On September 9th, 1990, the OAKLAND Athletics beat the New York Yankees 7-3 to complete a twelve-game sweep of the Yankees that year. The season sweep was a first for the Yankees
Sometimes the good guys win, even in baseball which like the economic system it exists in is, by definition, competitively imbalanced. In this case, the bad guys (the Yankees are always the bad guys) with more revenue and hence more resources were swept by the lowly OAKLAND Athletics. They lost every game against OAKLAND over the entire season. Would that every small-market, small-revenue, small-resource team could do the same every season.
I have written here before that baseball’s economic model is as flawed and as mysteriously unquestioned as our late-stage Capitalist system. Too few people ask the following two questions of both the Baseball Lords or of billionaires in general:
- How can you call it a “fair system” when some start with notable resource and economic advantages?
- How can you call it “fair competition” when some start with clear resource and economic advantages?
I am well aware after 65-years that asking such questions is akin to saying to many that you are in favor of Stalinism. I would argue it is not. It is merely asking if the game would be better and the world be better if we stopped pretending that the current unfair systems we have are ONLY options available to us.
Surely we can do better. And surely baseball can do better.
Until then, I will always root for the underdogs and against both the billionaires and the Yankees.
How about you?


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