behrcolls@aol.com Strike or not, baseball improve how needs to it runs by James Flanigan Los Angeles Times The simple truth is that baseball is not a very good business. That's the basic problem as major league baseball nears a fateful strike deadline Friday. If there is a strike, the value of baseball teams will almost certainly go down. Yet if negotiators for the players union and team owners reach an agreement on revenue sharing and other matters, values of leading teams still could go down because they will be penalized to take care of weaker clubs in the 30-team major leagues. A decline in team values would be a ter rible turn for the sport. The chief business at traction in owning a baseball franchise is that team values appreciate over time. The Ana heim Angels, for example, have appreciated at more than 10 percent a year since 1996, when Walt Disney Co. first bought an interest in the team. The Los Angeles Dodgers rose in value 11.9 percent a year compounded from 1950, when Walter O'Malley bought the Brooklyn Dodg ers, to 1998 when his son Peter O'Malley sold the team to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., according to statistics compiled by Moag & Co., a Baltimore-based sports evaluation firm. On the other hand, the Florida Marlins ap preciated at only about 5 percent during the 19905, which include the year the team won the World Series. Its owners could have done better in Individual Retirement Accounts with compound interest. There are fears today that appreciation could be slowing because business people don't find baseball, with teams reporting big losses, an attractive place to invest. Murdoch is reported to be trying to sell the Dodgers, while retaining the television and cable rights to games. (A spokesman for News Corp. said Murdoch has said nothing about selling, and his only recent statement is that he is "thrilled by the improvement in the team this year. - ) Disney has tried to sell the Angels but no big-money buyers with serious offers have stepped up to the plate. Baseball is not doomed. In many ways its losses are overstated and its future could ty bright if it can reorganize operations. Unfor tunately, current negotiations may not produce such a beneficial reorganization. In current labor talks, as well as those in 1994 that led to the longest strike in sports history, baseball owners are trying to achieve a cap on salaries and revenue sharing to foster a competitive balance among teams. Baseball is late. The NFL has had revenue sharing and salary caps for years. The NFL's overseers realized that if teams could be kept roughly on a par, competitive games could be come a national television attraction. Baseball, which plays 162 games a year, is more a sport of local enthusiasm. Its national TV contracts have never been as large as pro football's. But baseball never devised a suc cessful policy to encourage regional television coverage for its teams. "The Cincinnati Reds used to be televised in Kentucky, but today nobody sees them or speaks about them," says economist Bruce Johnson at Centre College in Danville, Ky. And baseball should have been doing more NASCAR 2002 Winston Cup Standings: Thru Race 24 of 36 Next Race: Mountain Dew Southern 500 September 1 Pos. Driver Points 1 Sterling Marlin 3240 Matt Martin Jeff Gordon Tony Stewart Jimmie Johnson Rusty Wallace Ricky Rudd Bill Elliott Matt Kenseth Dale Jarrett Kurt Busch Ryan Newman Jeff Burton 2763 Michael Waltrip 2705 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2640 Iti Ricky Craven 2601 2546 Bobby Labonte Terry Labonte 2480 Kevin Harvick Jeff Green NI,SCAR insion Cup SerieN its business to ensure competitive balance. Now it has be come a sport of wealthier teams that are able to hire better players, and other teams that gen erally have little hope of making the lucrative postseason playoffs. Baseball today is pleading poverty. Base ball Commissioner Bud Selig told Congress that teams collectively are losing more than $5OO million. But normal business account ing, which includes depreciation of assets, would reduce losses to $l5O million at most, says sports economist Andrew Zimbalist of Smith College in Nortfampton, Mass. For example, expensive player contracts of fer a tax shelter for new owners of baseball teams. A buyer may take half the purchase price of the team as representing player con tracts and then amortize those contracts for tax purposes over five years, gaining a tax shelter for profits in any other business. A team's connection with media companies owning cable channels, such as the Atlanta Braves, Chicago Cubs, Dodgers and New York Yankees, also changes the profit picture. The team's games add an attraction that increases the cable channel's earnings, but none of that profit shows on the baseball team's account. "The big value in baseball franchises today lies in regional cable organizations you can create around them," says Michael Mendelsohn, head of Patriot Advisors Inc., an entertainment industry brokerage in Los An geles. The Yankees and their principal owner, George Steinbrenner, have organized a lucra tive regional sports cable network in the New York area in recent years. And Steinbrenner has used cable revenue to pay for star players, making the Yankees a frequent champion in the last six years. But this has made him and the Yankees the target