Thursday, October 16, 2008

NYT: Eldest Rooney Brother Poised to Buy Steelers

The New York Times is reporting that the Steelers Ownership Issue will likely be resolved by the end of the year and result in Dan Rooney buying out his brothers.

The NYT has been on top of this story from the beginning and what they are reporting is only good news.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The Pittsburgh Steelers’ muddled ownership picture could clear by the end of the year, with the team’s chairman, Dan Rooney, buying out his four younger brothers, N.F.L. owners were told at a meeting here this week.
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The league is pushing the Steelers to settle their ownership situation. The four younger brothers are also working against their own deadline: they want to sell before the end of the year because they fear an increase in the capital gains tax rate if Senator Barack Obama is elected president in November.

Although the N.F.L. has not set a deadline to conclude the sometimes contentious intrafamily negotiations — which have now stretched into a third year — some owners have privately wondered why it has allowed three of the younger brothers to continue to own shares of the team while also owning racetracks in Florida and New York that have casino gambling operations, a violation of league rules. That, one owner said Tuesday, is a double standard.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette has reported that at least two of the brothers have recently tilted toward selling to Dan Rooney.

Rooney and his son Art II met with the league’s finance committee last week to update it on their offer for the team, which includes outside investors who have not been publicly identified. Each of the five brothers owns 16 percent of the team, and N.F.L. rules mandate that one person own at least 30 percent.

Last month, the four younger brothers rejected a bid from the hedge fund billionaire and Steelers fan Stanley Druckenmiller, who had offered an all-cash deal to buy out their shares of the team. That decision followed a meeting of all five brothers with Commissioner Roger Goodell, after which Goodell made clear that the owners of the other 31 N.F.L. teams would do everything possible to ensure that Dan Rooney retained control of the team — an indication that the owners, who must approve the sale, would reject any other suitor.

When the four brothers rejected Druckenmiller’s offer, they said they wanted to reopen the bidding to others. But the global financial crisis probably means additional bids could be hard to come by in the next few months.

Dan Rooney also has a right of first refusal for any outside offer his brothers receive.

“Dan Rooney made it extremely clear that he was not going to be involved in the gambling business moving forward if he was successful in being able to complete this transaction,” Goodell said. He added, “That is important to our ownership because it is one of the rules that they are not in compliance with.”

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Bucs Find Another Way To Not Finish Last

In the all-important TV ratings game, the Bucs finished ahead of the Nationals, Royals and Orioles. Still, they had a 15% drop in viewers from 2007. That's it? I wonder what they were before the trading deadline and hw low they dipped in September.

From The Sports Business Journal and the Pittsburgh Business Times:

Diamond ratings fail to shine
Television ratings for Major League Baseball games were down almost across the board, as the national networks and most regional sports networks suffered significant declines during the regular season. Fox's MLB ratings dropped 13 percent to a 2.0, and its viewership dropped 12.5 percent to average 2.9 million viewers for its Saturday afternoon package.

Fox Sports Net's performance was virtually flat, off 4 percent from last year.

"That's an acceptable variance," said Kyle Sherman, FSN's executive vice president of ad sales. "FSN remained very consistent against strong competition from the Olympics and the presidential primaries. Overall, I think we held up extremely well."

FSN's best performing network was FSN Florida, which saw a 99 percent ratings jump in its Rays games (1.74 to 3.47). FSN also was helped by the Marlins, which were up 21 percent on Sun Sports and 16 percent on FSN Florida.

FSN's trouble spots were in Atlanta, where the Braves' ratings dropped 29 percent on FSN South and 28 percent on SportSouth.

MLB's top concern has to be MASN, which pulled anemic numbers for the last-place Nationals and Orioles. The combined 37,000 homes that watched both teams' games in the Baltimore-Washington market beat only Pittsburgh (32,000) and Kansas City (26,000).

With an average of only 8,000 homes tuning in for each game, the Nationals had by far the lowest audience of any team, and showed a bigger year-to-year percentage drop than any Major League team (down 50 percent).

According to industry data, the Pirates saw their average number of viewers dip about 15 percent in 2008, compared with the previous year. The Pirates averaged about 32,000 households watching each game.


Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Bengals Fans Will Leave The Light On For You

vs.
The mass exodus has started in Cincinnati. The fans are revolting and hope Steeler fans invade Paul Brown Stadium while they hightail it for the Kentucky hills. I actually was a bit nervous about this game but now without Carson Palmer AND fans, I'm feeling much better.

