Revenue disparity not MLB’s problem
October 22, 2025
|Los Angeles Times
Dodgers ruining baseball might be perception, but owners need to find the solution
THE DODGERS are willing to reinvest profits into players such as Will Smith and Roki Sasaki.
(ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times)
If this World Series is going to turn into a food fight about the economics of baseball, Dave Roberts tossed the first meatball.
The Dodgers had just been presented with the National League Championship trophy. Roberts, the Dodgers’ manager, had something to say to a sellout crowd at Dodger Stadium, and to an audience watching on national television.
“They said the Dodgers are ruining baseball,” Roberts hollered. “Let’s get four more wins and really ruin baseball.”
The Dodgers had just vanquished the Milwaukee Brewers, a team that did everything right, with four starting pitchers whose contracts total $135 billion.
The Brewers led the major leagues in victories this year. They have made the playoffs seven times in the past eight years, and yet their previous manager and general manager fled for big cities, in the hope of applying small-market smarts to teams with large-market resources.
The Dodgers will spend half a billion dollars on player payroll and luxury tax payments this year, a figure that the Brewers and other small-market teams might never spend in this lifetime, or the next one.
The Brewers will make about $35 million in local television rights this year. The Dodgers make 10 times that much — and they'll make more than $500 million per year by the end of their SportsNet LA contract in 2038.
Is revenue disparity a problem for the sport?
The owners say yes. They are expected to push for a salary cap in next year’s collective bargaining negotiations. A cap is anathema to the players’ union. At the All-Star Game, union executive director Tony Clark called a cap “institutionalized collusion.”
The union could say, yes, revenue disparity is the big issue and propose something besides a cap.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 22, 2025 من Los Angeles Times.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
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