jshawaii22 wrote:The "little people" are already all screwed. Unless they are in a union, most stadium employees can't earn unemployment as the jobs are probably part time and many vendors are probably considered self-employed, even if illegal to do so, it's rampant in this type of job.
However, even in an no-fan event, there will be around 100 persons working. Field staffs, security, parking, AV staff, Electrical, Maintenance, and food (players, TV and other tech crews and VIP's will need to be serviced) all will have representation at the venues, even if it's only a few vs. a lot of people.
Better you employ a 'few vs none' -- This will be common throughout the next few years. The job reports are looking at minimum 2 million lost jobs, meaning that even as the country rebounds, those jobs are not coming back, as business fail and realign to the New World Order market.
trents wrote:Healthcare is a good job field to be working in right now and industries that supply healthcare would seem to be good investments right now.
trents wrote:Healthcare is a good job field to be working in right now and industries that supply healthcare would seem to be good investments right now.
EmeraldBullet wrote:Baseball isn't gonna happen this year unless owners change their proposal. No way the union will allow for 75% prorated pay. The players salaries where already collectively bargained. I fell 100% but prorated is most fair.
c_hawkbob wrote:I don't agree. Their game checks are collectively bargained, I see them as a constant withe the the shared loss of revenue being the # of game checks. Unless they come to a new collectively bargained agreement for the remainder of this season. I don't see the owners as able to simply dictate new terms based on assumed losses.
c_hawkbob wrote:OK so "Unless they come to a new collectively bargained agreement for the remainder of this season" applies.
c_hawkbob wrote:I agree with the players. I also think the owners are risking lawsuits over trying to stray from the current CBA's structure.
c_hawkbob wrote:I think it's just hard for you to see how such a lawsuit could succeed. I'm not talking about changes both sides agree to, obviously. I'm talking about trying to force the players to go beyond a direct proration to accept less than the already agreed upon money per game played. I have no problem seeing such a lawsuit being upheld.
c_hawkbob wrote:The end of baseball as we know it eh?
Sure.
trents wrote:This could be the end of MLB, at least as we know it. Just one lost season of revenue could have such a trickle down financial effect that it might not be possible to revive the league, at least not in one or two years. I mean think about it. This will have a negative impact at the collegiate and high school level. Kids might not want to invest in developing their skills for the sport of baseball if it is a professional dead end. The minor leagues have been paired way down by some clubs already so where will those kids go to play baseball. Japan and Korea? South of the border?
RiverDog wrote:Come on, man! Although I do agree that it's going to hurt the minor leagues, particularly the Class A leagues, one season isn't going to torpedo the entire sport.
But we might have seen the last of the hot dog vendors in the stands and the condiment bars on the concourses.
RiverDog wrote:Come on, man! Although I do agree that it's going to hurt the minor leagues, particularly the Class A leagues, one season isn't going to torpedo the entire sport.
But we might have seen the last of the hot dog vendors in the stands and the condiment bars on the concourses.
trents wrote:That might be good in some ways as they would probably let the fans bring their own food instead of having to pay exorbitant prices for dogs and soda.
jshawaii22 wrote:Now there is a new 'demand' from the players for a 70 game season that took Manfred all of 30 minutes to reject as it includes millions and millions of extra $$$$ and concessions from the owners over the next 2 years. Gee whiz, you couldn't see that coming. $$$$$$$ Players want to end up with their 100% for the full season, based on pre-Covid $$$$, no matter how it comes to them and the owners will (so far) only give them the pro-rated $$$ for the games they actually play, which is the gist of the 60 games proposal that we were told the players liked. Evidently they didn't ask the 'right' players.
jshawaii22 wrote:Florida is going down in a ball of fire and will soon the worst possible place to be right now. Texas and Arizona aren't too far behind. When having 'spring training' in NY City is a better idea then Florida, you know something is really wrong.
Both Baseball and the NBA are in real trouble if Florida is shut down. However, the Governor of Florida seems hell-bent on bringing in the $$$ that the sports will have, so it's really a conundrum for the leagues.
The NFL can't be far behind in realizing the season is really on the line right now, and none of it is really their fault.
https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/29343538/sources-players-eye-vote-mlb-plan-sunday
There may be some movement today. We'll see. I somehow doubt the players will approve anything right now, but you never know.
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