The Yankees' Field Of Screams

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April 16, 2009 at 10:51 PM

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"Wall Street bankers supposedly back the Yankees; Smith College girls approve of them. God, Brooks Brothers, and United States Steel are believed to be solidly in the Yankees' corner... but, as they say, who can fall in love with U.S. Steel?"
- Gay Talese in "There Are Fans... And Yankee Fans"

On Thursday afternoon, some 48,271 New York Yankees fans took a break from the drumbeat of lost jobs and looming tax hikes to take in the season opener, forking over anywhere from $95 to $2,625 for a seat with a view.

As these good folks tried to get relief from endangered paychecks and rising property assessments, at least a few suffered envy and anger as they thought about the millions, perhaps even $1 billion-plus, in public subsidies that went into building the brand-new stadium.

The beneficiary of all that cash is one of the most lucrative sports operations in the country, Yankee Global Enterprises LLC, the franchise George Steinbrenner bought for $8.7 million in 1973 and turned into an empire with a value pegged, last year, at $1.2 billion.

Mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg did not blink at this transfer of money to the deserving rich - George Steinbrenner and his two sons, Hal and Hugh.

Not everyone shares the Giuliani-Bloomberg view of how to spend taxpayer dollars.

Westchester County Assemblyman Richard Brodsky, the Don Quixote of sports politics, has been conducting a one-man assault on the financing of Yankee Stadium, but, so far, has little or nothing beyond few headlines to show for it.

In a series of lengthy, detailed and footnoted reports, Brodsky has tried to prove that the construction of the new stadium is, as he told the Huffington Post in characteristically moderate New York language, "the most outrageous and dishonest a deal as has ever existed," engineered by Yankee executives who are nothing more than "bullies and thugs."

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Brodsky, chair of the NY Assembly Committee on Corporations, Commissions and Authorities, found that "inappropriate and secretive lobbying by highly paid and politically connected procurement lobbyists, inappropriate hiring of politically connected former government officials, disposition of public property for less than its true value, [and] interference with investigations of such behavior" produced a deal with a "total cost to taxpayers and savings to the Yankees [of] between $585 million and $826 million."

The Mayor's office, the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) and the NY City Industrial Agency (IDA) dispute Brodsky's calculations, and, using different accounting methods - method some challenge -- argue that the city emerges from the deal a net $59.7 million ahead.

In fact, as the baseball season starts in earnest and the basketball and hockey seasons wind down, New York got what might be described as one of the "least bad" deals in negotiating who will pick up how much of the tab for new facilities -- in the face of team owners armed with a single trump card: the threat to leave town.

Smith College economist Andrew Zimbalist, a critic of most public spending on stadiums and other sports facilities, wrote a January 22, 2006, New York Times op-ed in which he declared, "the crucial public policy question here is whether there will be a net benefit for residents of the Bronx and the other boroughs. The answer is yes."

Neil deMause, author of "Field of Schemes," a book which weighs in against sport arena financing, strongly opposes the Yankee Stadium plan. On his Website, deMause calculates that the new stadium will cost the city $691 million, NY state $115 million, the NY Metropolitan Transit Authority $53 million, and the federal government $327 million -- for a combined taxpayer bill of $1.19 billion, nearly double the $671 million cost to the team.

"The Yankees deal actually manages to be both the largest team expense on a stadium in history, and the largest public expense on a stadium in history, somewhere in the neighborhood of $1 billion," deMause told the Huffington Post. "The city gets no part of the new revenues the Yankees will reap from the stadium; the jobs created are virtually all part-time, and largely cannibalized from other stores and restaurants in the surrounding area; Bronx residents lost their only large neighborhood park [until the old Yankee stadium is demolished and replaced by a park], for at least five years; and fans got more expensive seats with a lousier view of the field. All this, so that the Yankees wouldn't move out of New York - something that was never going to happen anyway, since the entire value of the Yankees franchise is wrapped up in where they play. I'd call that a pretty lousy deal."

The New York Times, in turn, has become increasingly skeptical of the deal: "Seats for $1,500 a game? Suites fit for the royal family? A scoreboard fit for the Big Board? A fabulous steakhouse and granite ramps (no ordinary cement for this crowd)? This $1 billion-plus pavilion and park financed with a lot of taxpayer help is beginning to sound like something fit for the Wizard of Oz," the paper editorialized on January 14 .

"Mayor Bloomberg has - rightly - had to cut city budgets and increase property taxes and explain to residents how times are bad and how we all will have to share the pain. It is time for Mr. Bloomberg to make that same pitch to the Yankees. If the Yankees can sign megamillion-dollar contracts (C. C. Sabathia just landed one for $161 million over seven years), they should be flush enough to contribute more toward their new stadium and to the parks for people living nearby."

The political facts of life, however, dictate that the stadium is a done deal. Property taxes are going up, jobs are down the chute, and the Yankees will play in their new palace. If the team wants to retain support in brutal economic times, their performance Thursday afternoon is not going to help.

The Cleveland Indians crushed the richest team in baseball 10-2.

