Master Index of Archived Threads
Der Kommissar's in Town
Mets – Willets Point Jan 05 2012 08:06 PM |
Big news! Mets hire turnaround consultants. Could mean bankruptcy and sale of team.
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Ceetar Jan 05 2012 08:13 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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[url]https://twitter.com/#!/DanDotLewis
A lot of this is one sided because Rubin wouldn't make his tweets public and is apparently having a hissy fit about something Dan said.
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Mets – Willets Point Jan 05 2012 08:19 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Either way, hopefully it's a sign of better fortunes for the team.
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Edgy MD Jan 05 2012 08:21 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Hopefully, certainly.
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Ceetar Jan 05 2012 08:23 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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seems hard for it to be worse right? either they'll help turn things around or help them sell if they can't afford the team. Either way should lead to a team that's able to spend.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jan 05 2012 08:25 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
What a dot douche.
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Edgy MD Jan 05 2012 08:26 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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Wouldn't have picked you for a grass-is-greener guy.
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Ceetar Jan 05 2012 08:35 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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sorry, there's always the crab grass of the ultimate buyer being a stingy, horrible owner. I hear bad things about Dolan for instance.
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Fman99 Jan 05 2012 08:37 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Fucking Wilpons. Just sell already.
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Edgy MD Jan 05 2012 08:48 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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No need to apologize. I'm not afraid of a stingy horrible owner so much as a (1) a prolonged bankruptcy period where assets have to be liquidated to cover debts, (2) a detached corporation who needs to see black ink above all else every year. Beyond that, stingy isn't a threat so much as conservative might be. Stupid as it was for the Wilpons to count on those fake profits, they sunk that money into the operations rather than paying off their principle. In this economy, I'm not sure folks will have the guts to keep reinvesting as the investments aren't paying off like the Pons did. But it's New York, and there'll likely be enough folks out there who want the vanity of pimping out the Mets in their name. Those folks will be bidding against the corporations, so we'll see. But again, the (1) and (2) above are what I fear might lies beyond the 'Pons.
I know, but they look like they're playing to stay and the game is on.
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Ceetar Jan 05 2012 08:51 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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Not that 2014 is soon, but the Wilpons have impending debt there with Citi Field, as well as the Picard thing looming. I don't think there will be a prolonged bankruptcy period.
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Edgy MD Jan 05 2012 08:55 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
This is where my lack of studies in these matters come through. How does another debt coming due accelerate the process by which the corporation will transfer through bankruptcy? I would figure that would only bog matters down further.
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Ceetar Jan 05 2012 09:00 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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I guess not. I don't really know. beyond my paygrade. I guess in bankruptcy it just makes it messier having another pile of debt jump on? Did the Rangers file for bankruptcy? how long did that take?
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Edgy MD Jan 05 2012 09:05 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
The Rangers' recovery seems like a pretty ideal model. Certainly the Dodgers are spending money in bankruptcy, but these don't seem like typical situations. The Dodgers, of course, always have this wonderful asset in the stadium and the land it sits on, but the Wips only have paid off on a fraction of the stadium and perhaps half of the TV station. (Or so I understand. Mongo only pawn in game of life.)
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jan 05 2012 09:23 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
The thing about a bankruptcy is that what happens is ultimately is up to the creditors and a judge. If the Mets owners were able to get financing that could pay their bills and the creditors approved it, then they could retain the team in a Chapter 11, but if creditors were convinced that selling the team would give them a better return then they'd likely back that solution.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 07:19 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
As one of those creditors is MLB, I imagine Selig will have a lot of say.
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Ceetar Jan 06 2012 07:34 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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And CRG can't pitch.
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metirish Jan 06 2012 07:45 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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and divisions foes have gotten better.
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Mets – Willets Point Jan 06 2012 07:48 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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And Leon's getting LAAAAAAAAAAARGER!
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Frayed Knot Jan 06 2012 07:49 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Here's the part I'm having trouble grasping (about the whole deal, not just this recent development if this really is a development):
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jan 06 2012 08:00 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
I think it's possible in this case.
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MFS62 Jan 06 2012 08:06 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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THAT is the question that must be answered. It was Tax Law that made the Wrigley family sell the Cubs after many years of ownership. IIRC*, the law states that a sports team's operational losses cannot be taken as deductions (against other income) if those losses have continued for over seven years. At that point, the team is considered a "hobby" and the deductions are no longer allowed. If the losses have been occurring for a number of years, but helping the Wilpons w.r.t. the other revenue, the benefit will be ending soon and they will have to make the decision to take the real financial hit or sell. The first may cause the second. We can only hope. Later * = My mother always wanted me to be an accountant. I'm not. But I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express.
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Ceetar Jan 06 2012 08:30 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Madoff doesn't really factor in. That's more of a Wilpon thing. It didn't really affect the revenue/payroll formula, it just gave them more money to pay them with.
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metirish Jan 06 2012 08:33 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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How can you reconcile the beginning and ending of this sentence?