Remember, these are Kentuckians we're talking about here:
I think no Bengal fans should show up for the game on Sunday. Let the stadium be filled the stupid, ugly, boastful, (i hope their q-back gets knocked out of the game) stealers (correct spelling) fans.

I just can’t wait to turn on the Bengals game this weekend and see more Steelers fans in the stands than Bengals fans... I had Bengals season tickets for 6 seasons and cancelled them after the 2006 season. What I came to realize was that I was going to the games to get drunk before the games and enjoy the camaraderie of spending the morning with friends grilling and drinking beer and not actually enjoying the rest of the day....and spending $800+ per season for the seat was just not worth it. Now I have Bearcat season tickets, pay nowhere near what I paid for the Bengals tickets and I actually enjoy the football itself as well as the time drinking before the games.

Boycott the game November 2! Picket the stadium! Protest outside where security can't take signs away -- it's OUR stadium, afterall!

Pirates are Better Than One Playoff Team...


...over the last 10 years.

Only the Royals and playoff (Devil) Rays are worse than the Bucs.

And only the AL Central has been worse than the NL Central, a weak division where the Bucs are 213.5 games out over that span, more than 21 games behind per year. Wow.

RECORDS SINCE 1998

A.L. EAST

New York Yankees 1074- 704 .604
Boston Red Sox 1011- 770 .568
Toronto Blue Jays 902- 879 .506
Baltimore Orioles 791- 989 .444
Tampa Bay Rays 742-1037 .417

DIVISION TOTALS 4520-4379 .508

A.L. CENTRAL

Cleveland Indians 937- 845 .526
Chicago White Sox 933- 849 .524
Minnesota Twins 909- 871 .511
Detroit Tigers 777-1003 .437
Kansas City Royals 743-1037 .417

DIVISION TOTALS 4299-4605 .483

A.L. WEST

L.A. Angels of Anaheim 958- 824 .538
Oakland Athletics 976- 804 .548
Seattle Mariners 907- 874 .509
Texas Rangers 872- 910 .489

DIVISION TOTALS 3713-3412 .521

N.L. EAST

Atlanta Braves 1015- 765 .570
New York Mets 930- 851 .522
Philadelphia Phillies 909- 872 .510
Florida Marlins 842- 938 .473
Washington Nationals 785- 996 .441

DIVISION TOTALS 4481-4422 .503

N.L. CENTRAL

St. Louis Cardinals 980- 800 .551
Houston Astros 957- 824 .537
Chicago Cubs 881- 901 .494
Cincinnati Reds 846- 937 .474
Milwaukee Brewers 809- 971 .454
Pittsburgh Pirates 766-1013 .431

DIVISION TOTALS 5239-5446 .490

N.L. WEST

San Francisco Giants 942- 838 .529
Los Angeles Dodgers 927- 855 .520
Arizona Diamondbacks 900- 882 .505
San Diego Padres 866- 917 .486
Colorado Rockies 826- 957 .463

DIVISION TOTALS 4461-4449 .501

How To Ruin a Franchise

As we watch this year's playoffs, note that the heart of the Phillies came via a strong run of first-round picks from 1998 through 2002 (Gavin Floyd was their #1 pick in 2001):

2002: Cole Hamels
2000: Chase Utley
1999: Brett Myers
1998: Pat Burrell

Compare that list to the Bucs, who had higher selections in 2002 and 1999 and took pitchers ahead of pitchers the Phillies took:

2002: Bryan Bullington #1 overall
2001: John VanBenschoten #8
2000: Sean Burnett #19
1999: Bobby Bradley #8
1998: Clinton Johnston #15

What a horrible list of picks. Only one player with really any chance of still contributing to the franchise and he's a long reliever at that.

Even worse is their list of their #1 picks since 1993. Really, no other explanation is needed for why the Bucs stink than this:

1997 J.J. Davis
1996 Kris Benson
1995 Chad Hermansen
1994 Mark Farris
1993 Charles Peterson
1992 Jason Kendall
1991 Jonathan Farrell
1990 Kurt Miller
1989 Willie Greene
1988 Austin Manahan
1987 Mark Merchant

When you have to argue about whether Kris Benson or Jason Kendall was your best #1 pick over the course of 16 years, you're in trouble. Just when the #1 picks from '87 and '88 should have been coming up to replace Bonilla and Bonds, we were stuck with Merchant and Manahan, who never made the majors.

But also know that this list spans more than one GM or front office administration. It's not just Dave Littlefield who has ruined the Pirates.