of reform. Yankee revenue should be transferred to San Diego and Kansas City so that those teams can pay star players too, goes the thinking behind the luxury tax other own ers hope to place on Steinbrenner's payroll. The Dodgers, as a large-market team, also would have to transfer revenue. But nothing guarantees that the wealthy owners of small-market teams such as San -Diege-aniiKantiasCitrwill invest shared rev enue to become competitive. They' haven't shown much initiative so far. And no mention is made of the fact that Steinbrenner's Yankees went 14 years from the early 1980 s to the mid-'9os without getting into postseason play. What that portends is that even if there is no strike, today's proposed reforms are not likely to cure baseball's ills. What could do so? Fresh thinking. John Moag, head of the sports evaluation firm bear ing his name, proposes that "100 pecent of all gate receipts go directly to the home team's player payroll." That would "establish a mean ingful link between the fans and the players they support," Moag says. The tnith is, baseball could face broaden ing horizons, with cable and satellite broad casting able to target subscribers and attract advertisers. Also international markets are opening to baseball as they may never open to pro football. If baseball can survive this week, perhaps it can become a good business tomorrow. Professional Golf Association PGA Money Leaders Plus," Winnings, Tiger Woods 5.496 Phil Mickelson 3.817 Ernie Els 3.128 Rich Beem 2.783 Jerry Kelly 2.454 6. David Toms 2.299 3145 3129 3101 3095 THE NATIONAL SPORTS ARENA (Money in Millions) Justin Leonard 2.175 Sergio Garcia 2.164 Vijay Singh 2.163 Shigeki Maruyama 2.074 Nick Price 2.014 Len Mattiace 1.993 Jim Furyk 1.935 Retief Goosen 1.932 Fred Funk 1.916 Chris DiMarco 1.863 JoseMariaOlazabal 1.862 Rocco Mediate 1.832 Chris Riley 1.771 Brad Faxon 1.663 Kenny Perry 1.650 Davis Love 111 1,638 Craig Perks 1.605 Scott McCarron 1.501 Bob Estes 1.500 SPORTS Friday, August 30, 2002 Runners continued from page 6 race in 28:51 to take 21st overall and 6th in the same age group as Schhultheis. Wheeler ran a 31:54 on the hot June evening, and Croft completed the race in 33:10 finishing 56th and 74th respectively. Knapp ran a 37:01 to take 169th over the entire field and 3rd in the women age 20-24 group. Szafran surprised herself in her first 5-mile road race by running a 39:38 after a long car ride from Bradford. The most impressive thing about rtprAtttAL 401 ' te „:14.1,,,,----,,, r-LIA RLE ' '' 3-- The health care you need, the convenience you want... Ig Meant Council Birth Control o Emergency Contraception Pregnancy Tests 0 dyne Exams Call for your appointment today! Edinboro Office 118 E. Plum St. Statistical Leaders Batting Average (AVG) Player Team POS AVG 1 B Bonds SF LF .372 2 L Walker COL 1B .356 3 B Williams NYY CF .344 4 M Sweeney KC 1B .344 5 I Suzuki SEA RF .338 Home Runs (HR) Player Team POS HR 1 ARodriguez TEX SS 47 2 S Sosa CHI RF 43 3 J Thome CLE 1B 41 4 B Bonds SF LF 40 5 S Green LA RF 38 Runs Batted In (RBI) Player Team POS RBI 1 ARodriguezTEX SS 116 2 M Tejada OAK SS 110 3 M Ordonez MON RF 107 3 L Berkman HOU CF 107 5 A Pujols StL LF 103 Player Team POS Runs 1 A RodriguezTEX SS 105 1 A Soriano NYY 2B 105 3 S Sosa ChC RF 104 4 D Jeter NYY SS 103 5 A Pujols StL LF 100 0 STD Testing, Treatment & Counseling o Breast & Cervical Cancer Screening 814-734-7600 Visit us on the web at : www.fhcinc.org Major League Baseball Runs her time is she finished second in the women age 16-19 group. All of these accomplishments were from one race and they were from June. Since then, all of the athletes on the team have completed an additional two grueling months of training and ran other races. Also, this is just the racing accomplishments of five of the team's runners in one isolated race. To list all of the teams off season racing accomplishments would 4110 a Family Health Council, Inc. 0 Adoption League Leaders Player Team POS Wins 1 C Schilling ARZ P 21 2 R Johnson ARZ P 19 2 B Zito OAK P 19 4 P Martinez BOS P 17 4 D Lowe BOS P 17 Earned Run Average (ERA) Player Team POS ERA 1 P Martinez BOS P 2.22 2 D Lowe BOS P 2.39 3 R Johnson ARI P 2.44 4 G Maddux ATL P 2.56 5 B Colon MON P 2.65 Player Team PDS SO 1 R Johnson ARZ P 279 2 C Schilling ARZ P 266 3 P Martinez BOS P 221 4 M Clement ChC P 187 5 A Burnett FLA P 183 Player Team PQS SV 1 J Smoltz ATL P 46 1 E Gagne LA P 45 3 M Williams PIT P 38 3 E GuardadoMlN P 38 3 J Mesa PHI P 37 ' • 'et:WEN! Erie Office 1611 Peach St. 814-453-4718 Wins Strikeouts (SO) Saves (SV) The Behrend Beacon undoubtedly take up an entire page. The "off-season" full of training is over and the Lions cross country team kicks off its season this weekend at the Westminster Invitational. The team looks to build from a summer full of hard work and start racing the ones that matter. ESPN/USA Today Football Coaches Poll Rank Team Record 1. Miami 0-0 2. Texas 0-0 3. Oklahoma 0-0 4. Tennessee 0-0 5. Florida State 0-0 6. Colorado 0-0 7. Florida 0-0 8. Nebraska 1-0 9. Washington 0-0 10. Michigan 0-0 11. Ohio State 1-0 12. Georgia 0-0 13. WashingtonSt.o-0 14. LSU 0-0 15. Oregon 0-0 16. Virginia Tech 1-0 17. Michigan St. 0-0 18. Louisville 0-0 19. USC 0-0 20. Maryland 0-0 21. South Carolina 0-0 22. Marshall 0-0 23. Penn State 0-0 24. N.O State 1-0 25. Wisconsin 1-0 Page