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Samuel Thoughts

Where Does A Sports Team Fit Into Society?

I love watching the St. Louis Cardinals, but I am glad that there is a lack of fans showing up to the stadium at the moment.  I realize this might have a slight negatively affect on our players in the short term which sucks – but fan’s are not frustrated with individual players so much as there is a growing frustration about the way the upper management and ownership group are operating. 

This is actually a somewhat common problem in our society where hyper wealthy individuals continue to try and maximize the amount of $ they have instead of looking around and trying to help other members of society out.

Take the cardinals for example: we here it constantly that COVID decimated profits, and before that we heard it year in and year out – we have to keep our payroll down were a smaller market bla bla bla. I don’t understand why local reporters let them get away with that? Fully dig into that statement!  Ask to see their financials or some kinda proof for this, because to the average fan this seems like totally BS.  To the average fan, or at least to me – and I consider myself to be an average, casual fan, this sounds like total BS.  The currently ownership group is making more money off this team than they ever have.  They not only have massive TV deal, they have ownership stakes in the ballpark village complex! They own a freaking massive hotel/condo building + the relatively new and beautiful stadium… I mean I get it – they are running a business like anyone else.  But to me running a sports franchise should operate somewhere between running a standard business and running a charity.  The franchise could do so much good for St. Louis is they turned the dial slightly more 1 or 2 notches to the left and didn’t focus sooo much on making $.  I realize this sounds somewhat strange in America, but they have enough $.  At a certain point does it really matter if you make 300 million dollars or 3 billion dollars? Once you reach into the 10’s of millions of dollars, it’s time to turn around and start looking for ways to lift other people up – you have won at the game we are all playing together.  Making more $ will just be unnecessarily hoarding resources for yourself.  Sure you could buy a mansion or a yacht – or fast cars…. Or whatever! And i”m not saying people should not be free to do this, everyone should 100% be free to do what they want, I’m just saying we should not romanticize that lifestyle. We should be pushing these people with social pressure to help society and the world out as a whole. There is some push towards this with “The Giving Pledge” that Warren buffett has setup – but this falls a little flat.  It’s not that hard to imagine how much good Buffet or other billionaires could do right now if they purchased and re-imaged the goal of the organization they bought.  A really easy example is Buffett could buy a fast food chain –  and chance the payment structure.  They could ensure that the workers at the bottom of the totem pole received an outsized percentage of the profits the company generates.  The company’s mission could change from “maximizing shareholder value” to “maximizing equity in society by prioritizing their poorest workers”.  I’d like to think there are enough rich executives out there that would come work for this chain even thought it would pay them less than they currently make – they would want to be part of this social experiment to try and do better vs pursue unrelenting profits at all costs.  If we could find a balance where this became the main focus, or at least a much larger focus of our society – it would seem that version of capitalism would be the best – most equitable system we could come up with. 

Back to the cardinals front – this ownership group can easily recalibrate the focus of the cardinals, they have more than enough money to do things like: Pay their minor league players a realistic wage, nothing crazy – but just pay the guys like 80 grand a year – that’s not going to kill you.  Sure you don’t need to do it according to the current CBA – but so what the current CBA also doesn’t prevent you from doing this.  It’s the right thing to do. And then at the big league level – spend up to the limit every year trying to make this team as best as you can.  We get it – you won’t hit with every signing, and not every team is going to go deep in the playoffs – but all we want is an honest attempt at putting the players, the city, and all of your fans around the country ahead of trying to generate as much $ as you can for the tiny group of people who own the team.  Your are 100% free to focus solely on $, it’s just deep down I’m sure you know that is a hollow pursuit.  You already have more $ than you could spend, you don’t wan to leave your family so much $ that they never have to work again and become lazy and non contributing members to society.

I hope you consider making some or all of these changes! If