The club which wishes to acquire the participation qualification of this organization must obtain the approval of Executive Committee as well as the owner meeting by November 30th of preceding year of to which said club will participate. [...]
Oops. How did the owners miss that? How did they think that a new team had to be approved by them by the end of this month? Do they not even know the very rules that govern themselves?
The most galling attempt to legitimize the merger was the owners' simulation for next season. Instead of using an economic professor's numbers which showed that everyone would bennefit more with the 6-6 configuration, they used 2003 income/outcome (?) numbers with some formula for calcuating additional income for games against the Giants. Then, when they've got all the negative numbers, they say that 35-oku yen in the read for the merged Orix-Kintetsu team is less than the 28-oku + 29-oku (57-oku) yen loss of the two teams combined. This looks very fishy to me. Like they're manipulating the presentation to say what they want to say.
As for possible additions, there are three groups interested in joining these read ink dripping old men in hope of breathing new life into the game. The most "traditional" of these is the owner of the Shidax. But he seems to be a bit adverse to controversy and is thinking about joining NPB two or three years down the road. Livedoor's Horie-president has turned in his application to join yesterday (Thursday, September 16). And Rakuten's Mikitani-president says that he'll be applying within the next week.
Each of these three has various parts of what they'll need to join. For example, Shidax has a team, staff, and the knowhow to run a team.
Horie has been working hard the past couple of weeks, getting a committment from Miyaki Prefecture's Sendai city's stadium as a home base, and is considering purchasing the Industrial League's JT (Japan Tabacco) which is based in Sendai (and recently finished fourth in one of the major tournaments this year). JT is considering disbanning their team with 80-90% becoming office staff only.
Mikitani has just gotten started on his quest to join the NPB and has pretty much only talked about being based in Kobe at Yahoo! BB. Interesting enough, Yahoo! BB, owned by Soft Bank, is a rival of Rakuten.
Both Horie and Mikitani are thinking along the lines of taking the left-overs after the merger.
Interestingly, I think MLB owners are pretty similar, if less extreme. Slightly less extreme.
"Some people hold management responsible for forcing the players to resort to a walkout because of the owners' stubborn stance concerning the new entries in the NPB. This attitude is questionable. Applications to enter the pro leagues must be assessed with the utmost care. Management's uncompromising attitude reflects the fact that there have been a number of failed teams in the past."
Yes, but of course this whole thing started because of the haste in which the owners pushed through the merger plans. I would suggest that any changes in the current setup should be assessed with the utmost care, including mergers. And I believe that's all the players originally requested.
Another gem:
"Prudent evaluation is indispensable in determining whether the heads of companies applying for franchises have an adequate sense of responsibility and are sufficiently conscientious to operate professional baseball teams and whether their companies are sound enough to support their entry bids."
Mmmm. With Daiei on the brink of bankruptcy and Kintetsu crying poor, then they should be welcoming newcomers, not putting obstacles in their way. As far as "sense of responsibility" and "concientiousness" is concerned, I think it's obvious who's lacking these character traits.
I just tuned in to the Tigers-Swallows game today, and saw Furuta entering Jingu to wild applause from both sets of fans. Obviously public support for the strike action is real. The owners are in a hole, that's for sure.
The TV talking heads interpreted this as a "stern comment" for the baseball powers-that-be."Baseball is popular in Japan: it has a broad support base. I'd love to see Japanese baseball not contracting but expanding."
With the groundswell of popular support for the players and the new entrants, surely the owners will capitulate. Well, in a perfect world, maybe."They say that there's not enough time to add another team for 2005, but I think it's the opposite, I think there's too little time to carefully remove a team by next year."
This is a site about Pro Yakyu (Japanese Baseball), not about who the next player to go over to MLB is. It's a community of Pro Yakyu fans who have come together to share their knowledge and opinions with the world. It's a place to follow teams and individuals playing baseball in Japan (and Asia), and to learn about Japanese (and Asian) culture through baseball.
It is my sincere hope that once you learn a bit about what we're about here that you will join the community of contributors.
Michael Westbay
(aka westbaystars)
Founder
G
Going into extra innings in their talks, the Owners have struck out against the Players in their negotiations.
The talks were extended for two hours after they should have ended at 5:00 this evening (September 9, 2004) in Tokyo. However, approaching 9:00 the announcers on TV and Yahoo! Sports Baseball News (in Japanese) had nothing. Then, just now (9:05) on TV Saitama, they announced that the games scheduled for this weekend have been cancelled due to strike.
More info as it comes in.