Baseball Strike
"I don't like it. People won't be able to come to these games anymore, and I don't like that". A sad nine -
year - old fan voices his concerns on the 1994 major League . The `94 baseball season has
come to an abrupt end. Players have ceased play because they feel they are being treated unfairly with the
owner's plan to impose a salary cap. Owners are finding it difficult to come to terms with their own
disagreements. Small market teams are rising to power with their demands while large market team owners
are finding it hard to deal with the teams and their issues, while still trying to please the players. In essence,
it is a three - way battle between the two sides of large and small ...
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going to get worse until they come to some sort of an agreement.
The baseball strike of `94 officially hit the hearts of America on August 12, three quarters into one of the
most intriguing seasons in a long time. A season on the verge of breaking many long standing records. As
the strike began, the people of the world looked with sadness, as well as disgust towards players and
owners. Officially, the strike is the players verses the owners, but at a closer look, it is much more
complicated. Within the owners meetings, there is feuding as well. Small market clubs such as Montreal,
Milwaukee, Cincinnati, and Kansas City, are addressing their needs which conflict the needs of the large
market owners. The main concern the owners have is that players salaries are eating up an increased
percentage of the owners revenues. Small market owners are now insisting that all twenty-eight ball clubs
share their income equally, not only to maintain parity in the league, but ...
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break the business. The truth is that teams with smaller revenues
cannot keep up with players salaries, while the teams who can pay them more receive the high price, high
talented players, who increase chances of winning and bring in more money. Smaller teams make a good
point in saying that a business is not always a competition. They say that this business will not prosper until
all aspects, and all job positions in the game are profiting. The only thing both sides agree on is that baseball
must have a salary cap, which would reduce team's spending for salaries from 58 to 50 percent of baseball
revenues. This would cumulate more money to please small market teams, and more ...
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Baseball Strike. (2004, August 3). Retrieved November 23, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Baseball-Strike/12075
"Baseball Strike." Essayworld.com. Essayworld.com, 3 Aug. 2004. Web. 23 Nov. 2024. <http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Baseball-Strike/12075>
"Baseball Strike." Essayworld.com. August 3, 2004. Accessed November 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Baseball-Strike/12075.
"Baseball Strike." Essayworld.com. August 3, 2004. Accessed November 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Baseball-Strike/12075.
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