There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
None of this makes any sense unless you just did an 8 ball before typing any of it.
What is so hard to understand?
Dodgers and people of LA/ Hollywood are rich. Cardinals fans from rural Oklahoma, Kansas West Virginia, Missouri are not. It's obvious as to why, and obvious as to why more players would rather go there.
What do economic situations have to do with anything? The Cards are one of the richest franchises in baseball even with those "backwoods hillbillies" buying up those tickets compared to Champagne ticket buyers.
Do you even have any idea what point you are trying to make?
It doesn't matter if all the Cards attracted was billionaires, they don't have a tv market of 18 million people, they have a tv market of 3 million that's the difference in today's baseball world.
The Dodgers make money before they sell ticket 1, the Cards don't. Your point is completely idiotic.
"What do economic situations have to do with anything?" What kind of babbling nonsense is this? Obviously people and fans that have better economic situations can support their team and recreational activities at better levels, have more free time to enjoy them, can and will enjoy them along with being in a position to do so if they want.
Prove to me the Cards are " one of the richest richest franchises in baseball". I see a team struggling to keep their head above water trying to remain relevant as the big dogs scavenge their parts for something that might help them.
Not all Cards fans are " backwoods hillbillies" and I WOULD NEVER STATE SUCH A THING! A lot of Dodgers fans are immigrants and of not ""champagne" type fans, just folks that love baseball, America and want to be a part of something successful they can identify with.
Obviously the point I'm trying to make (on this headline and particular subject) is, the Dodgers can draw the masses, they can get the people to buy into what they are selling, generate huge revenues (even to a point of subsidies for other clubs). That their fans show up in huge numbers, support the club and are happy. I'm not certain people and fans like you could ever be happy or support their club like that. And if you can't or don't, they beat you AND DESERVE TOO!
Like I stated, there are 3 teams in Southern California and another one soon coming to Las Vegas, along with about another dozen pro teams to root for. YES!!! Southern California is baseball crazy but the Dodgers don't have a monopoly on it and neither does baseball, THEY EARN THAT BUSINESS!
I think it's kind of confusing and contradicting to state the Cards are one of the richest teams, yet make no money and you think crying poor for ticket sales. The Cards definitely need ticket sales and fans to show up, be happy, support the club, and build it up.
You are terrible girl!
:::sigh::: I don't know how else to explain this, butts in seats are no longer a major league teams primary goal. It is nothing but a small piece of the pie. The tv contracts, luxury boxes, and advertising dollars are all that matters. The Dodgers have 15 million more people to pull from than the Cards do. Therefore they can charge drastically more for televising rights, advertising dollars on tv and inside the park. The type of audience or where they are from makes little to no difference as far as any of that is concerned. The Dodgers can pay Ohtani 700 million dollars because their advertisers will pay significantly more money to be seen during a game because of the possibility of 10 million+ watching a game. The Cards and the vast majority of other teams can't pay Ohtani 700 million dollars because even if they get every eyeball in their cities watching and attending a game they still fall millions of eyeballs short of what LA can potentially have.
Can you possibly understand this now?
No, because it makes no sense and is way more complicated. So why aren't the LA Sparks or Chargers, LA FC soccer team more valuable and way out spend a team like the Kansas City Chiefs? So you are telling me if the Dodgers drew crowds like Tampa they would still be as good? So why aren't the Angels? Why aren't the Marlins a juggernaut?
This is nonsense you provide ma'am!
Are you stupid?
First off you can stop calling me ma'am I'm not a woman.
Secondly, the Chargers can't outspend the Chiefs because the NFL has a salary cap. In fact the Chargers can't spend more than what the salary cap allows them. MLB does not have a salary cap, just an idiotic luxury tax which the rich teams scoff at. The Dodgers are making a mockery of the luxury tax and they couldn't possibly care less.
The Marlins? Are you seriously asking why the Marlins can't outspend the Dodgers? If the Dodgers drew crowds like Tampa, yes they would still be as good because they, I can't believe I'm having to say this yet again, get the vast majority of their money from the following: tv contract, advertising, and luxury box sales.
The Angels tried to be the Dodgers and overpaid for over the hill free agents and didn't pay for any pitching. They could score with the best of them, but couldn't stop them from scoring. As of today, the Dodgers pitching staff alone makes more money than some teams payrolls.
Do you finally, finally, finally understand?
So sorry lady didn't mean offend you, I call you ma'am like I like to mispell words as a form of colloquialism to try and get along.
Thanks for proving my exact points though. It's not the size of the market that matters, it's the structure and rules of the league along with how passionate and how much the "fans" care.
Go throw some of the fun juce in the egg nog and lighten up girl.
Now you are calling me a lady and a girl?
You didn't make a point though, you compared a league with no salary cap whatsoever, to a league with a salary cap.
You have no idea what you are talking about do you?
