How Bud Selig (Almost) Destroyed Baseball

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
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    How Bud Selig (Almost) Destroyed Baseball | Sports Oddity
    In this episode of Sports Oddity, we go through the tumultuous tenure of MLB commissioner Bud Selig, the damage he had on MLB's growth and reputation (both short- and long-term), and how his time as commissioner was worse for the game than you realize
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    Music (in order of appearance)
    The Emperor's Army - Jeremy Blake
    Lonely Troutman II - Wiliam Rosati
    Heaven and Hell - Jeremy Blake
    Coastline - TrackTribe
    Lands Unknown - Futuremono
    Chapters:
    0:00-1:30 Introduction
    1:30-5:30 Who is Bud Selig?
    5:30-10:55 The 1994 Player Strike
    10:55-15:30 The Steroid Crisis
    15:30-20:45 Business vs. Baseball
    20:45-21:43 Outro
    #BudSelig #RobManfred #MLB
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Komentáře • 306

  • @TheDiamondBaseball
    @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +16

    Who do you think is the Worst Commissioner of All Time? Let us know in the comments down below!

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 Před rokem +134

    All I will say is that if Selig gets a plaque then Bonds, McGwire and the others that he oversaw should too. Steroids weren't banned by MLB until 2005 after all.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +20

      Yeah, I’ve come around on this over the years. Hoping Bonds and Clemens will get in through the veterans committee

    • @zeeski7454
      @zeeski7454 Před rokem +13

      Exactly. How do you ban the players but not the guy who let the players get away with it? It's hypocrisy

    • @waltblackadar4690
      @waltblackadar4690 Před rokem +1

      @@TheDiamondBaseball I've said for decades that MLB - at worst - turned a knowing blind eye to steroids. In reality, they really enabled and encouraged steroid use because home runs put asses in the seats. Then when steroids became a hot topic, Bud threw those same players under the bus and tried to whitewash MLB's involvement. They weren't illegal in MLB (Vincent's supposed anti-steroid memo wasn't ever proven that it distributed to the players) and Canseco's estimate of 85% of players taking steroids was probably accurate.

    • @sirradiodude
      @sirradiodude Před rokem

      ​@@zeeski7454MLB hall of fame voters are often the best examples of hypocrisy.
      So, so many HOFers were admitted PED users...... Even before... and many first ballot.
      It's all the "back in my day" crowd. As those voters die off things will change, but not fast enough for many already.

    • @all_time_Jelly_Fish
      @all_time_Jelly_Fish Před rokem

      it's labor; the owners want the fans on their side, so you only blame the players

  • @de-fault_de-fault
    @de-fault_de-fault Před rokem +86

    While he was alive, my dad’s assessment of Selig was “Once a used car salesman, always a used car salesman.” And he died in 2005, missing out on the worst of the steroid fiasco, so I’d say he pretty much nailed it.

    • @nickbovi
      @nickbovi Před rokem +11

      Your dad was totally right.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem

      @@nickbovi Selig was a "Pay or Play Commissioner" We ALL know majority of the World Series Crowns were brought from him. He Made a Backroom deal with the White Sox to let them buy the 2005 Crown. That's why the White Sox are terrible.

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Před rokem +3

      Your Dad was 💯 correct.

  • @panowa8319
    @panowa8319 Před rokem +30

    I remember when Selig proposed to contracting two teams, the Minnesota Twins and the Montreal Expos, because the teams had a long record of failing to generate enough revenues to operate a viable major league franchise. There were other teams that couldn't generate enough revenue, and I think his beloved Milwaukee Brewers were one of them, which he did not put on the chopping block.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem +4

      He was a Brewers Owner, but even his Team couldn't win a Game of Hopscotch. He DID have a Personal Vendetta and HATRED towards the Houston Astros and Cincinnati Reds and I could never Figure out why. If you saw how Insanely OVERCROWDED the NL Central was during his tenure, you'd know what I'm talking about. Plus the 2005 World Series was Rigged. A Cheat. I've NEVER heard of a World Series with multiple games having Extra Innings. It Certainly was fixed for the White Sox that year. Umpires making AWFUL Calls and no Instant Replay. The Red Sox got SUPER Lucky in 2004 during the ALCS.

    • @henrymanzano2201
      @henrymanzano2201 Před rokem +2

      Exactly! It should have been considered a conflict of interest,being a former team owner

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Před 4 měsíci

      Also the Twins were having problems getting what is now Target Field built it took something like 15 years

  • @bw7754
    @bw7754 Před rokem +11

    You didn’t even have to be involved in an organization to know steroids were going around. I remember my dad told me they were all on steroids that summer. All he did was show me Bonds in his rookie year and it was clear as day.

  • @shaindaman13
    @shaindaman13 Před rokem +13

    One thing people do tend to forget about, for as big of an atrocity as the Roid fuelled Maris Homerun chase was, was that before this Cal Ripkin Jr’s Iron Man record. I mean this also did a great deal to recaptivate Fans back in to Baseball.

    • @craigcavaliere6744
      @craigcavaliere6744 Před rokem +3

      Very true. And throw in the Yankees return to dominance.

    • @shaindaman13
      @shaindaman13 Před rokem

      @@craigcavaliere6744 I will NOT! Lol

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      Major league baseball was about to go under at the time. Gambling was a real problem in those days and the Black Sox were the tip of the iceberg. A lot of it had to do with how bad owners, Commiskey as a prime example, were treating the players after the Federal League disbanded. Owners were getting retribution against the players, who, in turn, were getting retribution against the owners by throwing games. For example, Commiskey knew his behavior had a big impact on causing the scandal and after the '20 World Series, he never recovered and the White Sox franchise floundered. They picked Landis, who under normal circumstances would have been a disaster, because he was what was needed at the time.
      I don't see any way that Landis was going to break the color line back then with the state of baseball where it was. One problem at a time. Altho' Landis wasn't about to anything about it anyway. It's interesting but blacks, when they were competing in their own leagues, had a love and enthusiasm for the game that is completely gone. Blacks, as a group, don't seem to care much for major league baseball. I think it's too white for their tastes. Too rigid, too structured. I think the style of baseball played in the old Negro Leagues looked like it was a lot of fun, a lot more aggressive and a lot looser and black players are constrained by the way whites play it. Interesting that one thing the World baseball classic shows is how the different cultures play the game. Same rules, totally different styles. The Japanese are incredibly detail oriented and precise. The Dominicans free flowing and loose.
      You also have to remember how difficult it was for baseball to totally break the color line. When the Boston Braves started playing black players in order to compete against the Dodgers and Giants who were playing a lot of blacks and doing very well, Boston fans literally stopped going to Braves games. Their attendence went from close to two million to two hundred thousand in the space of a couple of years and the Braves, were forced, in a panic to move to Milwaukee in '53 or they would have literally gone bankrupt. And the crosstown Red Sox didn't dare dip their toe in the water for black players until '58 when they snuck a reserve infielder, Pumpsie Green, onto the roster. By then the Red Sox sucked and the Boston fans realized, reluctantly, that they needed to have black players to compete. The point is to think that Landis was the sole reason baseball wasn't integrating back in the Twenties and Thirties is missing the mark. It was a very different world back then.