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Ceetar Jan 06 2012 08:45 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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it doesn't factor into the equation. Strictly from a "Are the Mets profitable" standpoint. The equation isn't (How Much the Mets Make +random investments)= (How much we pay to operate the team) The Madoff stuff was never part of Mets revenue. Or at least, it shouldn't have been. The idea (at least it is now) is to plan for your intake of money to = payroll. I suppose they probably put all the season ticket holder money into a Madoff account, and maybe they even calculated the return on that as part of the budget to match Mets expenses, but that change isn't going to suddenly make the Mets a 70 million dollar losing prospect.
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Frayed Knot Jan 06 2012 09:48 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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I get all that -- but $70 Million?!?!?! (on top of maybe $50mil the year before) Assuming those numbers are even close to correct it's hard to see how this owner or any owner EVER made money running this franchise or, if this was all triggered by over-reaching in the stadium deal, how this or any other owner ever could.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 10:11 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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According to this hotshot, the pendulum swing in 2010.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 10:18 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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Add to that perfect star, crippling injuries to virtually every player signed to long-term, high-value contracts. Those not typically injured helped matters by under-performing shockingly (Bay, Perez) or punching family members in the face at the stadium (Rodriguez). It's like the fates aligned against the at the one time they dropped their pants enough to expose themselves to the fates. It's almost beautiful.
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Frayed Knot Jan 06 2012 10:33 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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So, assuming that we're to take those figures as accurate, we need to simply accept that, with virtually no change in expenses, revenues for the club suddenly fell by over 100 million dollars (or close to 25%) in the span of one year (and then further after that) as this club flipped from being in a positive-$50mil situation to a negative-$50mil in the blink of an eye. Attendance fell approx 20% between 2009 & 2010 which, when combined with lower prices, could put a dent in finances. But the paid gate is only a portion of income (it certainly is a much smaller portion than in previous eras) and if the set-up of this team is such where anything short of 3+mil asses-in-seats each year (essentially its capacity*) leaves the club swimming in red ink then we're back to my earlier question about how the team stayed afloat this long or could reasonably expect to in the future. * 42K x 81 games = 3.4 million
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Benjamin Grimm Jan 06 2012 10:53 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
I have to admit, I haven't been following this money story all that closely, but...
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metirish Jan 06 2012 11:05 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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from a Newsday article dated Dec. 14th
http://www.newsday.com/sports/baseball/ ... -1.3390173 I wonder how many of the expensive seats will be sold this coming season, I think that's a huge worry for them, not guys like me not going to two or three games a year.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 11:23 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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Assuming those figures are correct, I'd guess that (1) that 20% reduction in attendance came at the high end --- private suite-buying, private club-carousing, greasy-steak eating yucks. Those 1%-ers got a reality check with the crash and their discretionary values did not include a disappointing team playing in a homer-depressing stadium whose novelty value wore off fast. Good. Screw them and their scads of free-agent-supporting money. Long live the coupon clippers who help pay for the Mike Hessmans of this world. (2) Madoff got busted in December 2008. Some of those Madoff accounts were team-owned accounts, and those bogus revenues would have counted in prior years but didn't then. Would that show on the balance sheet? I don't know. And if so, why not until 2010? Mongo, again, merely pawn.
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Ceetar Jan 06 2012 11:32 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
There are so many moving parts here it's mindboggling.
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Frayed Knot Jan 06 2012 11:40 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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And, if that's the main source, I wonder if it's not a number put out there for public consumption while all this haggling goes on. I have no doubt that there's probably losses involved and that the $70mil figure is probably one someone can point to on some spreadsheet, but of course a good accountant can make just about any P&L say just about anything he wants. In short, I'm just wary of taking that number as a stone cold fact, especially seeing as how it may be in the interest of several parties to make it seem that way.
The expensive seats and the luxury boxes are where the big money is as far as attendance money goes and there's no doubt that that's where the biggest portion of their hit came from. Coming into the new stadium the Mets* anticipated more demand for those premium seats then there actually was and when the economy cratered they had to slash prices meaning they got both lower volume and fewer dollars per sale that they did get. * The Yanx, Jets & Giants did the same thing and probably to a greater degree. The Yanx wanted, what?, like $2,500 per seat at first for the ones behind the dugout and the football teams got far less demand for those PSLs than they thought even to the point of having to admit that the "bids" for the first seat licenses were rigged so as to simulate intense competition for them. Now all those teams probably had a bigger buffer to start with financially but I still don't hear any of them complaining about drowning in red ink.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 11:52 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
I'd be curious to see it, seeing as how the Yankees pay out crazy money in revenue sharing.
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Edgy MD Jan 06 2012 11:57 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
Mets tweet an acknowledgement of hiring CRG, along with a denial that it's to guide them through bankruptcy.
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Ceetar Jan 06 2012 11:57 AM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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and if the Yankees, instead of winning it all and easily making up the different in postseason revenue that year, had lost A-Rod and CC for 60% of the season and missed the playoffs. Because it's pretty clear the Yankees are feeling the economic pressure too. Lowering prices, talking about payroll and budgets, even lost this Japanese guy because they couldn't come to an agreement. (And what's to agree on besides money unless he just didn't want to play in NY?)
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jan 06 2012 12:03 PM Re: Der Kommissar's in Town |
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The victory lap the scoopers are taking on twitter now is kinda embarrassing.
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