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Post by kaybli on Jan 19, 2022 19:19:17 GMT -5
Yup.
I was looking forward to it taking the place of real baseball if the season was delayed but looks like that won't be happening.
Lo siento, mi amigo. Are you rethinking playing Strat-O-Matic with Noetsi? Yup, its right there on my list along with watching paint dry, learning to play the accordion, and traveling to North Dakota.
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Post by kaybli on Jan 19, 2022 19:20:55 GMT -5
Lo siento, mi amigo. Are you rethinking playing Strat-O-Matic with Noetsi? This is the game for Noetsi, Karl, and blue country Haha, I heard about that game.
Have you ever messed around on this site?:
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Post by anthonyd46 on Jan 21, 2022 3:51:06 GMT -5
This is the game for Noetsi, Karl, and blue country Haha, I heard about that game.
Have you ever messed around on this site?:
No but that looks like Karl's dream site.
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Post by inger on Jan 21, 2022 9:44:31 GMT -5
This is the game for Noetsi, Karl, and blue country Haha, I heard about that game.
Have you ever messed around on this site?:
I can see Blue Country’s big move to spark attendance. Extra fireworks nights! Karl signs King Felix to 115 year contract, leaving $1.54 per season for his second baseman. Noetsi pays bonuses to all players that bunt… but only if it’s a true sacrifice…
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Post by kaybli on Jan 21, 2022 10:51:31 GMT -5
Haha, I heard about that game.
Have you ever messed around on this site?:
I can see Blue Country’s big move to spark attendance. Extra fireworks nights! Karl signs King Felix to 115 year contract, leaving $1.54 per season for his second baseman. Noetsi pays bonuses to all players that bunt… but only if it’s a true sacrifice…
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Post by anthonyd46 on Jan 21, 2022 11:26:09 GMT -5
Haha, I heard about that game.
Have you ever messed around on this site?:
I can see Blue Country’s big move to spark attendance. Extra fireworks nights! Karl signs King Felix to 115 year contract, leaving $1.54 per season for his second baseman. Noetsi pays bonuses to all players that bunt… but only if it’s a true sacrifice… Reminds me of one of the gm goals in nhl 17 or whatever year it was when they wanted you to maximize promo nights.
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Post by anthonyd46 on Jan 21, 2022 15:26:59 GMT -5
Other names
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Post by rizzuto on Jan 21, 2022 15:46:52 GMT -5
Nellie would be my choice. Please, I just cannot take Flaherty’s humorless, tension-filled voice. Maybin could be a winner, but I’d like to replace the games Cone will miss with another pitcher’s perspective.
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Post by noetsi on Jan 21, 2022 17:26:13 GMT -5
Fans need to get organized and boycott the games after the strike if there is one. It is the only way the two sides, neither of whom cares a fig about baseball or the fans, will grow up.
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Post by noetsi on Jan 21, 2022 17:28:59 GMT -5
Think of all the wonderful things we could do with our time. We could watch ants build an anthill. Birds building their nests, laying eggs, hatching them. We could solve world hunger, create world peace. Learn how to control the weather. Play badminton. Sleep. Would a year of sleep perhaps extend life? … We could learn to appreciate quantile linear regression of structured equation models. Or play noetsi stratomatic baseball back when the yankees could hit.
