to stay 35 years -- meaning to 2047, measured from the opening of the park in 2012. No provision to wiggle out of that.
    BUT: An interesting provision is intended to keep former owner Jeffrey Loria from making too quick a profit from taxpayers' largess, embedded in a poorly named Relocation Agreement.
That made owner Jeffrey Loria promise that if he sold the team within 10 years, he had to give the county a slice.
    Under terms of that agreement, Loria must pay 5 percent of the net proceeds to the county. The county attorney doesn't yet a dollar figure, says Suarez' office, but should within a few weeks. An auditing firm is examining the deal.
    Interesting: If the county reveals details (and shouldn't it under public records laws?) this audit could serve as a window into the details of the deal Loria and Sherman struck.
    The highly publicized number is that Loria sold for $1.2 billion -- more than seven times higher than the $158 million he was supposed to have paid in 2002.
    Now, some county insiders have told the Herald that they're guessing that Loria will present figures that show this-and-that expenses to be deducted, meaning that the county will get little or nothing.  
     BUT: In December, MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred revealed on Dan Le Batard's radio show two fascinating details: The Marlins sale was "the single largest commitment of equity ever in the history of the game."     AND The debt level didn't change from Loria's ownership to Sherman's.
    Why is this important? The Herald's Barry Jackson has been reporting on how the new owners are continually seeking new investors to reduce their $400 million debt they needed to buy the team.
    Dayn Perry at CBSSports.com notes about Manfred's equity remark: "OK, that's probably true. However, the Marlins are the first team sold since the Dodgers and Padres back in 2012. MLB franchises appreciate at an incredible rate, especially in recent history, and that's a lot of inflation built in. Basically, he's saying the Marlins new owners paid more cash for their $1.3-ish billion purchase than the Dodgers owners did for their $2 billion purchase (the only higher-priced sale in MLB history) six years ago. That's notable, sure, but it's not exactly amazing. Citing it also doesn't prove the Sherman group has sound finances at the moment."
    The central issue -- as Le Batard kept hammering Manfred -- is why did MLB accept a new owner who was so money poor that he needed to immediately slash payroll?
    Manfred insisted he had no information on the new owners' intentions in advance -- Le Batard called that an outright lie. Jackson cited inside sources that it was a complete falsehood.
    "Rob," Le Batard said at one point, "I think you cared more about the $1.2 billion asking price than you did the fans of South Florida."
   
As Barry Jackson has pointed out, local groups -- Mas and Bush -- wanted to buy the team for less than $1.2 billion, but didn't intend to gut the team the way Sherman-Jeter has.
    My take-away: Loria was a bad owner. He backloaded over-priced contracts trying to get another championship. (Former Marlins President David Samson complained recently on another Le Batard show that agent Scott Boras sweet-talked/conned the Marlins into an outrageous deal for nearly worthless pitcher Wei-Yin Chen, who will get more than $50 million over the next three years.)
    But Jeter-Sherman may be even worse. It looks like their basic plan is to do nothing more than hold on to the team for a few years and then selling at a huge profit.
    Most interesting revelation (to me at least) in the continuing Barry Jackson exposes: "According to a source, even though the National League announced the Marlins’ attendance at 1.6 million last season, only 820,000 were paid tickets."
    Finally! Since Marlins Park opened, I've been going from 10 to 20 games a year. I've also been seeing games in other parks -- 29 of the present 30. (Still missing Seattle.) Time and again, I've felt that an announced 20,000 attendance in Miami felt like a half or a third of what 20,000 seemed in other ball parks.
    Jeter's plan -- according to Jackson's viewing business plans dubbed Wolverine (Michigan! Not even a nod to Miami Tropical, or Palm or Mango!): "Wolverine projects the paid figures to rise to 1.1 million, 1.2 million, 1.35 million, 1.5 million and 1.65 million over the next five seasons."
   
By getting rid of the league's MVP? Here's how the NY Post describes the Wolverine plan:  "First: Make your team unwatchable. Second: See an immediate boost in ticket sales with this eye-sore squad. Third: Convince your TV network it should pay more for a team no one wants to watch. Fourth: Coax more millions from corporations, thinking they will be further inspired to support a franchise that is now much worse on the field.

       "How could you possibly get from Step One to Step Four? A Jeterian leap, of course."