"Wall Street bankers supposedly back the Yankees; Smith College girls approve of them. God, Brooks Brothers, and United States Steel are believed to be solidly in the Yankees' corner... but, as they s...
"Wall Street bankers supposedly back the Yankees; Smith College girls approve of them. God, Brooks Brothers, and United States Steel are believed to be solidly in the Yankees' corner... but, as they s...
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- johnie2xs I'm a Fan of johnie2xs 62 fans permalink
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My father, as a boy, would sit on a curbstone after completing his paper route,and commit statistics from that days paper, of his idol Joe D. I, as a child of the fifties was in a perpetual state of lust for my next Yankee card from the greatest delivery system of such cardboard happiness ever devised; and it had gum!! The "Topps" five pack of baseball cards were an adolescent boys catnip.

But like most boyhood euphoric memories, reality intrudes. For many Yankee fans that reality comes in the name of "George Michael Steinbrenner III". He has been alternately the Hope, and the Bane, of Yankee fans for thirty years. Sometimes the memories are not enough.

I've said many times that there are four immutable facts to my life; Born Italian, Raised Catholic, Staunchly Democratic, and Proudly a Yankee fan.

I've claimed such many times, but as a true Progressive, I can move on. This may be that time.

What's that other New York team? The Mets!! They were pretty exciting in '69 and '86. Not too bad in 2000,either. I may have to check them out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 04/19/2009

Baseball is boring a fat man's sport.

If people are going to waste their days and money feeding the rich in this unfullfilling endeavour, so be it.

You vote with your money. You can have more fun and cheaper fun throwing the ball around with friends.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 04/18/2009
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As a kid growing up in metropolitan NY, I was not thinking about the inner workings of baseball or any sport for that matter. I just loved sports and I loved my team. The mind of a youth does not seek out the inside story of the business side professional or even collegiate sport--stadiums are built by stadium "gods"...team affiliation for some begins in the youth and is oftentimes correlated to the area one is from...my area NY, my chosen team, The Yankees.

I went to Michigan and my fan-dom reached outside of the region I was from but I will always be a devoted fan of the team that I followed since childhood. And there are many hypocrisies within both my Wolverines (I went during the Fab 5 era!) and my Yankees...

I am a Yankee fan, loyal and true. And I try not to mix my left leaning politics with my sport loving brain candy, and it has worked for me. I deplore the corporate take over of sports in general; but I love my Wolverines, Yankees and Football Giants. A double standard for sure--but do I just stop watching something I have enjoyed for over 30 years? NO. I must live with my own hypocrisy...

And for every Arod hater, there is probably a Jeter lover..."The Bush Curse" is over....Yankees 09

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 04/17/2009
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vs the Cubs. The first name in winning vs the first name in losing. That will be one for the ages.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 PM on 04/17/2009
- amadorjon I'm a Fan of amadorjon 6 fans permalink
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Cal Bears and Oakland A's for me man!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 04/17/2009
- richinkle I'm a Fan of richinkle 17 fans permalink

This article underscores the unseemly relationship between all Republicans many Establisment Democrats in government, and their rich and powerful corporate masters. I suppose there is some billionaire logic that Mayor Bloomberg uses to justify giving a rich company and its owners hundreds of millions in tax-payer-subsidized money to build a luxury stadium filled with corporate sky-boxes and sky-high ticket prices for the average sports fan. I just don't get it.

How did we elect this guy - twice! And going on a third time. Fellow New Yorkers - Don't put up with this rip-off! Say good bye to Bloomberg!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 04/17/2009
- mjeffn I'm a Fan of mjeffn 27 fans permalink

I like AAA ball better. It's more fun and personal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 04/17/2009

'course the pitching generally sucks...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 04/17/2009
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 386 fans permalink
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Ever been to a SF Giants game?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 04/18/2009
- markinaz I'm a Fan of markinaz 7 fans permalink

I should feel sorry for the guy who blew 2600 on his seat to watch a losing endeavor, but I don't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 04/17/2009
- sc300nc I'm a Fan of sc300nc 56 fans permalink

Just another indication of what happens when gov't gets involved in things they should not be involved in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 04/17/2009
- amadorjon I'm a Fan of amadorjon 6 fans permalink
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Yankees suck!!!

95 dollars is the low end ticket..........

Oakland sells the wednesday tickets for $2

I'd rather have an old ball park and a $2 ticket myself!

Go A's

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 04/17/2009

Unfortunatly the A's ownership is pushing for a Stadium kind of like the Yankee's one. The Owner wants to move the team from Oakland. To San Jose or who knows.