  • @MrPezdispencer
    @MrPezdispencer Před 2 lety +62

    Man this gave me a lot of food for thought. Although I still do think the worst commissioner of all time was Kennesaw Mountain Landis, and I don't think it's close. The way he handled the black sox, let owners get away with more murder than bud selig did, and further rejected baseball's color line being broken for years.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +19

      Yeah, those are all really good points. I’m glad they started taking his name off the mvp trophy after all these years

    • @MrPezdispencer
      @MrPezdispencer Před 2 lety +8

      @@TheDiamondBaseball Seriously though I was in the opinion that Bud was a good guy until this video.

    • @kevinvilmont6061
      @kevinvilmont6061 Před rokem +3

      Yeah bigotry trumps greed.

    • @kevinvilmont6061
      @kevinvilmont6061 Před rokem

      @@antonioprovenzano5130 I
      Bot? Yeah, I do know that a bigot is worse than greed. Your comment makes no sense.

    • @antonioprovenzano5130
      @antonioprovenzano5130 Před rokem

      @@kevinvilmont6061 how do you know that cause youre One yourself are you not or you love to project on whites what you really are

  • @BitcoinMotorist
    @BitcoinMotorist Před rokem +7

    My favorite Bud Selig moment was when he awarded Troy Glaus the World Series MVP and called him Troy GLAWOOS. Like, you don't know how to pronounce one of your stars names?

  • @PGar58
    @PGar58 Před rokem +3

    I have always said that McGwire vs Sosa was a Faustian bargain. There was, clearly a nod nod wink wink agreement between the players and owners. And when the chickens came home to roost? To quote Claude Rains said in Casablanca “I am shocked - shocked! - there are PEDs in the game!”

  • @thevalleyabriefhistoryofar2845

    He did give us the Diamondbacks though, and that's all that can be forgiven about him.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +11

      Amen to that, although now I can hate him for the heartache that team has caused me

    • @paysonfox88
      @paysonfox88 Před 10 měsíci

      I do not give him credit for putting his personal image into the game. You know, both Bud, and Diamondbacks are venomous snakes

  • @martyf3531
    @martyf3531 Před rokem +6

    He also gave us the All-Star game tie, which led to the rule of , the World Series home field advantage being determined by that league's all-stars.

  • @pathutchison7688
    @pathutchison7688 Před rokem +14

    The thing is, a salary cap has been great for every league in which it was introduced. You also have minimum spending to go along with maximum. It creates parity and makes the game fun. MLB NEEDS a salary cap.

    • @marcus813
      @marcus813 Před rokem +2

      Convincing the MLBPA of that is one of the hardest jobs in sports, though. I don't know why they won't get on board.

    • @theo4307
      @theo4307 Před rokem

      @@marcus813 because they’re greedy. Pretty simple. Unions are bad.

    • @pathutchison7688
      @pathutchison7688 Před rokem +6

      @@marcus813 they won’t get on board because they think it means less money for them by artificially holding down contracts. What they don’t realize is that while it may cost the top 15 highest paid players some money, the average salary would actually go up. The NFL introduced its salary cap in the early 90s. Every team was then on even competitive ground. Parity came to the league with everyone actually having a chance, and popularity exploded. More cash for everyone. I applaud the MLBPA for being a strong union, but they need to get past this short sighted approach.

    • @a.williams1945
      @a.williams1945 Před 4 měsíci

      What hard evidence do you have to back your claim that a salary cap has been great for every league it's been introduced to?

  • @RetroBaseball
    @RetroBaseball Před 2 lety +10

    Those transitions are glorious.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +3

      Appreciate it! I had to place each rectangle one by one so I sure hope it looks good lmao

  • @mattmurphy5805
    @mattmurphy5805 Před 2 lety +20

    That collusion stat is crazy. This video totally changed my opinion on Selig, nice job.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +6

      Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! I want to do more deep dive video essays like this one in the future - this one is kind of a trial balloon lol

  • @donpietruk1517
    @donpietruk1517 Před rokem +33

    Selig may not have been the worst ever commissioner in the history of MLB. I think Kennesaw Mountain Landis was worse. But with said that enshrining Selig in Cooperstown is more than problematic. His actions turning a blind eye toward the steroid use when it suited MLB alone are reprehensible. The real problem however was the callous exploitation of that usage in the form of the home run race in order to win back fans to the game. Once that narrative came apart under scrutiny he acted like a coward and sought to punish those players. I used to be against including those players in the hall. Now I say if Selig is in they should be in as well. To keep them out is the purest hypocrisy.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +6

      KML certainly is in the conversation, the fact that they are both in the Hall is very sad.

    • @J.C...
      @J.C... Před rokem +1

      This is probably the most foolish comment on this video. Two wrongs don't make a right. Letting steroid users in because he's in is the most asinine, ridiculous suggestion I've heard yet.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Před rokem +3

      @@J.C... I don't believe it's wrong. The deciding factor for me is whether you can adequately tell the story of baseball without the player. I don't believe you can, especially with Bonds as he was emblematic of the era. I'm not saying it shouldn't be noted, commented upon, etc. But he belongs in and so does Clemens. If you're going to keep Bonds and Clemens out you need to eliminate all those like Willie Mays who very very likely used amphetamines and red juice in the late 1950s through mid 1960s as well.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem +2

      @@TheDiamondBaseball It wasn't just the Roiding OR the fact that he agreed to sweep the A-Rod scandal under the rug to buy the Yankees the 2009 Crown, it was the fact that FEW World Series Championships were legitely won under his tenure. Watch the 2005 World Series, the WHOLE thing was Rigged Against the Astros. I'm not even an Astros fan and even I know that. You DON'T SWEEP a Team in Extra Innings Games. There were BAD Umpire Calls that screwed them over.