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Post by kaybli on Jan 24, 2022 18:55:38 GMT -5
MLBPA Drops Push For Earlier Free Agency Eligibility In Latest CBA ProposalBy Anthony Franco | January 24, 2022 at 4:45pm CDT 4:45 pm: In addition to holding firm on their push for two-year arbitration, the MLBPA remained steadfast on a few more of their top goals. Jeff Passan of ESPN reports that the union proposal included a bump in the league minimum salary to $775K, the institution of an eight-team draft lottery and a $245MM base luxury tax threshold. All three issues had been known goals of the MLBPA in past proposals, and the setting of the CBT threshold is expected to be of particular import. In recent offers, MLB has pushed for tax thresholds in the $214MM – $220MM range, leaving a fairly significant gap between the parties. 3:51 pm: As part of this afternoon’s collective bargaining proposal, the MLB Players Association dropped its push for an earlier path to major league free agency, reports Evan Drellich of the Athletic. It now seems likely the next CBA will require players to accrue six years of MLB service time in order to reach the open market — as had been the case under prior agreements. The game’s service time structure is one of the most contentious issues during ongoing negotiations. The MLBPA, desiring to get players to free agency earlier, had previously been pursuing a modified service/age threshold that would’ve allowed players to test the market after six years of MLB service or after five years of service if the player had reached a certain age (initially 30.5 years, later 29.5). Major League Baseball had steadfastly refused to entertain that possibility, either pushing for a continuation of the six-year status quo or an age threshold (29.5, in MLB’s previous offers) that was independent of service time. It seems the league will get its wish to preserve the path to free agency as is, marking a significant development. In an additional alteration, Drellich reports that the MLBPA agreed to alter its push for reduced revenue sharing from large-market organizations to small-market franchises. Chelsea Janes of the Washington Post adds more specifics, reporting (on Twitter) that the union’s latest offer included a revenue sharing cut in the $30MM range relative to the 2016-21 CBA. Earlier in the winter, the union had been pushing to cut revenue sharing by around $100MM. The past CBA required recipients to use those funds “to improve (their) performance on the field,” but there was no provision that required teams to invest the money into player salaries (as opposed to such things as scouting, analytics or player development, all of which indirectly attempt to improve team performance). The MLBPA has expressed its belief that smaller-market clubs have been too content to pocket that money, filing grievances to that effect against the A’s, Marlins, Rays and Pirates in recent years. As with an expedited path to free agency, the league has opposed modifications to the revenue sharing system. It remains to be seen whether that pushback is categorical or one of degree. The MLBPA’s proposal still included a revenue sharing cut, of course, but it’s significantly smaller than the union’s previous pushes in that regard. While the MLBPA made a pair of notable steps towards MLB’s vision, one thing that hasn’t changed is the union’s desire for earlier arbitration eligibility. Drellich reports that the union’s proposal this afternoon would allow players to qualify for arbitration after reaching two years of MLB service, as have all of the PA’s past offers. (The previous CBA required three years for arbitration eligibility for most players). MLB has thus far refused to discuss earlier paths to arbitration, either. Whether the league will be more amenable to that possibility now that the union has made some changes in other key areas is unclear. Janes tweets that this afternoon’s meeting lasted around two hours and fifteen minutes. Encouragingly, the parties are set to meet again tomorrow, according to a report from Hannah Keyser of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). At that sit-down, MLB plans to put forth some form of counter-offer, tweets Drellich, although the league won’t make a comprehensive proposal that hits on every topic of discussion. It seems possible today’s proposal will kick-start negotiations, which have moved at a glacial pace in the nearly two months since the start of the lockout. That’s not to say agreement on a new deal is imminent. According to Drellich, the MLBPA “rejected most, if not all” of the terms the league put forth in its most recent offer, a bit more than two weeks ago. Jeff Passan of ESPN tweets that today’s meeting was “contentious;” Drellich categorized it as “heated.” It also bears reiterating that the full specifics of the MLBPA’s proposal aren’t known. In addition to ongoing potential holdups regarding arbitration eligibility and revenue sharing, such issues as the competitive balance tax, league minimum salary and playoff expansion will need to be sorted out. With a bit more than a month before the scheduled start of the first Spring Training games, the parties have to make rapid progress in a number of areas if a disruption to the exhibition schedule is to be avoided.
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Post by inger on Jan 24, 2022 19:43:40 GMT -5
MLBPA Drops Push For Earlier Free Agency Eligibility In Latest CBA ProposalBy Anthony Franco | January 24, 2022 at 4:45pm CDT 4:45 pm: In addition to holding firm on their push for two-year arbitration, the MLBPA remained steadfast on a few more of their top goals. Jeff Passan of ESPN reports that the union proposal included a bump in the league minimum salary to $775K, the institution of an eight-team draft lottery and a $245MM base luxury tax threshold. All three issues had been known goals of the MLBPA in past proposals, and the setting of the CBT threshold is expected to be of particular import. In recent offers, MLB has pushed for tax thresholds in the $214MM – $220MM range, leaving a fairly significant gap between the parties. 