It was the summer of 2011, and players …

It was the summer of 2011, and players in the National Basketball Association were in the midst of a heated lockout. At a time when players would typically be gearing up to report to NBA training camp in September, the stars were looking for any morsel of competition to keep their skills sharp. Thanks to the conflict over dispersion of revenue, the salary cap and luxury tax, it resulted in generational talents such as James, Bryant and Durant making their first Drew League appearances during that remarkable summer.

MLB players couldn’t wait to change their avatars back after the lockout ended

Say goodbye to generic blank avatars, baseball is back!

By now you may have figured out that MLB and the Players Association were able to reach a new collective bargaining agreement on Thursday.

In fact, there was a very simple way to tell the madness had ended after 99 days of an owner-imposed lockout: MLB players began restoring their avatars on social media.

If this seems like a strange harbinger for the return of the sport, let us explain:

When the owners officially locked out the MLBPA, the league and its teams could no longer use photos or likeness of players in the union. Instead, all MLB roster pages featured empty silhouettes where players faces would normally be. That quickly became a rallying cry on social media as players, fans and supporters of the MLBPA removed their avatars in solidarity.

Once the lockout was lifted on Thursday, the players couldn’t wait to change their avatars back:

Here’s hoping we don’t have to see these faces go away again anytime soon.

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MLB teams and players had the absolute best reactions to the lockout ending

The lockout is over. The celebration is just beginning.

Major League Baseball is back.

Like for real.

No more deadlines, no more late nights with both sides moving closer, no more canceled games and no more delays. We’re getting a full, 162-game season with nine-inning doubleheaders, a designated hitter in the National League and no runner on second base to begin extra innings.

All that’s left to do is report to spring training, sign a few remaining marquee free agents and play ball.

Ok, there is one thing left to do and that’s celebrate the fact that we’re getting baseball at all. After months of uncertainty, players and teams couldn’t wait to unleash their excitement that the sport is back.

Here’s some of the best reactions from around the league:

See you all on Opening Day, 2022. Which is now a certainty!

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Wojnarowski highlighted how the MLB has …

Wojnarowski highlighted how the MLB has an adversarial relationship with its players currently unlike the NBPA in which they have successfully worked through a number of issues. The NBA and NBPA both want to get a deal done by December 2022 when both sides have a mutual out they can exercise for the 22-23 season. “They have an interest in not having another lockout,” said Ramona Shelburne.

Rob Manfred shamelessly laughed while canceling Opening Day and MLB Twitter wasn’t having it

Not great, Rob.

Tuesday numbered among the darkest days in MLB history but you’d never know it from watching the league’s commissioner.

After careening toward a self-imposed deadline during an owner-imposed lockout, Rob Manfred strolled up to the dais in Jupiter, Florida to deliver the news he was canceling the first two series of the 2022 season in rather chipper fashion.

For anyone watching on mute, the commissioner looked more likely to announce the lockout was ending than explain he was dragging the sport further into a pit of despair. And it’s that image—the one of Manfred smiling at the lectern, attempting to fire off jokes with the assembled media—that may be impossible for him to overcome.

This is the same Rob Manfred who previously said canceling games would be “disastrous” for the league. His mood on Tuesday certainly didn’t seem to reflect that attitude.

More so than calling the World Series’ trophy—the Commissioner’s Trophy—”a piece of metal”, more so than not punishing any players involved in the Houston Astros cheating scandal and more so than explaining without any evidence that owning a baseball team is a bad investment, Manfred’s stewardship of baseball will be remembered for this: a jovial and unperturbed demeanor while ensuring baseball will not be played.

MLB Twitter was having absolutely none of it.

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NC State freshman Tommy White keeps hitting home runs to cheer you up during MLB’s lockout

Tommy Tanks just will not stop hitting home runs.

There’s not a ton of great baseball news out there right now.

On Feb. 28, the deadline self-imposed by MLB owners to complete a full 162-game season, the men responsible for taking care of the sport reportedly told players the league is willing to cancel a month’s worth of games. Rather than negotiate in good faith with their work force, those in power would see fit to rob the world of baseball at the highest level even longer.

During a time of year when bats should be cracking across Florida and Arizona, players like Bryce Harper are teasing joining other leagues until the owner-led lockout is over.

It’s bleak out there is what we’re saying.

But amid an MLB-less spring, there is one ray of sunshine beaming down in North Carolina that’s giving fans a reason to crane their necks towards college baseball.

His name is Tommy White. He’s a freshman at NC State. And all he does is launch mammoth home runs.

The 18-year-old out of IMG Academy in Florida stands 6’1, 220 lbs. and pairs all the energy his frame can muster with the type of hand-eye coordination that turns opposing pitchers into Little Leaguers.

Through eight games to begin his college career, White has nine home runs and 29 RBI in 34 at-bats—good for a .588 batting average.

Not only has he recorded a hit in every game he’s played this season, he’s registered multiple hits in all but one contest. Oh, and he’s already been walked five times—including twice intentionally.