    • @paysonfox88
      @paysonfox88 Před 10 měsíci

      I would treat Selig the same as the Era he authored. Until the Steroid guys like Barry Bonds, or Roger Clemens get into the HOF, Bud has no place there either. His inaction, and encouragement of such actions led to the abuse of Roids in the first place.

  • @jasonvaught2274
    @jasonvaught2274 Před rokem +18

    Thank you for telling this story. Been a player and fan of baseball my whole life and have never known a good commissioner. As to who's worse probably Bud because the NFL surpassed MLB under his watch.

    • @TheChrismeg34
      @TheChrismeg34 Před rokem +7

      I love baseball but that was going to happen eventually. Goddell is paying you back now though cause the NFL is trash.

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri Před rokem +3

      NFL passed baseball back in the 1970, my friend.

    • @Floww23
      @Floww23 Před rokem +2

      Baseball and MLB is still bigger world wide than the NFL is

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri Před rokem

      @@Floww23 ...lol.....hahaha..

  • @fishingwithphil7603
    @fishingwithphil7603 Před rokem +6

    great presentation. i personally enjoyed baseball more during the 90"s than i do today and at any point since. gotta hand it to selig, the 90's were goated for baseball

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +3

      Late 90's baseball must have been objectively great to witness. Life must have felt so much simpler then.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem +1

      @Rrabows The Late 90s was the Yankees,Braves, DBacks and Cards. Nothing Else, everyone else was treated irrelevant.

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      Late Nineties baseball was the advent of retro stadiums, which Selig had nothing to do with. And it was the advent of the resurrection of the Yankees, which like it or not (and Selig certainly did not and fought it mightily) which was a huge factor in the rise of popularity in the sport. When the Yankees are good, interest in baseball is high and revenues increase. You don't have to like it, but you need to acknowledge it. The other thing was the steroids, which we have mixed emotions about. It screwed up historical statistics big time, which is bad but something Selig could care less about. On the other hand, it brought excitement (false excitement as it turned out), but excitement nonetheless after Selig spent years singlehandedly trying to kill the sport. Not only McGuire and Sosa but watching Bonds play in the early 2000's was a real treat. They actually walked him intentionally with the bases loaded, he was that good.

  • @PGar58
    @PGar58 Před rokem +3

    A big part of what led to the 94 strike was the fact the TV contract was so bad. This was a result of the CBS contract being bad for the game and not giving the game exposure nationally. This was fixed largely in 1996 when Fox Sports, looking to get itself established, gave MLB a lot of money. That and the regional networks.

    • @TMC1982Part2
      @TMC1982Part2 Před 8 měsíci

      After CBS' contract expired following the 1993 World Series, the next network TV contract was a revenue-sharing joint venture with ABC and NBC called The Baseball Network. ABC and NBC unlike the previous deal with CBS (who had lost approximately $500 within four years of their $1.2 billion contract), didn't pay Major League Baseball in rights fees. Instead, MLB if I remember correctly, would get about 85% of the revenue while the networks would split the rest.

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      Having lived thru it and the collusion earlier, Selig was on a mission to try to destroy the players union along with White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf.
      Selig and Reinsdorf were the driving forces behind that strike, there is no doubt. The other factors at the time were ancillary.
      And the cancelling of the World Series was beyond the pale. How you put a creature who had so little respect for the history of the game just shows you that black is white and night is day when it comes to how the power structures see things in any organization vs how normal people see things.

  • @freaky_j2207
    @freaky_j2207 Před rokem +7

    MLB has dropped in interest even to us long time fans for several reasons in addition to the ones you mentioned which while I agree I won’t restate.
    1) expanded playoffs. There are no more pennant races. It’s a long season. Always has been. The payoff was that come August and September you could focus on one, two or sometimes several races where the losing team would miss out a chance for a championship. It added drama to the end of the season keeping it in the news with Football season. Yankees v Redsox, Dodgers/Giants, Cardinals/Cubs, etc. no one cares nationally about a race between Baltimore/Tampa for a wildcard spot?
    2) disregarding a generation of the sports best players due to Steroids. Was it cheating? Yes. Was it against the rules? Grey area? Was it encouraged and profited on by the owners? Absolutely!
    A generation grew up watching Bonds, McGwire, Sosa, Clemens, etc. regardless if their “good guys” is irrelevant from a playing or baseball memory perspective. Those players have been effectively white washed from MLB history and fans see the hypocrisy in it. This is made worse by the fact that Baseball more than any other sport thrived on spotlighting it’s history. You then erase 20 years of stars and great moments and now any fan under 60 barely if at all remembers the Mays, Reggie’s, Mike Schmidt’s, etc. most never saw them play at least not in their prime. So what’s to pass down to your kids?
    3) all the other factors especially prices that you mentioned. One thing you didn’t mention was chasing the corporate $ at the expense of the hardcore fans. Maybe that was more revenue at the gate but those free ticket take a client crowd doesn’t tune into a Thursday night game on local TV. Since regular fans can’t attend in person several times a year like we used to we lost interest in those games too.

  • @forrestcommander6283
    @forrestcommander6283 Před rokem +19

    While Selig was a terrible commissioner, at least he loved baseball, despite his severely flawed approach to the game. Manfred genuinely despises baseball and thinks the fans are idiots.

    • @FoxxyBrown1111
      @FoxxyBrown1111 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Well, Manfred has a point. Fans are idiots. They pay for over priced tickets, game shirts, etc... They really think players love the game, and winning means anything to them (it doesnt, unless its in the bank account). Finally those idiots think gambling is profitable just bevause the TV ads tell them so.
      I mean its a fact. Fans are idiots. The rest of your post I agree on.

  • @neither_nor
    @neither_nor Před měsícem

    thank you so much for these thoughtful and well-researched videos! as a new fan who is also interested in economic justice and labor issues, this is exactly the kind of analysis i’ve been looking for. i would love to hear your breakdown of the ongoing struggle within the MLBPA!

