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MLB '24 Postseason thread

Any restraint on players' salaries is stupid. These completive issue is revenue, not player compensation and the owners acknowledge it. Their response? The players should take less so the owners can control costs.

If the owners were serious, they would find a comprehensive revenue sharing that addresses market size and competitiveness, while making sure teams don't just take the money.

Others have explained why revenue sharing like what the NFL has won't work in baseball. The gist was that too much if the revenue is local. The wealthier teams just won't do it.

What baseball needs most is a salary floor, but the owners have steadfastly insisted that won't happen without a cap.
So, we will go on watching teams use their financial advantage to win, as we saw in this postseason.

That didn't stop me from rooting for the Dodgers tonight, but that was mostly me wanting them to shut Yankee fans up, especially the two idiots who grabbed Betts last night.
 
Today was emotional.

My dad lost his brother and it's hitting him hard.

And just now we just watched the Dodgers win a World Series, as father and son in the same room, for the first time since 1981.

Moments after this photo he began talking about his brother, my uncle, with sad affection.

I told my dad I loved him for the first time in probably 30 years.

View attachment 18602

This is what makes sports more than just wins and losses, salary figures and contracts, TV ratings and ad buys.

It's a multi-generational passionate love of the game, passed down from parent to child. Old men in Brooklyn who watched Johnny Podres as children now share an experience with kids in Los Angeles who will talk about that season in 2024 to their grandchildren some day when I'm long gone from this existence.

It doesn't have to be baseball. It doesn't even have to be a team sport. You don't even have to get paid for it. But there's something magical about the payoff when you're emotionally invested in the outcome of something big enough to create lifelong memories. In that instant, feeling like being on the top of the world is so gratifying, such an incredible high that very few other moments can match.

I'm so glad for Songbird and his dad. And for everyone who still remembers what that experience feels like.
 
What happens first: the Dodgers match the Cardinals in WS titles or the Cards win their 12th?

As an STL fan, Imma betting on the Dodgers.
 
The part I will most enjoy is the knowledge that had he seen this game while alive, George Steinbrenner absolutely would have murdered someone tonight.
 

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