That certainly seems better than the alternative for opponents, which looks a lot like this:

That last clip was, indeed, a grand slam—his second home run of the game. It’s at this point we should note that Tommy Tanks only has three strikeouts this year. Some simple math would indicate he’s three times as likely to hit a home run as he is to go down on strikes.

Sure, it’s February, and NC State’s competition will get stiffer than the likes of Evansville, High Point, Longwood and Quinnipiac soon enough, but try telling that to Wolfpack alums who already want to workout with White.

Turner is far from the only one noticing White, either. With pro baseball on hold, anyone trying to get their baseball fix in can’t stop watching him send pitches into orbit.

“I’ve never experienced a hot streak like this,” White told MLB.com’s Nick Trujilo back when he had just seven home runs. “I think I had maybe five home runs in high school my senior year, so it’s pretty cool to go on this streak. I’m not really focused on how many I hit, just focused on hard contact, focusing on the game and the wins.”

And the legend only continues to grow.

MLB Pipeline had White ranked 107 overall in the 2021 draft, grading him him with 50 hit and 55 power (on a scale of 20-80) while pretty much nailing his profile at the plate:

“The big, strong right-handed hitter is all about the bat. White, thick and barrel-chested, has the chance to hit, and with plenty of power. He never gets cheated at the plate and has power to all fields, but scouts also like his approach and the balance he shows at the plate, with a knack for consistently barreling up the baseball.”

Somehow, even that was underselling him.

MLB owners may take away a lot of joy from baseball fans this year, but Tommy White will do his best to restore as much as he can by himself.

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Termina el paro esta semana, MLB, el juego está en riesgo

Dicen que los plazos estimulan la acción, en especial cuando se trata de disputas laborales en las ligas deportivas más importantes. Y parece que se acerca un plazo en las Ligas Mayores si los jugadores y dueños no logran como zanjar las diferencias …

Dicen que los plazos estimulan la acción, en especial cuando se trata de disputas laborales en las ligas deportivas más importantes.

Y parece que se acerca un plazo en las Ligas Mayores si los jugadores y dueños no logran como zanjar las diferencias financieras entre los dos lados.

La MLB informó a los jugadores que si no se lleva a un acuerdo para el lunes, los juegos de la temporada regular empezarán a ser cancelados.

Ahora, podrán pensar que menos de 162 juegos al año no es mucho. Pero esto no es la NBA o la NFL donde los fans regresaron después de conflictos laborales – diablos, incluso la NHL regresó después de su temporada corta debido al paro hace una década.

El problema que enfrenta el baseball va más allá del paro, con el futuro del juego en riesgo – los fans más jóvenes puede que ya no quieran ver la versión de baseball que existe el día de hoy, con un juego que tiene muy poca pelota en juego debido a una serie de factores que van desde analítica hasta un mejor picheo y la defensa.

El final del paro puede no abordar estos temas, pero esto significa que juego no puede seguir teniendo estos contratiempos mientras se decide el futuro. Perder juegos y perder aún más fans – recuerden , la huelga de 1994 casi desgracia al baseball – es empezar con el pie izquierdo.

Este fin de semana es crucial. No se pueden perder mas juegos esta temporada, o perder toda una temporada. ¿Y una vez resuelto? Es momento de encontrar la forma de mejorar el producto.

Háganlo.

Baseball fans teed off on the Washington Nationals for trying to lowball Juan Soto

Juan Soto knows better than to swing at a pitch this low

As the last few months of the MLB owners’ lockout have shown us, there’s nothing baseball’s ruling class appreciates more than opening a negotiation with a laughable offer.

On the macro level, its Major League Baseball refusing to admit it is overflowing with profits that haven’t trickled down to the players generating those returns. On Wednesday, fans got to see these tactics on a more individual level.

ESPN’s Enrique Rojas spoke with Washington Nationals superstar Juan Soto this week and learned the 23-year-old’s franchise offered him a 13-year, $350 million contract extension. At first glance, it’s hard not to be wowed by the number, but once you do some simple math, it becomes very easy to understand why Soto turned down the deal—and should probably feel insulted by it.

Aside from buying out the remainder of Soto’s arbitration eligible years, the deal breaks down to a $27 million annual salary. That puts him well below comparable talents like former teammate Max Scherzer ($43.3 mil AAV), Gerritt Cole ($36 mil AAV), Mike Trout ($35.5 AAV), Anthony Rendon ($35 mil AAV), Francisco Lindor ($34.1 AAV), Nolan Arenado ($32.5 mil AAV) and Mookie Betts ($30.4 mil AAV).

Not only will Soto reach free agency at age 26 if the Nats don’t extend him before then, the outfielder could—read: “probably will”—see a deal that pays around $500 million. It’s a fact so obvious to anyone paying attention that baseball fans immediately piled on the Nats for thinking they could get away with anything less than market value for arguably the best hitter in baseball.

Juan Soto deserves better, but then again, so did Bryce Harper and Anthony Rendon. Thankfully, the Nationals have baseball fans on social media to remind them.

