Yuck The Fankees Already!

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I hit this team. They sign every big Free Agent year after year and make the playoffs year after year winning 5 world series the last 14 years. When is this gonna stop? Where has parity gone. Yuck the Fankees! Another bought World Series title. Utter BullShit. If they didn't win it, yuck them also.
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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it would be better for the sport if everybody had more money, but baseball is not about national TV, it's about local markets.

so revenue parity is just not going to happen
 

Virtus Junxit Mors Non Separabit
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only 4 hall of famers from their farm system

yep they just grab EVERY free agent

just couldnt do without Halliday/Lee/Ibanez

stfu homo
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
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I'm not a fan of the Yankees because I favor the local team here.

But if I want to rate a baseball franchise in a sport with no salary cap, the first thing I'll look for is the teams willing to "buy" the most talent.

To that end, the Yankees are the best. And for the first time in nine years, they also are the champions of MLB. Props
 

ray

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I hit this team. They sign every big Free Agent year after year and make the playoffs year after year winning 5 world series the last 14 years. When is this gonna stop? Where has parity gone. Yuck the Fankees! Another bought World Series title. Utter BullShit. If they didn't win it, yuck them also.

Suck it up and stop the crying.

:laugh:
 

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Yankees cash in with World Series title



NEW YORK - The emotion was real.

From shortstop Derek Jeter, catcher Jorge Posada, left-hander Andy Pettitte and closer Mariano Rivera — who had not won a World Series as Yankees since 2000.

From first-time champions such as third baseman Alex Rodriguez, first baseman Mark Teixeira and left-hander CC Sabathia, who for all their hundreds of millions play the game to win.

From general manager Brian Cashman to manager Joe Girardi to every other Yankees employee who endure the grim reality of working in the biggest pressure cooker in sports.

They are human beings, not robots, no matter how much money the Yankees spend. The joy and — yes, relief — on their faces told you the moment was pure.

In virtually every other major-league front office, however, the frustration has been building for months now.

"Yeah, the Yankees are good," your typical executive might say. "They ought to be good, seeing as how they spent $200 million."

That emotion is real, too.

The Yankees always spend the most money — nothing new there. The difference now is that they are spending wisely, along with their junior partner in dominance, the Red Sox.

I'm not an alarmist when it comes to baseball's economic system. I do not view a salary cap as a panacea. But now that the big-money teams are proving adept at "Moneyball," commissioner Bud Selig needs to at least be on alert.

The Yankees eventually might implode under the weight of their massive contracts — A-Rod is signed through 2017, Teixeira through '16, Sabathia through '15 (with an opt-out after '11), right-hander A.J. Burnett through '13.

Jeter's next deal — his contract expires after next season — figures to be another whopper. And Rivera eventually will need to be replaced, diminishing the Yankees' greatest strength.

Then again, who's to say the Yankees won't grow even stronger? That their victory over the Phillies won't be the start of another run of four titles in five years?

Cashman isn't perfect — no GM is — but he certainly made the right choices last offseason when he spent a combined $423.5 million on Sabathia, Burnett and Teixeira.



He also made a shrewd decision the previous winter, when he declined to trade players such as Hughes and center fielder Melky Cabrera for Johan Santana, knowing an even better option — Sabathia — would be available as a free agent the following year.

The Yankees' farm system, while not elite, is spitting out significant contributors regularly, from Cabrera to second baseman Robinson Cano, Hughes to fellow right-handers Chien-Ming Wang, Joba Chamberlain and David Robertson.

Why shouldn't the team stay strong?

The Yankees figure to dive back into the market for starting pitching whether or not Pettitte retires; for $200 million, they had only three starters they trusted in the postseason. Another way to reinforce the rotation would be to buy relievers with the goal of making Hughes and/or Chamberlain starters again.

Left fielder Johnny Damon? Designated hitter Hideki Matsui? Pick one. Or pick neither. Chone Figgins, Matt Holliday and Jason Bay are potential free-agent replacements, and each represents a younger alternative.

The Yankees' resources — like the Red Sox's — provide margin for error. Cashman built such an offensive dynamo, it hardly mattered that Cano batted .193 in the postseason, Teixeira .180 and right fielder Nick Swisher .128.

The absence of Wang hurt the Yankees. So did the absence of outfielder Xavier Nady. But while the Yankees never found a replacement for Wang — Chamberlain failed to qualify — Swisher more than compensated for the loss of Nady.

My, how quickly things changed with this team.

A year ago, the usually composed Cashman showed his fiery side at a news conference announcing his three-year contract extension. The Yankees had just missed the postseason for the first time since 1993, seemingly making all the wrong moves.

