Goldfan wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 20:56 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 19:56 pm
Goldfan wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 18:18 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 18:11 pm
TopofthePerch wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 18:00 pm
11WSChamps wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 17:54 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 17:42 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 17:10 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 16:00 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 15:48 pm
An Old Friend wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 15:44 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑22 Dec 2025 15:41 pm
from 2015-2025, but not counting the shortened 2020 season:
Cleveland has averaged 89 wins on an average payroll of $97 million. They made the playoffs six times.
Milwaukee has averaged 88 wins on an average payroll of $101 million. They made the playoffs six times.
Tampa Bay has averaged 86 wins on an average payroll of $75 million. They made the playoffs four times.
The Cardinals also averaged 86 wins, but on an average payroll of $155 million and made the playoffs four times.
So, if the Cardinals can get their organization in shape like Cleveland, Milwaukee, Tampa Bay AND outspend them by 50+%, they should have considerable success going forward. That's the goal.
I just don't have optimism around the whole spending thing. Where is the revenue coming from?
The Cardinals will rebuild the organization, spend what they can/will, start winning 88+ games again, attendance will come back up to 3+ million, and then spending will then find whatever level it is going to balance out at.
I think this new brain trust can build what they have done in those other cities. I just expect them to also spend kind of like those cities absent some unforeseen revenue opportunity.
IF you hypothesize that the Cardinals will spend closer to the level of Milwaukee/Cleveland, then it is just MORE IMPORTANT that they rebuild the player development system if they are ever going to compete again.
I’ve said that their player development system is a mess for years. There’s no argument to made against that being corrected.
I’m saying that this idea that they’ll spend again when the timing is right is based on hope and not rooted in reality.
Matt doesn't seem to grasp this very real possibility
Used the same argument several weeks ago and we're still here.
It could be a possibility but that doesn't mean this rebuild shouldn't happen. The spending would be based on if they were winning and drawing the fan support. Also a new lucrative TV deal would help. They never spent big as it was but the money they will spend will go a lot further if they have an abundance of cost controlled talent.
I dislike even calling it a "rebuild". It's not that - they're resetting their model in real-time. They've said this over and over. Bloom has reiterated that.
If they spend like Matt fantasizes and you admire……they will become a AAAA feeder club for the teams who really care to win
What do you mean by “that I admire”?
Do you just say things to sound inanely stupid?
I’m sorry AOF, when someone writes the first sentence below, it would seem that you ADMIRE what this brain trust BUILT in other cities
If thats a wrong assumption on my part many apologies……

it would seem to imply the BRAIN TRUST….BUILT something….and now they’re HERE BUILDING the same thing and YOU think THEY can do IT….thus ADMIRING
“I think this new brain trust can build what they have done in those other cities. I just expect them to also spend kind of like those cities absent some unforeseen revenue opportunity.”
Why is it so, so, so hard for you to understand a simple concept:
- Emulate what Milwaukee, Cleveland, Tampa Bay do with their player development systems, but then improve on that by being able to spend more on the ML payroll than they can.
To compete consistently, the Cardinals absolutely need to have a Top 5 player development system, and they will need for it to have had some "bite" at the ML level - delivering Wetherholt, Doyle, Mathews, etc. for a couple of seasons - before they are ready to compete again.
Only AFTER that has happened do we even need to start worrying about exactly what new ML payroll level the team will settle out at in 2028, 2029, etc. But I fully expect that level to be considerably higher than Cleveland's $100 million from 2025, or Milwaukee's $108 million.