  • @stephenbrown-bourne465
    @stephenbrown-bourne465 Před 2 lety +8

    Amazing vid, great breakdown. I didn't know a lot of this stuff about Selig

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah, I think a lot of things get whitewashed about him and his tenure. We tend to look at Manfred with a more critical lens because he doesn't have Selig's charisma or love of the game, but they are both leading the game down a dark path.

  • @Uncultured_Barbarian465
    @Uncultured_Barbarian465 Před rokem +3

    I despised Bud as the owner of the Brewers, and really despised him as the commissioner of baseball. Unfortunately, when you call him out in the state, there are still plenty of people who defend him.

    • @DNSKansas
      @DNSKansas Před rokem +1

      Would Milwaukee have an MLB team if he didn't buy the Seattle Pilots out of bankruptcy? DOUBTFUL. Denver would have received the expansion team in 1977 which was the Mariners, then some city other than Milwaukee would have had an expansion team in '93 which was the Rockies.

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem +2

      He Overcrowded the NL Central just to give advantages to his Brewers and ALWAYS made sure the Astros and Reds SUFFERED no matter what. He got prideful and thought Moving the Stros to the AL would make things FAR Worse as 2013 did show that. But in 2017, Selig REGRETED approving the decision to move them from the NL.

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      @@DNSKansas Milwaukee never should have lost the Braves and eventually would have legitimately gotten a franchise as they had proven they could support a big league team well. Selig spirited the team away from a viable Seattle venue. Seattle sued causing the impromptu 1977 expansion into Seattle and Toronto solely because Selig illegitimately moved the franchise to Milwaukee. As a precursor to his reign of error as commissioner, Selig selfishly caused MLB a lot of problems by bringing about this law suit onto MLB and forcing it into a haphazard expansion. Par for the course for Selig - selfishly helping himself in Milwaukee while hurting the rest of baseball in the process.

  • @JR-zu9jk
    @JR-zu9jk Před 2 lety +19

    MLB commissioners are historically bad not just Selig or Manfred. Many of them have been terrible such as Landis. I really wish we had some one like the NBAs Silver or Stern who sought out to grow their respective sports and are actual fans of the sport they represent

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +7

      I agree with this for the most part. The one thing I will say to Selig’s credit is that he actually was a fan of baseball and you can tell how much he loved the game, but the problem was that he only cared about growing his wallet and not the actual game. In contrast, the NBA has focused way more on getting their game in front of his many people as possible and it’s done wonders for them over the past 20 years

    • @davidrolfes8803
      @davidrolfes8803 Před 2 lety +7

      Are you kidding me? Stern is the worst sports Commish of all time, and why people think the NBA is just a basketball version of the WWE.

    • @musicandmagic909
      @musicandmagic909 Před rokem +2

      I promise you that you don't want Stern. I love basketball but the NBA is a fixed league because of Stern. There are a lot of things about image that a sports league can rehabilitate, illegitimate competition is not one of them

  • @matthewfein
    @matthewfein Před rokem +4

    The commisoner that I think was the worst was Bart Giamatti, the one that banned Pete Rose. The reason I say this, is because, 1.The all-time MLB hits leader should definetely be in the Hall of Fame and, 2.When he bet on baseball, he bet ON his team, not AGAINST them! (I say this, because they compared what
    HE did, to the 1919 Black Sox scandal!
    Although, I DO think that Bud Selig did do some terrible thing as commissioner. Like, when he made the All-Star Game decide home field advantage for the World Series, just because of that ONE time when the players threatened to boycott the All-Star Game,on 2002, because it was scheduled to be played in Bud Selig's home town, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin!

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      I think if Giamatti lived, he would have reinstated Rose after a time. Selig with his faux piousness never did.

  • @everettkalafatis6106
    @everettkalafatis6106 Před rokem +5

    This is a man who stopped an All Star Game during a tie game. In all my years, I have never seen a more ass kissing sports executive move.

  • @Notimp0rtant523
    @Notimp0rtant523 Před rokem

    What I love about you is you don’t cuss unless and until it is necessary to cuss. Thanks my guy

  • @josephweiss1559
    @josephweiss1559 Před rokem +3

    I blame the owners who knew and were aware of what they were getting into

  • @54raynor
    @54raynor Před rokem +4

    Ok, here is the counter argument.
    Blaming Bud Selig for the 1994 Strike and the Steroid issue is like blaming Gorbachev for the fall of the USSR. They were in charge when shit hit the fan, but the underlying issues were decades in the making.
    Here’s the truth about the Strike: a work stoppage was going to happen no matter what. The relations between the two sides were beyond radioactive, having built up by three decades of intense labor negotiations that resulted in a strike or lockout every single time. While I agree that Selig was negotiating in bad faith, we have every reason to think this would have been the case no matter who was commissioner at the time.
    But here’s something that never gets mentioned: Selig is the very first commissioner ever to get a MLB labor agreement without a strike. It was intense as can be and could have gone wrong any number of times, but he got it done in 2002.
    Then he got it done two more times, improving relations to the point where the last agreement received virtually no attention since a strike wasn’t even an afterthought. I don’t know if another commissioner could have done that, but Selig definitely did.
    As for the steroid issue: Selig DID try to get ahead of it, much earlier than anyone realizes. Steroid testing was part of the proposed 1994 labor contract, and it was rejected outright by the players. The Union would fight it tooth-and-nail until public opinion forced them to cave in 2002.
    Why did Selig want it in the 1994 agreement? Because he knew that steroids (and the more-dangerous amphetamines) had been widespread in MLB clubhouses since at least 1973. A government study cited in the Mitchell Report stated exactly that.
    But Selig gets no credit for getting the testing program implemented, nor getting it strengthened almost immediately afterwards.
    If you are going to blame Selig for the mess in MLB now, you also have to give him credit for his role in cleaning up the mess thst had been there long before he sat in the commissioner’s chair. And by that notion, Bud Selig is the most under appreciated man in MLB history.

    • @FoxxyBrown1111
      @FoxxyBrown1111 Před 3 měsíci

      Finally a post that talks about the greedy cheaters/players. I thought I was the only one not worshipping them.

  • @robertmusgrave9236
    @robertmusgrave9236 Před rokem +6

    When gamantti died it was a sign that baseball was going to be dying as a big league sport.

