THE BOOK cover
The Unwritten Book is Finally Written!
An in-depth analysis of: The sacrifice bunt, batter/pitcher matchups, the intentional base on balls, optimizing a batting lineup, hot and cold streaks, clutch performance, platooning strategies, and much more.
Read Excerpts & Customer Reviews

Buy The Book from Amazon


SABR101 required reading if you enter this site. Check out the Sabermetric Wiki. And interesting baseball books.
MOST RECENT ARTICLES
MAIL : You ask | We say

Advanced


THE BOOK--Playing The Percentages In Baseball

<< Back to main

Monday, January 25, 2010

What the Pirates owner is saying

If I’m following along from this great exchange:

Q: I understand that the opening-day payroll figure can increase as the season goes along but, at the same time, it’s probably going to end up down from the $48 million of last year.

What went into your thinking?

A: First of all, I think it’s never going to be about the total dollars we spend as much as how effectively we put them to use.

Part of the reason for the payroll level is that we have young players, and it is normal, expected and natural that, as those players mature, those dollars are going to have to come up. That certainly is my expectation.

But I think we’ve shown good discipline in building this 2010 team, in that there is lots of flexibility that Neal still has. He’s building the team that he thinks will perform best for the coming year but also can still succeed going forward.

Q: So, Neal can spend more than what we see right now?

A: Absolutely.

Q: Why not, some might say, just take some heat off yourself and have a $50 million-$55 million payroll?

A: Well, what I really believe is that we’ve put in place an orderly, systematic plan, and the last thing we can do is divert from that plan or change it, as I’ve seen done before in Pittsburgh and with other clubs. I believe that the decisions being made are giving the team the best opportunity to compete this year, as well as going forward. I don’t want to do anything that handicaps that.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10025/1030840-63.stm#ixzz0deezXCrx

He’s saying that every dollar spent has to have a positive ROI.  The Pirates could, for example, spend an extra 20MM$ on payroll by acquiring 20MM$ worth of free agents for a price tag of 20MM$.  Instead, he’d prefer paying 20MM$ for 30MM$ of non-free agent talent.  I agree with him.  Therefore, the focus should not be on the payroll budget itself, but rather on the entire baseball operations budget.

And, if Huntington has extra money left over, is the Pirates owner letting the GM roll that money over into the following season, or is it the classic use-it or lose-it budget setup?


(6) Comments • 2010/01/26 • SabermetricsFinancesMLB_Management
Page 1 of 1 pages

<< Back to main