TwinkieGorilla said:
You're missing the point. Teams like Green Bay have a better run organization than most, but will never be able to afford competing against a money-driven campaign like Jerry Jones could afford if there's no limits to bargaining or rules as to where players end up. Because honestly, who the fuck wants to live in Green Bay for glamour?
Yeah, I'm not talking about how the team is run, I'm talking about accessibility to a large, affluent fanbase that can better supply a team with the funds it needs to put the best experience possible out - team, stadium etc. Especially if that's what's holding them back from competing for free agents.
I think lowering the bar is the wrong way to do it. Especially in a hyper-competitive meritocracy like pro sports. It's counter-intuitive. Flattens the bell curve, stifles excellence. And holds FA salaries down.
You're basically saying, in so many words, that "Fuck yeah, I want Donald Trump as my Pre'ednt! He got 'dat cash to back 'dat ass up!"
Far from it. Presidents don't pay for their cabinet out of their own pockets, so their personal wealth is irrelevant once elected.
Do you really think Boston/NY has anything other to do with money?
No, where did I say otherwise?
What better reason is there though? I thought the whole point was to have a viable, healthy, robust league with broad appeal. That purpose would be better served with franchises in LA and Toronto than Buffalo and JAX.
Your arguments do seem rather colored by a wish to just see major East Coast cities split championships between them, Cimms.
I want the strongest, most competitive teams that money can buy as provided for by the host city. If a team is being held back because of a small funding base, they should look for a new city that will support them.
Thanks, but no thanks. What have these teams accomplished except being lucky in being grounded in the richest market areas of the US?
You just gave the only good reason. Their money affords them the ability to put a better product on the field. Money runs the NFL. It dictates just about everything.
What about the other side of the coin?
Is Kansas City anymore deserving of a title than Chicago?
Small market teams suddenly have more inherent soul to them? They work harder/smarter?
I can tell which teams are richest by Forbes' lists, I don't need to see that played out on the field. No thanks x3.
See, this is a quaint narrative, it makes us feel good to bash the 'fat cats', but not always representative of reality.
Tampa Bay Rays have the second lowest payroll in MLB @ $41M.
Yankees and Red Sox are #1 and #2 at $202M and $161M. Quadruple the payroll.
Which of those three teams has won the AL East 2 of last 3 years?
The Rays. A team with 1/4 the payroll dominating the two Evil Empires.
Paying someone big money doesn't guarantee commensurate production. Big market teams can't buy guaranteed production and small market teams can excel at scouting/drafting/development.
A NY fan also pays higher ticket prices than other teams. Jacksonville has the lowest ticket prices yet all home games are blacked out due to lack of sales.
This system (as well intentioned as it might've been) is not working as intended.