I am an A's fan from way back. I remember the World Series Wins of the 70's. So this push to move the Team just saddens me. Though you have to admit it would be nice to have a park as nice as the one that the SF Giants have :D

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 04/18/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 165 fans permalink
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A ridiculous embarrassing waste, and perversion of a simple pastoral game...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 04/17/2009
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Time will tell if there is pay-back from the public funds. This team has played in a rickety old (although historic, and beautifiul in its own way) staduim, that has been revovated a few times, and fairly recently had to be repaired from parts of it falling down...for decades. Teams in much smaller markets have brand new places for their fans to enjoy. So now the Yanks have theirs, in a big way. They are after all one of the world's premier franchises.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 04/17/2009
- elcojonu I'm a Fan of elcojonu 28 fans permalink

I see the Yankee haters are out in force today.
That's Ok, we're STILL the WINNINGEST PROFESSIONAL SPORTS FRANCHISE in the history of Sports Franchises.
No other Sports Franchise represents its city, its area and its people like the Yanks do; the Yanks ARE New York.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 04/17/2009

to elcojonu: "we're till the winningest..." What kind of a fool are you to think that the Yankees care about nothing more than the money you're willing to spend in their stadium? The city gave away valuable public parklands to these leeches and the community still doesn't have replacement parks. A school in the neighborhood has it baseball team practicing in its cafeteria and their home games are played on their opponents' fields. This was a bad deal for the community (great for the Yankees). Never mind that it will be a minimum additional 2 years before any semblence of replacement parks are available. Tell me: Would you want your children to be without playing space?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 04/17/2009
- SouPro I'm a Fan of SouPro 9 fans permalink
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Represents? Did you read the article? They're looting you through your collective rears while you blissfully sing "take me out to the ball game"! Open your eyes!

It's sad when a loss of "the winningest professional sports franchise" is a victory for the sport as a whole.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 PM on 04/17/2009
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First of all, anyone who wants to post a comment about yesterday's loss holding any significance should have to write "THERE ARE STILL 152 GAMES TO PLAY IN THE SEASON" 152 times before posting (Simpsons-style). In reality, a loss in the first game at a new stadium is of no more importance or significance to a team or a season than any other loss. The fact that the Yankees lost yesterday literally means nothing. Who cares? It doesn't count as two games or anything like that. So by your logic, if the Yankees go 80-1 (obviously that is a stretch) at the new Yankee Stadium this season, the fact that they lost in the first game is a victory for the sport? Interesting.

Regardless, it's not a victory for the sport as a whole. It is a fact that baseball does well when the Yankees do well, regardless of whether or not people like them. If you don't believe me, go look at the television ratings or any other figures that can be used as measurements (and aren't impacted by inflation - to be fair to both sides of this argument). I mean, you just took the time to write that post. I doubt you would have done the same if this was a piece about the Pirates (no offense to the good people of Pittsburgh).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 04/17/2009
- stavros I'm a Fan of stavros 6 fans permalink

Normally I could care less about baseball but WTF is going on with the outfield sidelines where a player can run into a wall. Over one billion spent and the fans get to watch some poor fool run into a wall. Sounds like NASCAR to me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 04/17/2009

The Florida Marlins with a payroll of around $30 million are at 8-1 and have won 2 World Series in the last 12 years.

The New York Yankees with a payroll of around $220 million are at 5-5 and have won 3 World Series in the last 12 years.

Gay-Roid makes more per year then the whole Marlins roster.

Who gets more bang for their buck?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:30 AM on 04/17/2009

& one of thse Series wins was aganinst the Yanks

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 04/17/2009
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Again, there are 150 games to go in the 2009 Major League Baseball season. The current record of these two teams is irrelevant in terms of this debate. It's the standings at the end of September (not April 17) that count.

As you admit, the Yankees have won more titles than Florida over the last 12 years. However, you're omitting that New York reached the playoffs in every season from 1995 to 2007, while Florida only got there during those two seasons when they won the title. You can't win the World Series if you don't qualify for the playoffs, homie. I'd rather be in the mix every year than once per decade.

Anyhow, here is how their records compare over the last 12 years:
New York: 1,175-775
Florida: 942-1,009

Regardless, I think Florida's model is an interesting one for small-market teams to take notice of. The Marlins have won two titles by trading all of their players once they get good (and too expensive) in return for high-ceiling prospects. Eventually, those prospects develop within the system, but the cycle never ends. Hopefully, Hanley Ramirez's new contract is a sign that the Marlins will be keeping some of their best talent from now on (because the sport as a whole hurts when organizations aren't able to do that). The new ballpark in Miami will certainly help because Dolphin Stadium is not a good baseball venue for fans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 04/17/2009

Even though you have commented on the "irrelevance" of the teams current record I was stating that they have more "bang for the buck".

And the Marlins are 2 for 2 in the World Series, a much better percentage.

Thirdly, the move to Miami for the Marlins will not work out well. After the novelty wears off the fan base in the Miami area will not be supportive, they would have been better off building the stadium in Broward or Palm Beach county where the fans are.

I would like to add that Dolphins Stadium is an allright place to watch a game but Wayne Huzienga took every penny he could get his stubby fingers on and leaves nothing for the Marlins, THAT is the reason they are leaving their current home.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 04/17/2009
- jeffp26 I'm a Fan of jeffp26 28 fans permalink
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F*%k the Steinbrenner family, and f*%k the Yankees.

Like A-fraud, they stink.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 AM on 04/17/2009

I like the color of the seats--I saw so much them after the Indians piled on the runs towards the end of the game----

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 04/17/2009
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