I think i have addressed your issues in previous posts. You can have very successful teams in markets like Green Bay Wisconsin, South Bend Indiana and Norman Oklahoma etc. The market size makes no difference if the structure provides for fair competition. That's your argument right? Market size is what is the paramount of importance? Not only did i prove that a myth, I proved it's about fan loyalty and support.
Please do tell, what is the winning formula and structure along with your goals to make the Cardinals the best? I think it's about fan support and passion (my point) that drives success. What you all seem to lack.
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
I’ve read your junk patiently without responding for a while now, but enough is enough. I have been a Cardinal fan since the late 1940’s because my dad and grandpa were fans. I don’t need some wise a—s Johnny come lately to lecture me on being a good fan. Dewitt dumped this team long before the 3 million per year fans started leaving. I am still a fan of Cardinal baseball, I’m just not a fan of the DeWitts.
I don't mean to insult you old timer, but when you all want to destroy my city and my team we might have a problem. What kind of "fan" are you really when you press to boycott, press to bash the city and not support it in anyway. That 60 year "fan" nonsense is worthless if you don't show up or even root for the club.
More like a 60+ fair weather "fan" if you feel like it, right!? Yo dude, "real fans" stick with it through the good and bad, which happens in everything.
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
I’ve read your junk patiently without responding for a while now, but enough is enough. I have been a Cardinal fan since the late 1940’s because my dad and grandpa were fans. I don’t need some wise a—s Johnny come lately to lecture me on being a good fan. Dewitt dumped this team long before the 3 million per year fans started leaving. I am still a fan of Cardinal baseball, I’m just not a fan of the DeWitts.
I don't mean to insult you old timer, but when you all want to destroy my city and my team we might have a problem. What kind of "fan" are you really when you press to boycott, press to bash the city and not support it in anyway. That 60 year "fan" nonsense is worthless if you don't show up or even root for the club.
More like a 60+ fair weather "fan" if you feel like it, right!? Yo dude, "real fans" stick with it through the good and bad, which happens in everything.
I live 200 miles from the ballpark and I’m past 80. I will listen and watch on TV, but I’m doubt I’ll be making the effort to travel to the stadium when it is obvious that the owner only wants to pocket the dollars we spend. I made that drive many times in the 70’s and 90’s, when the team wasn’t exactly flourishing, so take your fair weather fan junk and place it where the sun never shines.
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
I’ve read your junk patiently without responding for a while now, but enough is enough. I have been a Cardinal fan since the late 1940’s because my dad and grandpa were fans. I don’t need some wise a—s Johnny come lately to lecture me on being a good fan. Dewitt dumped this team long before the 3 million per year fans started leaving. I am still a fan of Cardinal baseball, I’m just not a fan of the DeWitts.
I don't mean to insult you old timer, but when you all want to destroy my city and my team we might have a problem. What kind of "fan" are you really when you press to boycott, press to bash the city and not support it in anyway. That 60 year "fan" nonsense is worthless if you don't show up or even root for the club.
More like a 60+ fair weather "fan" if you feel like it, right!? Yo dude, "real fans" stick with it through the good and bad, which happens in everything.
I live 200 miles from the ballpark and I’m past 80. I will listen and watch on TV, but I’m doubt I’ll be making the effort to travel to the stadium when it is obvious that the owner only wants to pocket the dollars we spend. I made that drive many times in the 70’s and 90’s, when the team wasn’t exactly flourishing, so take your fair weather fan junk and place it where the sun never shines.
Cool. And i live less than a mile from the ballpark, will show up to any game and do. I also will watch any game on TV even in ballpark village, love your passion old timer. But that energy isn't going to beat LA. Yup, the 80+ old guy Dodgers fans wants it more than you. So don't give me your nostalgic [nonsense]. They want it more than you, right?
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Okay, do you understand the difference between Google chome fixing auto spell and the world of reality of the Dodgers being way better than the Cards?
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Okay, do you understand the difference between Google chome fixing auto spell and the world of reality of the Dodgers being way better than the Cards?
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Okay, do you understand the difference between Google chome fixing auto spell and the world of reality of the Dodgers being way better than the Cards?
Hofikebrucee wrote: ↑21 Dec 2025 22:46 pm
lA has been a huge market since forever. When Fox and later when McCourt owned the team they sucked.
It took smart owners with deep pockets to develop the revenue that had been sitting there untapped.
The argument about the market is a bit odd given they’ve been good for about 8-10 years but LA has been a huge market far longer. The key to the dodgers is not money alone and I would go so far as to say their brain trust is far more valuable than their checkbook.
Baseball is broke. But not likely to be fixed. Strike or no strike. Lockout or no lockout. The brewers are in a horrible market and still can compete. If that’s possible why can’t the cardinals?
With Dodger/Yankee money, the owner has to be stupid not to win.
Yeah, the Dodgers stopped their stupid and are actually using their unfair advantage. Congrats to them.
The system needs to be fixed we can't rely on all the largest markets being stupid in order to give the poorest 15 teams a fighting chance.
St Louis and Kansas City are the only metro areas smaller than 4.5M to win a World Series in the past 28 years (since MLB expanded to 30 teams).
