good dolphin wrote:
Terry's Peeps wrote:
I don't have the strength to read it.
Highlight my causes for further irritation
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The last two weeks have been a real gut punch for us. It’s been the culmination of two years of rhetoric that we were told would be the signaling of a contention window opening. While that may still happen, we were ultimately sold a bill of goods that ended up plain and simply being a lie.
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In the end, we enter the 2019 season in the same position as we were when the 2018 season ended. Reliant on internal improvement that may or may not come, and unproven prospects. Ultimately, we know with a high level of certainty it will end with a seventh consecutive losing season and an eleventh season without meaningful baseball at 35th and Shields.
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We were also assured that when the time was right, this organization would allocate financial resources to the free agent market that had never been done before. For over two years, we heard Rick Hahn and Kenny Williams repeat the line that “when the time is right, money will not stand in the way of the White Sox acquiring premium talent.”
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There will never be a better opportunity for the Sox to break through. And they blew it! They blew it because at the end of the day, the White Sox, as has been the problem for most of their history, have an owner that wants to win at his desired profit margin. For all the talk about Jerry Reinsdorf’s loyalty and good nature, he sure doesn’t have any loyalty to the small group of people that truly give a damn about this team.
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The fact is the Sox offer was not more attractive than the Padres. The Padres were willing to commit $300 million with an opt-out while the Sox were only willing to go to $250 million guaranteed and two vesting options that carried the value over $320 million. The fact of the matter is, that offer simply is not better than what San Diego presented. As someone who works in a profession where a great deal of my income is based on performance incentives, I can tell you that when looking for employment, 9 times out of 10 people in my profession will take the higher guarantee. Baseball players are no different and shouldn’t be looked at or expected to think differently. That’s why it is so insulting to hear people defending this offer.
In the last few days, we’ve heard Kenny Williams go out on the “offensive” in the media saying that he believes it’s sad that the White Sox are “perceived” as being cheap. Hey Kenny, it’s not perception when it’s the truth. When you are in the third largest market in the country and have never given out a contract larger than $68 million, you are cheap. When your owner refused for years to spend in the draft causing you to have a bottom tier farm system, you are cheap. When you have an owner that refused to spend money internationally to boost your prospect pipeline, you are cheap. When your owner refuses to take on larger contracts in trade discussions because you don’t have a prospect pipeline to get a deal done, you are cheap. So what’s really sad is people trying to defend this organization, and more specifically, the guy at the top who is, yes, very cheap.
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Hahn through his diplomatic and articulate messaging was able to be the lone member of this “brain trust” that seemingly had public support. Well, that is all gone now. Because Hahn was either in on the lie, or conned himself. I’m not sure which is actually worse in this instance.
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At the end of the day, the last two weeks have confirmed what many of us have long feared. Nothing will change with the White Sox organization, until Jerry Reinsdorf’s reign of terror is over.