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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
I agree with Buster. It just seems like the AL, as a whole, is more free spending than the NL. The NL has lost so many stars in the last 5-6 years it is tough to bounce back.
AL paid good money for success The American League won 8 of 14 interleague games Friday -- an off-day for the AL, really, considering its overall domination -- and now has racked up 139 victories and just 85 defeats. Tommy Lasorda said the other day that this is all cyclical, and that the National League had a similar domination in the '60s and '70s. I don't think it's that simple, or that random, and I don't think the situation is going to change any time soon. Here's why: 1. Baseball's two financial superpowers, the Red Sox and Yankees, both play in the American League, and their rivalry -- and spending -- forces responses from other AL teams. In almost every offseason in recent years, most of the best free agents sign in the AL. Look at the salary structure in baseball. The four highest-spending teams are in the AL, and the 14 AL teams have spent a combined total of $1.168 billion in salaries, an average of $83.4 million. The 16 NL teams, on the other hand, have spent $1.158 billion, an average of $72 million. Sure, the AL teams might be overzealous in their competitiveness, and there are deals like the Carl Pavano signing that are basically lost cash. But an average difference of $11 million is steep; the AL pays for talent, as B.J. Ryan and A.J. Burnett will tell you. 2. The low-budget teams in the AL have been more successful than their NL counterparts, generally speaking, raising the overall quality of the league. The Minnesota Twins rank 19th in payroll, overall, but have been a contender in every year in this decade. We all know the track record of Billy Beane and the Oakland Athletics. The Indians are having a bad year, but they have been very competitive the last couple of seasons, despite ranking near the bottom in total payroll. 3. The designated hitter. AL teams field nine-deep lineups -- they pay good money for that extra hitter -- and generally, the design strategy within the league is to wear down opposing starting pitchers. No NL team other than the Mets really does that kind of thing, and some executives believe it really affects the interleague play. "When an AL team plays in a NL park, they're struggling with the tough decision of who to take out of the lineup -- David Ortiz or Kevin Youkilis, for example," said one talent evaluator. "But when an NL team plays in an AL park, they really have to stretch to find that extra hitter. They're not going to spend to get that extra veteran hitter on their roster, just for the sake of a few interleague games." My own view is that the best three teams in the majors right now are all in the AL -- the Tigers, White Sox and Red Sox -- and then you could make a case for the Mets being fourth. After that, it's the Yankees, the Twins (with the emergence of Francisco Liriano), Toronto, Oakland and Texas. And then St. Louis. The difference between the leagues is staggering right now, and it's not going to change until the Dodgers, the Cardinals or the Mets start spending very big dollars and forcing the other NL teams to ante up. |
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The Lineups stink.
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: West N. Carolina
Posts: 55,342
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
If Bud dares use this to suggest the NL start using the DH I will hunt him down
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Go Gators! |
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#3 | |
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Charlie Brown All-Star
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Mt. Juliet, TN
Posts: 4,675
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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I'm not sure how correct he is -- removing the outliers of the Yankees and Marlins, there's not a big discrepancy between league average payrolls. But there's definitely been a difference in energy and competence, and he's right when he says that the AL not only has the big spenders but the small-market innovators. The list of NL franchises that have been well run in recent seasons is pretty short.
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"I don't have a baseball team, I have a theological seminary." -- Charlie Brown |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 767
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
Cyclical is NOT random.
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#5 | |
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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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#6 | |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Brooklyn
Posts: 767
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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If he's not equating the two, he's a poor writer. Actually, remove the condition. Olney is a very poor writer. |
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#7 | |
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Pre-tty, pre-tty good!!
Join Date: Oct 2001
Posts: 12,171
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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Grape works as a soda. Sort of as a gum. I wonder why it doesn't work as a pie. Grape pie? There's no grape pie. - Larry David |
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#8 | |
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Churlish
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Olathe, KS
Posts: 13,664
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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Olney's ignorance makes him my least-favorite sports journalist.
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"I prefer books and movies where the conflict isn't of the extreme cannibal apocalypse variety I guess." Redsfaithful |
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#9 | |
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The Lineups stink.
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: West N. Carolina
Posts: 55,342
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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Go Gators! |
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#10 | |
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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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#11 |
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Churlish
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Olathe, KS
Posts: 13,664
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
1 Catcher (Larue, Ross, Valentin)
Hatteberg Phillips Encarnacion Lopez Dunn Griffey Kearns Freel Aurilia That's 10 deep. It's at least as deep as your average AL team.
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"I prefer books and movies where the conflict isn't of the extreme cannibal apocalypse variety I guess." Redsfaithful Last edited by Johnny Footstool; 07-02-2006 at 12:05 AM. |
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#12 |
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"So Fla Red"
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: South Florida - The Real Humidor
Posts: 4,470
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
It's gotten even more laughable. 8 teams in the AL are 7-3 or better in their last ten games (including the Royals who are 6-1 against teams not named the Reds).
No teams in the NL are better than 6-4 and those would be the Reds and Rockies who played a stretch against NL teams. SOmehow the Reds/Cards maintain a 2.5 game WC lead. The Marlins are now in second in the NL East at 7 under .500. Oh and seven of the NLs top eight teams lost again last night in interleague play (Mets won). |
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#13 | |
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Box of Frogs
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NJ
Posts: 15,816
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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Rally Onion!
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Cincinnati, OH
Posts: 33,221
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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I do agree that the AL is the better league. Stevie Wonder could see that. As much as I hate to agree with Lasorda, it is cyclical. I remember growing up how the media wondered if the AL would ever win another All Star game. Of course an All Star game is not exactly the best way to discern which is the better league but it is a cyclical thing. I guess it is just too easy to believe the misconception that money buys wins.
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Charlie Brown All-Star
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Mt. Juliet, TN
Posts: 4,675
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Re: Olney's take on parity btw the leagues
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And that was what the writer was trying to get at -- NL clubs don't have good bats on their benches and struggle to fill the DH spot in interleague games. But the Reds can put a good ninth bat into the lineup.
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"I don't have a baseball team, I have a theological seminary." -- Charlie Brown |
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