Opening the season in Japan? Blame greed
MLB just trying to wring more dollars from international market
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The Red Sox managed to get some male bonding in, the fans in Florida finally got a game, and Bud Selig got two baseball teams on planes to Japan.
Everyone won in Wednesday’s mini-drama in Fort Myers, including the concession stands that got another hour to sell beer and cotton candy while the players engaged in a high-stakes showdown with Major League Baseball.
Oh, and don’t forget that little extra something that will be in the paychecks of coaches and others for having to take a working vacation overseas.
Apparently the charter flights, luxury hotels and free meals aren’t enough compensation for being away from home. But, hey, if the multimillionaire players they do their bidding for can get extra money for the trip, why not throw something in the pot for the little people who make it all happen?
This could only happen in baseball, where economics defy reality and everything comes with a price tag. Think the Miami Dolphins or New York Giants weren’t going to go to London last year unless the National Football League did something about the lousy exchange rates?
There’s some confusion as to who is at fault in this dustup, and whether the players were really the heroes they seemed to be making themselves out to be. Coaches have shared in the riches before — much as they do with postseason money — but players who negotiated their own terms for the trip a few months back weren’t all that concerned about the little guys at that point.
Boston manager Terry Francona apparently assumed the same thing, telling his coaches they would be getting $40,000 to make the trip. When he found out at the last minute that the Oakland A’s coaches weren’t getting a penny and he had to tell his coaches it didn’t look good for them, either, things got interesting.
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They did end up delaying a spring training game, which didn’t matter much unless you were a fan who went to the City of Palms Park intent on seeing Daisuke Matsuzaka in his final spring training outing. Rather than risk warming up Dice-K’s arm two times, the Red Sox sent him off to pitch a game against some minor leaguers.
Actually, it couldn’t have worked out better for the Red Sox. The team had to agree to sweeten the pot, but it was chump change compared to what they pay players. For their money they got a team that, if not unified before, certainly bonded together at just the right time as they begin the defense of their World Series title.
“Our players feel very united, and I think they proved that today,” Francona said.
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