  • @sirradiodude
    @sirradiodude Před rokem +2

    Amen brother!
    My personal peeves are the two Buds that did lasting damage to pro sports...
    Bud Selig and Bud Adams.
    So many little things and decisions Selig made in his tenure really put his astronomically poor character on display. Really, just so many the video would have been lengthy and tedious.
    SIDENOTE- Don't let recentcy bias blind you to the flaming turd nugget that was Commissioner Mountain Landis.

  • @TERoss-jk9ny
    @TERoss-jk9ny Před rokem +3

    Him screwing Pete Rose from the HOF has pissed me off forever.
    Rose’ stats deserve to be honored.
    Selig wouldn’t make a pimple on THE WORST baseball Butt!
    Regardless, Manfred ruined BB.

  • @surcentro2134
    @surcentro2134 Před rokem +2

    Great episode 👍 glad I came across your channel

  • @robert3622
    @robert3622 Před 21 dnem

    I'm 40. Lifelong Reds fan. My kids are now 13 and 11. My daughter (13) likes baseball a bit more than my son. Like an increasingly growing number of people, our TV is internet and antenna. Local tv contracts went away, and unless I use a VPN (something I really don't like doing) can't watch Reds games. I've taken them to about 20 games, my brother caught a Joey Votto foul pop with them, and my Dad about four weeks before he died caught a Manny Ramirez(?) home run. We love this. My kids hate baseball on radio (which is my preferred way unless attending), and I can't show them a goddamn Reds game because it's blacked out because of our nearness to Cincinnati. Manferd can make himself a god by addressing this foolishness, hit at the same time, they're not boomers, so as far as far as he's concerned there's no money in it

    • @robert3622
      @robert3622 Před 21 dnem

      It's laziness for the easy dollar. Our society is about to die from it's debauchery

  • @robert3622
    @robert3622 Před 21 dnem

    I believe the thing that actually killed his career, was the idiotic contract Cashman/Steinbrenner gave him guaranteeing him a major league roster spot, and then Jim Bowden drafting him in the Rule V Draft, hard to develop at 21 on 181 plate appearances because you're not ready and can't be sent down to the minors. Nevermind Bowden 's hardon for giant but relatively fast outfielders who can hit BP balls 500'

  • @user-mk1kp6jy5q
    @user-mk1kp6jy5q Před 4 měsíci +1

    The three positives of Selig's tenure, according to this video, were: elimination of separate NL and AL offices, interleague play, and World Baseball Classic. Wrong, those were all horribly bad things.

    • @a.williams1945
      @a.williams1945 Před 4 měsíci

      THANK YOU!!! Interleague play was the absolute WORST THING ever to happen to MLB. Bud Selig single handedly ruined baseball forever.

  • @richardnunez3474
    @richardnunez3474 Před rokem +1

    I remember losing interest in the game for 5 years after the 94 strike.

  • @BorostateBlues
    @BorostateBlues Před rokem +1

    Nailed it, great job, I love baseball and I have tried to turn my back on it but I can’t, love this game and quit messing with the rules.

  • @Jangmo_SC
    @Jangmo_SC Před rokem

    It costs me nearly 100$ usd a month for Fubo, regional sports provider. Having cable is as much, but requires a contract. It’s terrible trying to be a fan rn

  • @johnterry4987
    @johnterry4987 Před rokem +9

    Personally I think inter league play is a negative, I liked that when the teams play in the World Series that it was the first time they met under circumstances that counted.

    • @JayTemple
      @JayTemple Před rokem +2

      And now they'll face every team every season.

    • @SW2799
      @SW2799 Před rokem +2

      johnterry4987 I somewhat disagree with that, if only for the fact that interleague play brings more competitive rivalry to crosstown teams, such as in the Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York regions. For example, I am in the Los Angeles area. Although the Dodgers are my team, I always enjoy when they play the Angels. I like the fact that the “Freeway Series” between the Dodgers, and the Angels is now a series that counts. Yes, I am hoping one day that those two teams will meet in the World Series!

    • @a.williams1945
      @a.williams1945 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@SW2799 interleague play ruined baseball. It destroyed the structure and intelligence that made baseball interesting. With interleague play, then there's no point of even having leagues. The Dodgers play the Angels more times a season than they play the Cardinals, a team that they're supposedly in the same league in.

  • @cccCCCccc123ccc
    @cccCCCccc123ccc Před rokem

    When I was a kid in the 90’s- early 2000’s, I used to watch the Braves with my dad as often as I could. Now I can’t even be bothered. Sometimes I’ll check highlights out on CZcams. Baseball just seems to suck now.

  • @zacharyhelton1247
    @zacharyhelton1247 Před rokem

    The real question is… who won the Braves vs Astro demo on your MLB The Show in the background?

  • @RobertNugent
    @RobertNugent Před rokem +1

    This guy. Hands down.

  • @csnide6702
    @csnide6702 Před rokem +2

    Selig was an abomination . My personal favorite was openly saying HE wasn't running the Brewers while commish - but his DAUGHTER was..... yeah, Riiight.
    Then there was his reasoning for having the brewers change to the National League and move Houston to the American League--- WTF for..?
    He actually publically said " when I was a boy in Milwaukee , the (then) Braves were in the National league " SO WHAT..? WTF does THAT have to do with today..? He just wanted it that way and it was HIS TEAM. So he did it. then there is the biggest issue of them all..... Turning a blind eye to steroids.

  • @jamesmccarthy4777
    @jamesmccarthy4777 Před 11 měsíci +1

    If it wasn't for how my dad and grandpa taught me well how baseball works and all the games they took me to throughout my life I wouldn't be a lifelong fan. But if I didn't come from a family of avid fans Bud Selig and his gooons defintely would've ruined baseball for me the way they did for other potential fans.

  • @MikeSuth4040
    @MikeSuth4040 Před rokem +1

    Some commissioner's have a bias towards certain teams. I think those commissioners are also horrible.

  • @markgreene8186
    @markgreene8186 Před rokem +3

    Selig is the most corrupt. But He is what the owners wanted.

  • @SamRobnett
    @SamRobnett Před rokem

    I think there is one huge factor that is missing in this and the video about the HOF.

  • @MachoMessiah
    @MachoMessiah Před rokem

    All I know is that Bud Selig would never have called the Commissioner's Trophy "a piece of metal"

  • @brianbelden2449
    @brianbelden2449 Před rokem +3

    Oh, and all this time I thought the current commissioner was the worst. BY FAR.