Cashman, lashing back at his critics, said, "The storyline that was going to be written if I left, I didn't agree with. I'm not going to let that story be written. One thing Reggie Jackson said, if you have the bat in your hands, you can change the story. I'm staying to change the story."

By picking the right players, Cashman indeed changed the story. Theo Epstein, his counterpart with the Red Sox, is just as shrewd. So forgive the growing feeling of helplessness in places like Cleveland and Tampa Bay, not to mention Pittsburgh and Kansas City.

I'm not saying the system is broken. And I definitely am not dismissing the Yankees' accomplishment; winning is difficult even for the wealthy, and this Yankees team was unusually potent and surprisingly cohesive.

All I'm saying is that parity was a lot easier to achieve when the Yankees were blowing money on players such as Carl Pavano and Kevin Brown.

The rich got richer when the Yankees got smart.
 

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MLB needs a salary cap... Not saying that the Yanks won because of their money, but it did help certainly... Hopefully things will change after Bud Selig's rotten ass leaves baseball for good after the 2012 season. This guy is the worst commissioner of any sport, of all fuckin time.
 

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hey now hey now...bud selig gave us interleague play! and without his genius plot to let steroids ruin the game for a decade, baseball would have never been as profitable as it is today. clearly obvious selig was in on it, and encouraged the use of steroids after the '94 strike so the HR ball would bring the fans back. it's all a marketing scheme that has been shafted by the attempts of canseco, schilling etc. if the real truth ever comes out, it will show that close to 90% of baseball players were on something that was performance enhancing. if you think HGH is not a problem anymore, guess again. there is no way to test for HGH, as players are STILL using this in baseball today. the sport will never be the same. o yea, and if a salary cap is ever imposed, expect another strike by the players union....yup america's past time, makes sense....just as fucked as our economy.
 

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if there is a salary cap there has to be a minimum too for teams like twins royal pirates who never spend.............
 

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I am amazed at all the cheap fuckers out there who have the money to get good players. I think in that way you really gotta respect the Yankee organization.
 

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hey now hey now...bud selig gave us interleague play! and without his genius plot to let steroids ruin the game for a decade, baseball would have never been as profitable as it is today. clearly obvious selig was in on it, and encouraged the use of steroids after the '94 strike so the HR ball would bring the fans back. it's all a marketing scheme that has been shafted by the attempts of canseco, schilling etc. if the real truth ever comes out, it will show that close to 90% of baseball players were on something that was performance enhancing. if you think HGH is not a problem anymore, guess again. there is no way to test for HGH, as players are STILL using this in baseball today. the sport will never be the same. o yea, and if a salary cap is ever imposed, expect another strike by the players union....yup america's past time, makes sense....just as fucked as our economy.


Selig is a joke... period. This guy has fuckin "deceptioN" written all over his face, I hope he dies soon or something, because he really fucked the game of baseball. Litterally.
 

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I am amazed at all the cheap fuckers out there who have the money to get good players. I think in that way you really gotta respect the Yankee organization.

Whats up king, long time no see! Your right, alot of teams don't spend to get good players... But some are even worse, like the Pirates for example: they give away their top players for fuckin peanuts! Theyve been losing for 17 straight years, and it ain't for nothing... Thats why the MLB is so fucked up, you've got teams like the Yanks who could sign Vlad Guerrero, Cliff Lee, Bobby Abreu & Tim Lincecum in one shot, while others (like the Pirates) can't even afford one of these players.
 

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Hey what's up man.

MLB is fucked up but you gotta love it when the Yankees lose the World Series to a team with a $23 million payroll, like in 2003. Good stuff.
 

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hey now hey now...bud selig gave us interleague play! and without his genius plot to let steroids ruin the game for a decade, baseball would have never been as profitable as it is today. clearly obvious selig was in on it, and encouraged the use of steroids after the '94 strike so the HR ball would bring the fans back. it's all a marketing scheme that has been shafted by the attempts of canseco, schilling etc. if the real truth ever comes out, it will show that close to 90% of baseball players were on something that was performance enhancing. if you think HGH is not a problem anymore, guess again. there is no way to test for HGH, as players are STILL using this in baseball today. the sport will never be the same. o yea, and if a salary cap is ever imposed, expect another strike by the players union....yup america's past time, makes sense....just as fucked as our economy.

HGH is now detected through urine samples
 

Rx. Junior
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if there is a salary cap there has to be a minimum too for teams like twins royal pirates who never spend.............

No kidding, people forget that the Yankees also put a lot of money back into their team and it takes money to make money. Some of these teams refuse to spend even what they can afford. It's easy to knock the Yankees if and go along with the idiotic claim that they just bought a pennant. They earned it and won it fair and square. People need to get over it.
 

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