Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Priorities and a promise

It's obvious what they are: money, money, and more money. The Phillies front office and ownership group recognize that they are a business first and a baseball team second. In no particular order, this off-season the Phillies:

  • Re-signed starting pitcher Cory Lidle.
  • Offered 2nd baseman Placido Polanco arbitration in hopes of receiving compensatory draft picks when he signed somewhere else. Assured Polanco of being the highest paid utility infielder in MLB when arbitration offer was accepted.
  • Signed starting pitcher Jon Lieber.
  • Allowed starting pitcher Eric Milton -- arguably the team's best pitcher last season -- to walk away for nothing. Sat idly by while Cincinnati signed him to a three-year contract for $25 million.
  • Dealt reliable relief pitcher Francisco Rodriguez to the Yankees in exchange for geriatric centerfielder Kenny Lofton. Finally.
  • Signed relief pitcher Terry Adams.
  • Watched Mets sign starting pitcher Pedro Martinez and centerfielder Carlos Beltran, engage in serious contract talks with first baseman Carlos Delgado, and be players in a possible Sammy Sosa deal.
  • Watched Atlanta move super-closer John Smoltz from the bullpen back into the starting rotation, sign closer Dan Kolb from Milwaukee, and trade for one of Oakland's "Big Three" -- starting pitcher Tim Hudson.
  • Fired Larry Bowa. Finally.
  • Hired Charlie Manuel as the team's next manager. Finally.
The very least the Phils could have done this year -- for us and for them -- would have been to give us the carrot-hanging-from-a-stick routine. Sign a decent free agent or two and/or pull off a good trade, and fans will be sufficiently enticed to purchase or renew season ticket packages. This is simple business logic -- we get hope and in return they get money. However, I don't think Cory Lidle, Jon Lieber, Terry Adams and Kenny Lofton fit the bill.

Thus, I'm making this promise now: if there is no improvement in the win column this year over last, and there is another watch-the-paint-dry off-season next year, then I will not renew my season ticket package.

**I have to put one condition on this: the tickets I have -- which I share with Shallow Center -- were moved from section 329 down to section 143. If I like these seats enough due to the home run potential, then I reserve the right to rescind the above.

Comments on "Priorities and a promise"

 

post a comment