  • @bluemooncinco
    @bluemooncinco Před 2 lety +6

    While it is great to see a critical look at Selig, who was widely praised and liked during his tenure, aren't seven years at the helm enough for Manfred to have at least started work on reversing some of the issues he was left with or that Selig built the foundations for? It seems like he has been on a "full speed ahead" type of plan the whole time.
    I know this is such a surface level or subjective thing, but it seems like Manfred doesn't even like baseball whenever I see an interview or a quote or something, which has always led me to dislike him even outside of any of the decisions he makes. Selig always came off as a baseball fan and that always seemed to work for him when it came to public opinion. Maybe that's the fan version of an old timey scout rating grit and heart over WAR and BABIP, but I have to admit to it.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +3

      You are correct on pretty much all counts here imo. It's like I said in the video: Manfred is just Selig without the PR, charisma, and business savvy. The one good thing I can say about Selig as a commissioner is that you cannot deny his lifelong love of the game - but Manfred is a different story. His policies have largely been an extension of Selig's (e.g. regionalizing the game through TV contracts, focusing on short-term profit, and relying on gimmicks to solve long-term problems), which is why we haven't made any progress on issues of the relevance, growth, and health of the game. But because he is also an incredibly awkward lawyer with seemingly no real ties to the game, he is easy to hate and he gets put under even more scrutiny. Still, it will take a lot for him to do as much damage as his predecessor did with the steroid crisis and player strike.

    • @JayTemple
      @JayTemple Před rokem

      @@TheDiamondBaseball I can't help think that regionalizing the game is part and parcel of (eventually) having every game televised, at least in the local market.

  • @kjorlaug1
    @kjorlaug1 Před rokem +1

    I get the critiques of Selig and Manfred, but let's not forget that Landis kept baseball segregated and Kuhn knew about collusion and did nothing

  • @WMCheerman
    @WMCheerman Před rokem

    Crazy

  • @lowgearman9731
    @lowgearman9731 Před 4 měsíci

    Well he was certainly the creator of the Oakland A's mess suggesting the the Athletics move to Oakland hurt the San Francisco Giants market and that they should be relocated to another city. Rob Manfred has continued that push and the Owners have been more than happy to approve relocation to Vegas which may or may not happen. But it does seem like their leaving Oakland where to is anyone guess.

  • @johnterry4987
    @johnterry4987 Před rokem +2

    Or doing like football and not making a big deal about steroids.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem

      Goodell will always be the WOAT when it comes to commissioners

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri Před rokem

      Nobody cares if they use steroids.

  • @agentallstar7
    @agentallstar7 Před rokem +1

    MLB needs a salary cap big time….

  • @rwboa22
    @rwboa22 Před rokem

    What is now needed in MLB is not a salary cap, but a salary floor.

  • @papabare1977
    @papabare1977 Před rokem

    Wait....Selig's in Cooperstown? What?!?!

  • @willdodge200
    @willdodge200 Před rokem

    Selig was a terrible owner in Milwaukee. Claiming that they never had any money, yet he was paying family members very large salaries for basically doing nothing for the Brewers.

  • @aaronanderson8268
    @aaronanderson8268 Před rokem

    He was horrendous. Interleague and wild card are massive negatives he created

  • @decker528
    @decker528 Před rokem +2

    Interleague play was a huge mistake. Baseball wasn't special anymore with having two separate leagues that only saw each other in the world series and all star game. It was a short term gimmick that has destroyed the schedule now and a big reason why I barely care about baseball anymore

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +2

      If AL teams playing NL teams made you not care about baseball, I question if you even cared about baseball in the first place. That is such a bizarre complaint to have

    • @decker528
      @decker528 Před rokem +2

      @@TheDiamondBaseball not really. The wildcard and division realignment already cheapened baseballs postseason and now you had teams potentially playing in the world series that had seen each other in the regular season. They weren't complete unknowns. I take it you aren't old enough to remember baseball prior to either 1997 or 1994 when those two shifts happened

    • @jadenfoster7729
      @jadenfoster7729 Před rokem

      @@decker528 wild card helped it and realignment made sense no reason uneven divisions should exist and you shouldn’t be punished because you had a 100+ win team in your division

    • @decker528
      @decker528 Před rokem +1

      @@jadenfoster7729 why should a 100 win team have to go prove themselves again against an 84 win team? Baseball isn't special anymore. I hate it. I've got a whole man cave full of stuff I've collected since I was 11 but the format and the games are just awful now. I'm glad the shift is gone but it's still brought in a bunch of nerds comparing stats that have many different calculations and nobody truly understands them. That little ball on the screen in the strike zone makes it where you cant even see the bat come off the ball anymore. All the launch angles and spin rates have become available to fans and it takes away from the experience tremendously. Baseball from 1996, and especially before 1994 was a lot different and it was great and I miss it. I could go on all day but if you're too young to remember when kids traded cards and no one would recognize Steve young on the street but everyone knew who Ken Griffey Jr , wade boggs, Mike piazza, frank Thomas, Mark McGwire, Nolan Ryan etc were

    • @jadenfoster7729
      @jadenfoster7729 Před rokem

      @@decker528 the nfl has always been more popular than the mlb so that’s a non starter and the 100 win team should win they did it in the regular season they should do it again for the entire season if you can’t beat inferior competition then that’s on the team not anyone else don’t make excuses get it done

  • @TippfehlerEN
    @TippfehlerEN Před rokem +1

    Now don’t shoot me, but as an Astros fan I will never forgive him for forcing a move of the Astros to the AL, screw you Bud

  • @youngf.l.y.1467
    @youngf.l.y.1467 Před rokem

    I think what must be remembered is that the commissioner of any sports league works FOR THE OWNERS so in your (the fans) opinion sure he is a horrible commissioner..but ask the MLB owners they love him he takes the big bullets wit a smile so the true evil manipulative string pulling owners stay behind the curtain

  • @ortforshort7652
    @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

    I know Selig's myriad warts. Is there a detailed description of what Manfred has done or failed to do that has hurt baseball?
    I know that analytics has ruined the game because it is unable to properly evaluate the value of speed, base running and strategy and tactics that force the opposition into making mistakes. Unfortunately, elements of the game that analytics cannot properly model are discounted and discarded which has caused the game to become remarkably staid and boring.
    That being said, analytics reared it's ugly head way before Manfred appeared on the scene so I am curious as to what precisely it is that he is being condemned for.