3:51 pm: As part of this afternoon’s collective bargaining proposal, the MLB Players Association dropped its push for an earlier path to major league free agency, reports Evan Drellich of the Athletic. It now seems likely the next CBA will require players to accrue six years of MLB service time in order to reach the open market — as had been the case under prior agreements. The game’s service time structure is one of the most contentious issues during ongoing negotiations. The MLBPA, desiring to get players to free agency earlier, had previously been pursuing a modified service/age threshold that would’ve allowed players to test the market after six years of MLB service or after five years of service if the player had reached a certain age (initially 30.5 years, later 29.5). Major League Baseball had steadfastly refused to entertain that possibility, either pushing for a continuation of the six-year status quo or an age threshold (29.5, in MLB’s previous offers) that was independent of service time. It seems the league will get its wish to preserve the path to free agency as is, marking a significant development. In an additional alteration, Drellich reports that the MLBPA agreed to alter its push for reduced revenue sharing from large-market organizations to small-market franchises. Chelsea Janes of the Washington Post adds more specifics, reporting (on Twitter) that the union’s latest offer included a revenue sharing cut in the $30MM range relative to the 2016-21 CBA. Earlier in the winter, the union had been pushing to cut revenue sharing by around $100MM. The past CBA required recipients to use those funds “to improve (their) performance on the field,” but there was no provision that required teams to invest the money into player salaries (as opposed to such things as scouting, analytics or player development, all of which indirectly attempt to improve team performance). The MLBPA has expressed its belief that smaller-market clubs have been too content to pocket that money, filing grievances to that effect against the A’s, Marlins, Rays and Pirates in recent years. As with an expedited path to free agency, the league has opposed modifications to the revenue sharing system. It remains to be seen whether that pushback is categorical or one of degree. The MLBPA’s proposal still included a revenue sharing cut, of course, but it’s significantly smaller than the union’s previous pushes in that regard. While the MLBPA made a pair of notable steps towards MLB’s vision, one thing that hasn’t changed is the union’s desire for earlier arbitration eligibility. Drellich reports that the union’s proposal this afternoon would allow players to qualify for arbitration after reaching two years of MLB service, as have all of the PA’s past offers. (The previous CBA required three years for arbitration eligibility for most players). MLB has thus far refused to discuss earlier paths to arbitration, either. Whether the league will be more amenable to that possibility now that the union has made some changes in other key areas is unclear. Janes tweets that this afternoon’s meeting lasted around two hours and fifteen minutes. Encouragingly, the parties are set to meet again tomorrow, according to a report from Hannah Keyser of Yahoo! Sports (Twitter link). At that sit-down, MLB plans to put forth some form of counter-offer, tweets Drellich, although the league won’t make a comprehensive proposal that hits on every topic of discussion. It seems possible today’s proposal will kick-start negotiations, which have moved at a glacial pace in the nearly two months since the start of the lockout. That’s not to say agreement on a new deal is imminent. According to Drellich, the MLBPA “rejected most, if not all” of the terms the league put forth in its most recent offer, a bit more than two weeks ago. Jeff Passan of ESPN tweets that today’s meeting was “contentious;” Drellich categorized it as “heated.” It also bears reiterating that the full specifics of the MLBPA’s proposal aren’t known. In addition to ongoing potential holdups regarding arbitration eligibility and revenue sharing, such issues as the competitive balance tax, league minimum salary and playoff expansion will need to be sorted out. With a bit more than a month before the scheduled start of the first Spring Training games, the parties have to make rapid progress in a number of areas if a disruption to the exhibition schedule is to be avoided.
One thing that strikes me is that the players are looking for a significant increase to the minimum wage. I know the minors and MLB have completely separate organizations and agreements, but the players that have not reached the big leagues are still going to be fed peanuts. I just don’t get it. Show some generosity by taking a bit off meat off that bone for AAA players at least…
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Post by domeplease on Jan 31, 2022 20:30:56 GMT -5
MLB, MLBPA still far apart as scheduled start of Spring Training nears.
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Post by chiyankee on Jan 31, 2022 21:03:37 GMT -5
MLB, MLBPA still far apart as scheduled start of Spring Training nears.
Get a deal done you clowns! I wonder if they noticed that the NFL playoffs are on fire? The NHL & NBA seasons are at their half way points and both their trade deadlines are approaching, so there will be all kinds of media attention for these two sports. Meanwhile, there has been no baseball talk at all, except people debating whether former steroid users should get into the HOF. No hot stove talk. No free agent signings or trades. Baseball is out of sight, out of mind. The people in charge of the sport that we love are running it into the ground.
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Post by inger on Jan 31, 2022 21:17:24 GMT -5
MLB, MLBPA still far apart as scheduled start of Spring Training nears.
Get a deal done you clowns! I wonder if they noticed that the NFL playoffs are on fire? The NHL & NBA seasons are at their half way points and both their trade deadlines are approaching, so there will be all kinds of media attention for these two sports. Meanwhile, there has been no baseball talk at all, except people debating whether former steroid users should get into the HOF. No hot stove talk. No free agent signings or trades. Baseball is out of sight, out of mind. The people in charge of the sport that we love are running it into the ground. I want MLB extra Innings for $29.99. Just thought us fans oughta get something out of this horse manure…
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