ticohans
...but this was always going to be the obvious outcome of his contract: wherever he signed, his new team stood to reap enormous financial benefit from sponsorships, ticket sales, and global fan engagement.
Soto doesn't bring Japanese airline sponsorships with him, but the effect will be similar to whatever team signs him: whoever wins the Soto sweepstakes will see a significant portion of his contract covered on 2ndary effects, to say nothing of his performance on the field.
We're not going to sign him, but any Cubs front office official talking about smart spending or lux tax or anything else like that as a reason for not signing Soto is lying through their teeth and insulting your intelligence.
They're not going to sign Soto because winning is not Ricketts' primary goal.
Curt and tico, I recall reading that post earlier, and I admit I don't fully understand the logical coherence.
1. Claim 1: Ohtani makes financial profit many times the cost of his contract. Soto, "the effect will be similar to whatever team signs him."
2. Claim 2: Cubs won't "sign Soto because winning is not Ricketts' primary goal."
Claim 2 states that winning is not Ricketts' primary goal, presumably implying that primary goal is financial gain. But claim 1 suggests that after signing a star player
, a "new team stood to reap enormous financial benefit from sponsorships, ticket sales, and global fan engagement", and the Soto effect will be similar. If financial gain is Ricketts' primary goal, and if signing a star makes financial profit many times the cost of contract, or in Soto's case at least "the effect will be similar", it seems that financial-gain-prioritized Ricketts should be pursuing for financial reasons, regardless of whether "winning is not Ricketts' primary goal". If signing a star more than pays for itself financially, it is logically incoherent to deduce that an owner prioritized on profits would refuse to sign the star for financial reasons.
I see two possible explanations:
1. Ricketts and Hoyer are dumb. Signing stars would more than pay for themselves, but they are too dumb to realize. Profit is dangling fruit, but Ricketts is too dumb to pick it.
2. The financial Soto-effect is not projected to be that similar to Ohtani's, and may not reap enormous financial benefit?