  • @nomorefielders
    @nomorefielders Před 2 lety +5

    3:15 Andy Warhol called. He wants his stupid looking outdated glasses back

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před 2 lety +2

      My favorite thing about Bud Selig is that everything about him looks outdated - even when he was young

  • @champaignken
    @champaignken Před rokem +1

    I hate him because he moved the Astros to the AL, rather than moving his Brewers BACK to the AL.

    • @DNSKansas
      @DNSKansas Před rokem +1

      The Royals were given the first chance to go to the NL and they said no.
      The Astros went to ONE World Series in 41 seasons in the NL and were swept in that one series. It was more to give the Rangers a natural rival.
      TOUGH SHIT. Besides, now that the DH is in the NL, there's no real distinction between the leagues.

  • @tryhardfinessedyou
    @tryhardfinessedyou Před rokem +1

    Are any baseball players paid what they are "actually worth" is Aaron Judge hitting 60 odd HRs worth 250 mill or whatever his contract was? Mmmmmm I'd argue probably not really.

  • @jonnytheboy7338
    @jonnytheboy7338 Před rokem +4

    Stopped going years ago, stopped watching on TV too ... The sport was ruined for me

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +1

      Its a shame, you're missing out on some of the greatest talent the game has ever seen (although if it were up to MLB, you wouldn't be able to watch any of them play lol). I don't blame you for leaving, but it sucks to see fans be driven away.

    • @jonnytheboy7338
      @jonnytheboy7338 Před rokem

      @@TheDiamondBaseball I agree with you. I should have added that I watch the highlights on CZcams everyday but it's short and sweet and not spending hours of my time

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +1

      @@jonnytheboy7338 Honestly, that's a good way up keeping updated. I can't watch many games live anymore since I live in Sweden now, so I mainly keep tabs via CZcams and Twitter

    • @jonnytheboy7338
      @jonnytheboy7338 Před rokem

      @@TheDiamondBaseball my father was off the boat from Sweden. I'll get over there someday

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem

      @@jonnytheboy7338 It's pretty nice over here, not gonna lie

  • @nicolasdenz4292
    @nicolasdenz4292 Před rokem +5

    He helped both Jeffrey Loria and David Glass get their clawholds into MLB, helping screw Kansas City fans for decades, and Montreal fans forever. Saying that the merger of the leagues and interleague play were good things is laughable.
    He introduced the abomination called the Wild Card (at one time, only one out of every seven teams (14%) made the postseason; now it's two of five (40%), as well as trying to make the All-Star game relate to World Series home field advantage -- didn't do much damage, but it was stupid, and not even good for a laugh.

  • @LordHighFixxer
    @LordHighFixxer Před rokem +1

    Kennesaw Mountain Landis straight up road blocked integration. He had to die for integration to move forward.

    • @ortforshort7652
      @ortforshort7652 Před 5 měsíci

      Landis is getting a bad rap here.
      He was a hard ass, but he had to be because gambling was killing the sport when he was brought in to restore order. He screwed Joe Jackson and a couple of others, but something had to be done and unfortunately for a few of them like Jackson, they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.
      I don't know Landis was racist or not, most whites in America were back then so it wouldn't be a surprise.
      But he wasn't the one blocking integration if it's true that he was even actively against integration.
      Which teams were interested in integrating back then?
      There weren't any until GM Branch Rickey left St Louis where he wasn't going to be allowed to integrate the Cardinals to Brooklyn in the late forties where he was allowed to integrate the Dodgers.
      The only other team wanting to integrate was Cleveland, but only after Bill Veeck bought the club in the late forties.
      You can tell how little interest there was in integrating after Jackie Robinson came in. Veeck jumped aboard quickly with Larry Doby and Satchel Paige. The NY Giants were the only other National League team that integrated quickly. That was it. When the Boston Braves integrated, the city of Boston essentially boycotted them and their attendence went from 2 million to two hundred thousand in a couple of years and they had to flee Boston for Milwaukee (the first franchise shift in fifty years, by the way) in order to stay solvent. No one else in either league was in a rush to integrate. Landis was long dead so you couldn't blame that on him. It was a different time back then. There was no one rushing to integrate anything back in those days.

  • @agentallstar7
    @agentallstar7 Před rokem +1

    It’s hard to argue that baseball is more entertaining or popular as it was in the 80s and 90s. Even early 2000’s …The steroid era was far better then this crap we’ve had for over a decade lately.

  • @JStorm13
    @JStorm13 Před 4 měsíci

    He almost contracted two teams

  • @anthonyemerson2965
    @anthonyemerson2965 Před rokem +2

    Worst commissioner is still Kennesaw Mountain Landis, who fought tooth and nail to keep baseball segregated. Baseball could’ve been a force for good in the early 20th century, but instead it decided to reinforce the existing power structures in the country.

  • @DoctorEw220
    @DoctorEw220 Před rokem +3

    He made some decisions that favored his old team while he was commissioner.

  • @emmanuelwood8702
    @emmanuelwood8702 Před rokem +3

    Manfred is the worst . Bud actually did some things right.Under Manfred theres only been drama and scandal .Theres no good everything has been done wrong .

    • @Tornado1994
      @Tornado1994 Před rokem

      Selig can go to HELL. He was a Contemptuous piece of Trash. He HATED small Teams too. And LOVED rigging Series(Its why they often went to EXTRA Innings) for larger market teams. Watch the 2005 WS. You can tell something is amiss. You don't have Extra Innings World Series Games in a Row. Its just not normal.

  • @stevecooper6473
    @stevecooper6473 Před rokem

    Worst Commissioner ever?
    Rob Manfred says "hold my beer."

  • @Tornado1994
    @Tornado1994 Před rokem

    Buddy was a CROOK. A Slimeball. ONLY a Handful of legit WS Crowns were won under his Tenure, and I'll say this, 2005 and 2006 certainly weren't legit.
    My SF Giants won 2010 and 2012 because of the MLBIPA, Selig was demoted and could no longer buy World Series for his Favorite Big Market Clubs, What's pathetic about Bud is that even with his Precious Brewers in the NL during the 90s and 2000s, they STILL blew chunks. Selig's HATRED towards the Astros during its NL era was legendary too.

  • @bigjared8946
    @bigjared8946 Před rokem

    I used to believe this but Manfred put in the work to change my mind.

