Yankee-hating has long been a part of our national pastime of
baseball, especially when the Bronx Bombers dominate the game -- as they
have since the mid-1990s. Recall an earlier time of pinstripe excellence
during the 1950s when the best-selling book, "The Year the Yankees Lost the
Pennant," was followed by the smash-Broadway musical Damn Yankees and a hit
movie with the same name. Yankee-hating was in vogue even then.
Today, the baseball owners, guilty of class-warfare thinking,
would love to take actions that would severely damage the great Yankee
franchise. In the process, they would also cripple the standing of the game
and the game's players.
Owners want a new revenue-sharing plan that allegedly would take
more money from the rich teams and redistribute it to the poor ones. They
would also institute an unbelievable 50 percent luxury tax on teams with
high payrolls.
In today's soft economy, if anyone in Washington proposed a 50
percent tax on luxury goods the general public would instantly label them
out of their minds. Yet the owners carry on with just such a tax-the-rich
campaign. It's a scheme that would make Al Gore blush.
In so doing, the owners would do to the baseball economy what a
similar luxury tax would do to the gross domestic product of the United
States. They'd cripple it. More, if anyone cares to look at the facts, the
rich teams they would tax frequently fail. Yes, the New York Yankees and
Atlanta Braves have dominated the game of late, but that's a result of good
management on the field and in the front office. Plenty of other "rich
teams" have fared poorly.
Think of the major-media-market Los Angeles Dodgers. Or the
Boston Red Sox. Or the other perennial losers in prime locations like
Philadelphia, Baltimore, Detroit and Chicago. The Cubs and the White Sox
fail miserably each year, but it's the owners and management -- and not the
Yankees -- who are to blame.
The Cubs, in particular, report poor economic performance. But
that's a sham. The team's excess revenues are upstreamed to the Tribune
Company, which owns the Cubs, rather than back into the team. League-wide,
teams use phony accounting that would rival what we saw out of Enron.
Why should poorly managed teams be subsidized anyway? When
sinking companies in Japan and elsewhere in the Pacific Rim were subsidized
the economists labeled it industrial targeting. In baseball, it's nothing
more than crony capitalism. If a failing team goes under, then let it go
under.
Texas owner Tom Hicks, perhaps the most vocal opponent of George
Steinbrenner and his Yankees, is a crony with his hand out. He took
excellent advantage of the annual free-agent crop when he brought phenomenon
Alex Rodriguez on board. But he has only himself to blame for giving A-Rod a
burdensome $250 million contract that has translated into another last-place
finish for the Rangers. Here, and elsewhere, owner ineptitude is the
culprit -- not player salaries that luxury taxes and revenue-sharing
socialism intend to limit.
And what would the owners do with the extra cash flow? Well,
they would not even rule that luxury-tax revenues must be reinvested in
their teams. Instead, they're grabbing a quick buck at the expense of the
game.
This is a key point with respect to the Yankees. This franchise
has built a phenomenal farm system that has produced current stars in Jorge
Posada, Alfonso Soriano, Derek Jeter and Bernie Williams. That's what wins
championships -- vision and player development. Not luxury taxes. For all
his idiosyncracies, George Steinbrenner should be a model -- not a goat.
And since when does America punish success? Taxing success will
generate less of it; on the road, the Yanks routinely draw much bigger
crowds than second-rate home teams typically bring to their ballparks.
Blaming the Yankees is akin to blaming rich Americans for injecting capital
in job- and wealth-creating start-up businesses.
A dearth of taxes is not what ails baseball, but the selfishness
of owners. They'd prefer to pick the pockets of fans and players -- most of
whom have only 12 or 15 years to earn a lifetime's living -- than let poorly
managed teams go under. Of the 849 players in major league baseball, 222, or
one-quarter of the league, were born abroad. Nearly 10 percent are from the
Dominican Republic, followed by Puerto Rico and Venezuela. They won't get
lucrative advertising contracts or high-paying jobs after retirement. The
lily-white-bread baseball-owner fraternity seems never to think about the
money that Latin players send home to their families and their downtrodden
countries.
Today there are six small-market teams in contention for the
playoffs. The newly created Arizona Diamondbacks could well take a second
straight World Series. Or perhaps the Yankees will reign supreme again.
"You've gotta have heart," went the old Broadway song. That plus good
management and a free-market playing field is the equation for success in
baseball -- and the rest of the business world for that matter.