How To Be The Worst Major League Baseball Team Owner Ever... Lamentations of a Dodger Fan
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A Brief History
The Dodgers hadn't won a World Series title until 1955. But the team had been loved by the fans in Brooklyn where the players had been part of the close knit family. The Dodgers represented the overcoming spirit of the people in Brooklyn. They had been the "team of the common man" always losing to the "Royalty of Baseball and of New York", the Yankees.
In 1957 team owner Walter O'Malley moved the Dodgers to Los Angeles, and was also influential in the move of the New York Giants to San Francisco. It was a hard blow to Brooklyn, but the westward expansion was the best thing that could have happened to major league baseball. A professional sport confined to the northeast had to be let out of the cage, and O'Malley was just the pioneer to do it.
Memories of Ebbetts Field
Having lost a bitter politicized battle to build a new stadium for the Dodgers in New York, O'Malley's move west was first to the Los Angeles Coliseum. Ebbets Field had been the home of the Dodgers since 1913, and though most fans and players of the time admitted that the stadium was cramped and decrepit, Ebbets field, at its demolition in 1960 became a symbol to many of a beloved and bygone era of baseball and sports in general.
Purchases and negotiations for the construction of Dodger Stadium led to its opening in 1962. Los Angeles accepted the Dodgers right away, and "Dem Bums" once so beloved in Brooklyn quickly became a Southern California attraction.
Dodger History
Vin Scully on Baseball
Time Goes On
As baseball took root in California the Dodgers took their place among the powerful influences in sports. Many of the aging players of the Brooklyn team were nearing the end of their careers, and team owner Walter O'Malley was struggling to sell modest single-year contracts to young and old players and their agents. This was a losing battle, but O'Malley maintained a winning operation at both the major league and minor league levels. This brought great business and financial success as well as growth of the fan base.
Change is inevitable in all things though, and baseball is no exception. Walter O'Malley couldn't operate the business forever. He died in August 1979 just 28 days after his wife Kay. The Dodgers under his 29 years of ownership had won eleven National League penants and four World Series titles. Ownership passed to O'Malley's son Peter and Daughter Terry Seidler who led the team to an additional two National League titles and World Series championships. In 1998 the O'Malleys sold the team, the farm system, and the stadium to the "big-money" investors at Fox Entertainment Group.
In 2004 the Dodgers were purchased by Frank McCourt and his wife who used absolutely none of their own money to do it. On a financial downhill slide since being purchased by the McCourts, the once proud and beloved Dodgers are bankrupt and barely recognizable. The Dodgers are now little more than pawns in the great chess match that is the McCourts' divorce settlement. Having continuously paid his wife and sons huge monthly "allowances" from the Dodger piggy bank, McCourt's ultra-self-indulgent lifestyle brought the team to its knees.
The Frank McCourt Formula for Bad MLB Ownership
- Pay your family annual salaries totalling at least $7 million.
- Buy several homes and properties in several states and foreign countries including his and her Malibu beachfront homes costing $46 million.
- Regularly spend $400 on dinner out and only stay in hotel rooms costing at least $1000.
- In the rich tradition of "dirt-bag", divert funds from team transactions for your personal use, and set the team opposite its mother (Major League Baseball) in court.
- Divorce your spouse of 30 years, and assume attourney's fees totalling, in some reports, $50 million.
- Take a family-oriented baseball experience and turn it into something akin to the violence common to football grandstands and parking lots.
- Take out millions of dollars in loans from team-related businesses.
- Put the team's most beloved member (broadcaster Vin Scully) into a "retain pending fan polling" status.
The Call to Sell
Frank McCourt has resisted selling the Dodgers; and has taken great steps to alienate fans and Major League Baseball in his efforts to retain ownership. A group of long-time season ticket holders has formed a fan's committee which is seeking representation of Dodger fans in the legal proceedings involving the team. McCourt has fought such representation, and continues to plan an assault against Major League Baseball commissioner Bud Selig who has called for the sale of the team since its financial mismanagement became obvious. McCourt has been warned that the team may be kicked out of the league if he doesn't sell. Will he continue to battle taking the Dodgers out of baseball with him; or will he walk away, leaving the fans with the team they love?
Your Thoughts
If his "creative financing techniques" make it possible, should Frank McCourt be allowed to retain ownership of the Los Angeles Dodgers despite the objections of fans and MLB?
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As an old guy, I am still a fan of the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Boston Braves. I agree that expansion to the West was inevitable, but I wish baseball had simply sprouted new teams instead of transplanting the Tribe to Milwaukee and the Bums to LA.
I agree with you that this is a tragic tale and a lesson for the future. I am a big baseball fan but my team is the Chicago Cubs. Now tell me I haven't learned patience, longsuffering, and forebearance! :D










Mr. Smith Hub Author 4 months ago
Bill, I've thought about what you said for a while. I can't argue with that logic. I love the Dodgers' history, and I feel a kinship toward Brooklyn because of it.