  • @J.C...
    @J.C... Před rokem +2

    He didn't almost kill baseball. I was there. Through every game. The 94 Strike. Everything.
    He DID NOT almost kill baseball.

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri Před rokem

      I went to a packed spring training game in 1994.

  • @terrytitus5291
    @terrytitus5291 Před rokem

    Selig was commissioner that long?
    There should be term limits or maybe 10 years,then a fresh voice!

  • @richardnunez3474
    @richardnunez3474 Před rokem +2

    I would say the closest model of a commissioner in sports right now is Adam Silver.

    • @DNSKansas
      @DNSKansas Před rokem

      Commissioner Spock is an improvement over tyrant David Stern, but he's far from perfect. He's might be the least evil, which is a very low bar considering how bad Manfred and Bettman are.

  • @winterrider6668
    @winterrider6668 Před 11 měsíci

    CORRECTION... NOT BUD.. RATHER BUTT!!

  • @sleekaxe303g2
    @sleekaxe303g2 Před rokem +1

    Nope couldn't do it with his voice

  • @AndThatsBaseball
    @AndThatsBaseball Před 2 lety +4

    But he’s in the Hall of Fame, how could he be bad at his job?

  • @jasonmilly3320
    @jasonmilly3320 Před rokem

    I think Manfred is worst. I have paragraphs worth of reason but I'll stick with just one that really bothers me personally. I love being a fan of a high attendance MLB team these days... that means I (we) don't matter and my team is gonna be shipped across the world, and to play our biggest rival too probably, so none of us real fans can even go see it...the biggest games we circle on the calendar. Bravo MLB, bravo. I understand these international games "grow the game" but they're too stupid to realize, baseball is baseball, it doesn't matter the teams... do like NFL, send the low attendance ones, grow their fanbase up maybe even too while they're over there. What a wild concept.

  • @earsonlyaudio887
    @earsonlyaudio887 Před rokem

    I love that this creater is shocked that business people are in search of profit. Hey, let me spend 100K plus on my education. Let me spend 20 years learning the ropes. Let me invest a billion dollars in to a team and see how fast I can lose the most money. Are you saying that a good product wasn't put on the field from 94 to the mid 2010s? Seems like we had the homerun race, the 98 Yankees, hit 'em, but amazing to have watched, the entire 1996-2004 Yankees for that matter, the 04 Red Sox taking it all for the first time in 86 years, the 05 White Sox, the Giant's run in the 2010s, the Cubs finally taking it all, just packed full of incredible fan experiences. Not to mention what Mac was taking in 98 was actually not against MLB rules at the time.
    He completely blew 94, I agree on that, but where's our critisism of the players and MLB people for what went down with stimulants, the PEDS of their time, in the first half of the 20th century?
    Not saying he was walking talking Jesus, but it's a lot more gray than this video makes out. Owners are greedy. Players are greedy. CZcams is greedy. Creaters are greedy. We all wanna get paid the maximum for our work. Without the players, the owners don't have a product to put on the field. Without the owners, the players don't have a field to play on. Obviously disagreements will arrise regarding which party is being better compensated for their value at any given time.

  • @TheStaticJedi
    @TheStaticJedi Před rokem +1

    This just made me hate Bud Self Selig even more

  • @fluffskunk
    @fluffskunk Před rokem +1

    To explain the problems with baseball, you basically have to start with the Austrian School of economics.

  • @wsegen
    @wsegen Před rokem +1

    sure, selig. manfred a close toady second.....

  • @vicarious4231
    @vicarious4231 Před rokem

    He screwed the expos, i will forever have two middle fingers for selig.

  • @mathewcaldwell4108
    @mathewcaldwell4108 Před rokem

    Manfred is worse the pitch clock and dh in the national league. Horrible the umpires becoming tyrants that control the game and are probably part of organized game fixing. All of these early ejections and making sure that I never pay to watch any games until the game goes back to the same rules as they were in 1972.

  • @jimmymetal713
    @jimmymetal713 Před rokem +1

    All these changes Manfred made this year, especially the pitchers clock i believe has been extremely bad for baseball. It will shorten pitching careers, it also has brought down batting averages. This change will effect records, and imo Judge players. It really hasn't made games that much faster, but from what i notice a lot of pitchers get pulled in the 4 or 5, also messing up win lose also. Bud mighr have been worse, but Manfred is a close first.

  • @williamhild1793
    @williamhild1793 Před rokem

    Spike Eckert.

    • @TheDiamondBaseball
      @TheDiamondBaseball  Před rokem +1

      Not a great commissioner, but I wouldn’t say his tenure did more damage to the game than Selig’s

  • @stlbusker3025
    @stlbusker3025 Před rokem

    MLB hasn't had a good commissioner since Bart Giamatti. This Joker that is ruining the show now is quite possibly the worst commissioner the game has ever had. It has always been my creed that 'If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It.' Well the commissioners office is slowly but surely ruining the game of baseball as we know it.

  • @James90
    @James90 Před rokem

    He Screwed My Texas Rangers

  • @richardnunez3474
    @richardnunez3474 Před rokem +1

    Selig was an awful creep.

  • @ZZSmithReal
    @ZZSmithReal Před rokem +1

    Nah, it's not jumping the gun. Manfred truly is the worst.

  • @georgerogers1166
    @georgerogers1166 Před rokem

    Rob Manfred

  • @stephenmacfarlane5061
    @stephenmacfarlane5061 Před 11 měsíci

    Sadly no one will know who won that simulated game between the astros and braves behind you.

  • @CrashPK77
    @CrashPK77 Před rokem +2

    Selig was good at the "spin"; great at PR, and coming off like an even-keeled, jovial, Midwestern "good guy". Despite that, he was downright evil, like EVERY wealthy businessman. No one gets wealthy by being a good person.
    The difference is that Manfred doesn't give a fuck what people think of him. He's basically a Bond villain. Like Roger Gooddell, he revels in his image as a mustache-twirling throat-slitter. He couldn't care less about the game, the players, or the fans. He cares about billionaires getting wealthier, and that's it. And he doesn't try to hide it.

    • @theo4307
      @theo4307 Před rokem +2

      Spoken like a true poor person.

    • @CrashPK77
      @CrashPK77 Před rokem

      @theo4307 LOL maybe so, but I'm also not wrong.

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri Před rokem

      Selig= good ...Goodell= awful