Curious Hair wrote:
How many businesses in major cities are allowed to run their businesses fully as they please, though? And as for other major league teams, most of them are shadowy, elaborate corporate welfare schemes that exist virtually above all laws and jurisdictions--there's one just a few stops down the line--and so I guess all you can do is concede that you're not one of them and settle for the moral high ground of not being part of a big American problem.
Are the rooftops theft? In a sense, yes, more or less on the same level of scalping -- a practice which the Cubs engage in with themselves, let's not forget. So of course the Cubs are entitled to more than 17% of that. But they're part of the package now, like it or not, and the Cubs don't get to run roughshod over them any more than they do the stores that sell Cubs shirts or the restaurants that sell hot dogs and hamburgers, no matter how much Tommy Boy stamps his feet and says he's a real business and he should be the only one within eyesight of Wrigley Field.
I don't think there's any point in threatening anymore. It's an empty threat. It's always been an empty threat. Of all the baseball teams that have shaken down their cities by threatening to move, we've had one relocation in over forty years, and that was less a direct response to Montreal calling the Expos' bluff as it was good old Jeff Loria letting the team die a slow, disemboweled death. I mean, who'd pay them to build their billion-dollar Dan Bernstein wet dream of monopolistic baseball commerce, anyway? Not the state, not a city, and God knows they themselves don't have the money.
I wouldn't say that they won't pay for it themselves. They are already half way there with what they are paying to renovate Wrigley. And ok. In Schaumburg or wherever you have less of the "frat boys fresh off the Red Line" but how much more in profits could you make off a modern stadium? And like attendance would be an issue without the "neighborhood charm" if the Cubs were winning every year.
Look at the Hawks. In the late 90's early 2000's you could have a section of the 300 level to yourself on a weeknight. Now that they are winning you are dropping a hundo just to get in the door and stand some nights. And that area sucked balls until the recent growth spurt of business after the winning started.