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Rob Manfred’s latest tactic to justify the MLB lockout is his most laughable

Will the investment bank that analyzed MLB team values please stand up?

Since taking over the office of the commissioner of Major League Baseball, Rob Manfred, an allegedly smart person with degrees from Harvard and Cornell, has made a penchant of saying some incredibly stupid things.

There was the time he called the World Series trophy a “piece of metal” following the largest cheating scandal the sport has seen in a century—a scandal he refused to punish any players for partaking in, no less.

That was quickly followed by Manfred attempting to use the COVID-19 shutdown to strong-arm players into an absurd reworking of baseball’s economic structure, resulting in him unilaterally imposing a 60-game shortened season after failing to reach a deal.

Most recently, Manfred initiated a lockout of the MLBPA as a negotiating tactic that he claimed would only help speed up the completion of a new collective bargaining agreement—then he waited 43 days before even getting back to the table.

But his comments on Thursday may be an all-time low—or high, depending on your view—of Manfred’s tenure.

Speaking to reporters in an attempt to bolster MLB owners’ cries of economic hardship, Manfred claimed the league hired an investment banker who showed that running a Major League Baseball team just isn’t profitable.

“We actually hired an investment banker, a really good one, actually, to look at that very issue,” Manfred said. “If you look at a purchase price of franchises, the cash that’s put in during the period of ownership, and then what they sold for, historically, the return on those investments is below what you get in the stock market, which looks like the end of the stock market was a lot more risky.”

You’d think a massive study showing a critical public misunderstanding of baseball’s core economic structure is something MLB owners would want to spread far and wide. If this were actually the case, Manfred would be doing a disservice to the owners he works for by keeping it in his back pocket. A fireable offense if there ever was one.

Except Manfred and MLB won’t say anything else about the study. Not what framework was used to determine team values, not what data the analysts had access to and certainly not which bank was responsible for compiling the report.

Per The Athletic’s Evan Drellich (emphasis by FTW):

A Major League Baseball spokesperson declined to identify the investment bank that produced the study, or other details about the study. The answer Manfred gave was indirect, in that it answered a question of how teams fared relative to the stock market, when the question posed had nothing to do with the stock market but was simply: Are teams good investments? And an attempt to temper the quality of investment in baseball team runs counter to public studies and reporting.

“Pitchbook said that since 2002, all four of the major U.S. sports leagues have performed better than the S&P 500 companies on the stock market. The return on MLB franchises was 669 percent, above the NFL’s 558 percent and exceeded only by the NBA’s 1,057 percent.”

This is, objectively, quite sketchy! And, objectively, quite easy to debunk.

Forbes senior contributor Maury Brown dug into Manfred’s comments even further, and the more you pick them apart the less sense they seem to make:

“The comments would make the likes of Steven Cohen – one of the biggest hedge fund moguls in the world – look like a poor investor. If Manfred is saying he could have invested his money more wisely, and with less risk, why would he do so? There are other investment factors beyond just the purchase and sale. In 2019, just before the pandemic struck, the annual Forbes valuations of the 30 clubs noted how incredibly lucrative owning an MLB franchise is.”

You don’t even have to be an investment banker to see that the price of MLB teams has gone up exponentially over the years.

Before Cohen bought the Mets for $2.48 billion, the Kansas City Royals—one of the smaller market teams in the league—sold for $1 billion only 20 years after previous owner David Glass purchased his controlling stake for $96 million.

Jeffrey Loria bought the Miami Marlins in 2002 for $158.5 million and sold them for $1.2 billion in 2017. The club’s Opening Day payroll during Loria’s stewardship exceed $60 million on just five occasions.

As far as the idea investing in the stock market would’ve been a better choice for the league’s billionaires, well, ESPN’s Jeff Passan took a Mjolnir-like hammer to that notion:

“Never mind the fact that 30 men chose to own baseball teams rather than investing that money in the stock market. It’s better to focus on the hard facts that are publicly available and show that owning at least one team, the Atlanta Braves, is quite an excellent investment.

“The Braves are owned by Liberty Media, a publicly traded company, and their financials are laid bare in public statements. The most recent statement covers the third quarter of 2021, from July through September, before the Braves won the World Series. In that quarter alone, the team’s operating income before depreciation and amortization (OIBDA) was $55 million, according to Liberty. Hefty returns aren’t anything new. The team’s OIBDA in 2018 was $88 million and in 2019 $49 million before losing $53 million during the COVID-shortened 2020 season. And that’s leaving out entirely the tax benefits organizations reap through depreciation and amortization.”

So we’re left with this: Either Rob Manfred is lying through his teeth in a weak attempt to make players look responsible for the league’s owners deciding to lock out the MLBPA, or Major League Baseball hired the worst investment banker alive to analyze financial data the league typically goes to great lengths to hide.

If it’s the latter, we would absolutely love to hear from you and are genuinely curious how you came to such a conclusion.

Until then, it’s impossible to do anything but laugh at Manfred using labor scare tactics any high schooler could refute with a quick Google search.

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