Toronto and the New York Mets are the only metro areas larger than 4.5M not to win a World Series in the past 28 years.
I always love the " Dodgers use their unfair advantage" They do not have an unfair advantage, but are the best run organization in baseball , if not of all sports.
Huh? Lol.
The only people I've seen say this the past few years are Dodgers fans and a few liars who for whatever reason, can't admit the rules are broken. Which one are you?
Hofikebrucee wrote: ↑21 Dec 2025 22:46 pm
lA has been a huge market since forever. When Fox and later when McCourt owned the team they sucked.
It took smart owners with deep pockets to develop the revenue that had been sitting there untapped.
The argument about the market is a bit odd given they’ve been good for about 8-10 years but LA has been a huge market far longer. The key to the dodgers is not money alone and I would go so far as to say their brain trust is far more valuable than their checkbook.
Baseball is broke. But not likely to be fixed. Strike or no strike. Lockout or no lockout. The brewers are in a horrible market and still can compete. If that’s possible why can’t the cardinals?
Yes they completely revamped the organization, but you can't have a payroll that's almost a billion dollars simply because you have a well run front office.
McCourt during the majority of his ownership was going through his divorce so he was always distracted.
The new owners have revenue streams outside of baseball that make it so they can spend this type of money and not be personally affected if the season goes sideways.
Revenue streams like Ballpark village? 1 Cardinal way? Those revenue streams are a direct result of Cardinal baseball.
You think those bring in nearly as much money as what the Dodgers ownership group brings in? I sincerely doubt that.
Just asked a question. But it is revenue that the baseball team is responsible for bringing in.
oh sorry. Yes but at best that brings them in a few million extra a year. The Dodgers ownership group are a financial investment group worth 350 billion dollars. They could buy every MLB team with just their pocket change.
The TV contract alone is 8.35 billion with Time Warner cable for 25 years which nets them 335 million a year in just that contract alone. Hell the Cards entire TV deal likely isn't as much as what the Dodgers get in a single season.
I'd imagine you could take about 6 teams tv contracts, lump them together and they still wouldn't equal out to what the Dodgers get in a year.
That's why this can't continue, that's a disparity that the majority of the teams simply can't overcome no matter how well they draft and develop. If you are top 30 baseball player currently why would you not do everything you could to get to UFA? With the Mets, Phillies, Dodgers, Yankees and Red Sox simply being able to beat every bid by 10 to 20 million a season all the rest of league is becoming nothing but a minor league system for them.
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Okay, do you understand the difference between Google chome fixing auto spell and the world of reality of the Dodgers being way better than the Cards?
Oh my
Huh? Oh i want this! Tell me what?
Google spellcheck isn't going to change Google CHROME to Google chome.
Poojols wrote: ↑19 Dec 2025 22:31 pm
Yes, baseball is broken. The only people who refuse that fact are either fans of those few large markets or complete idiots.
No, it's the opposite! Dodgers fans showed up 4 million strong, root like crazy ( in a fun and happy way) people love their players and management, love baseball and pay big bucks to see it.
The system isn't really that broken, you "best fans in baseball" are. Yeah, Cards could definitely use a TV deal like that.
Dodgers drew 4 million in an area of maybe 14M to 18M people with a peaking team.
Cardinals drew 2.5 million in an area of maybe 3M people with a cratering team. Okay, be honest, it was 2.5M tickets but 1.5M people .
This huge difference shows up most strongly in Monday to Thursday games... which is around half of the games.
Working people aren't often going drive over an hour to attend a weeknight game.
They would watch on TV, but MLB is rarely on TV outside of St Louis unless you pay for a package.
There are 3 teams in Southern California. The Cards have historically owned the Southern Midwest and still have fans in lots of other places around the Midwest. Maybe if Cardinals fan types didn't kill economies and adopted a more fun loving and open type mindset you wouldn't destroy St. Louis either and more fans would show up during the week.
What in the holy hell are you even talking about?
Not sure if we are allowed to conversate about such things, but this topic has passed and it's about luxury tax. THE PEOPLE OF HOLLYWOOD CAN AND DO AFFORD A LUXURY TAX AND HAVE WORLD CHAMPS TO ROOT FOR! The people of rural West Virginia, Kansas, Arkansas etc are whining about their luxury tax being hire than the whole payroll of the Cards. So root for the rural West Virginia team as i want to compete with the Dodgers! I'm not "talking" I'm posting about economics and the structures of economics. Which you lose at like you do at baseball!
People in WV, Kansas, and Arkansas don't know the difference between "hire" and "higher" ?
Okay, do you understand the difference between Google chome fixing auto spell and the world of reality of the Dodgers being way better than the Cards?
Oh my
Huh? Oh i want this! Tell me what?
Google spellcheck isn't going to change Google CHROME to Google chome.
How does deferred money work with payroll tax? Is it divided by the years of the contract or only what they are getting paid that year?
Without deferred payments, the Dodgers wouldn’t be able to have all those players either.