No, I’m not. You’re the one not living in 2024, let alone this millennium. That’s why you’re talking about 30+ years ago.
Too much emotional bias from most of you that are fans of these Bay area teams. You’re just not able to remain objective. Or avoid moving goalposts.
I’ve been religiously following the NFL and MLB since I was 6. I’ve lived in NorCal for over 53 years now. I’ve seen and experienced a lot. There’s nothing you’re going to teach me about any of these franchises or their fans. I’ve seen and lived through it. I’m not some youngster talking about things I only heard or read about. I’m fully aware of the A’s (and Raiders and Niners and Giants) histories and their fanbases.
Having said that, the A’s fanbase today and in recent years is not what it was during the 70’s or 80’s or even the 90’s. Furthermore, the city of Oakland has been crumbling to the ground for decades and has reached a point where it is essentially a lost cause.
Proof is in the super high crime rates and the fact that the likes of Denny’s and In and Out (which never closed a store before) are closing up shop there. People like you seem to wanna ignore major factors like that, along with the “not even remotely close to what it was fanbase”. More power to you. Go ahead and bury your head if you so choose, but I won’t join you.
So, yes, 1000% I stand by what I stated. The A’s situation of TODAY is COMPLETELY different than the KINGS situation. Or the Sonics. If you cannot recognize that, that’s on you.
Lastly, even if any of the things I’ve stated were untrue (they aren’t) — it doesn’t change the first point I made. SAC temporarily hosting the A’s is not going to change anything. Unless Vegas or the A’s ownership has a huge change or heart, they are leaving Oakland. And regardless whether they somehow miraculously find a path to remain in Oakland or eventually end up in Vegas (or Nashville or some place else), the temporary location they opt to play will have nothing to do with it. That’s a truth some of you seem to be selectively ignoring.
It’s not the same thing as the Seattle group trying to steal the KINGS and Seattle fans not having sympathy or empathy for KINGS fans. Carmichael Dave or anyone else making that comparison are completely missing the mark. I could expound further and provide a longer list of reasons why but I fear it would be a complete waste of time. If you can’t see the differences already, there’s really no convincing you.
You can say I’m wrong all you want. It’s not changing reality. Nor is any weak counter argument you’re going to grasp at straws to construct.
As you were.
I'm talking about 30 years ago because believe it or not, that was the
last time an owner of the A's actually spent money on the team beyond the bare minimum required of them by MLB. I think it's relevant to this current conversation that the last time the A's had a payroll which indicated an interest from the front office in fielding a competitive team -- they were outselling all but two teams in the sport. What happened since then?
*Walter Haas died in 1995 and the team was sold to Steve Schott -- whose first act as owner was to demand the front office cut payroll. Everybody of value was traded (most notably Dennis Eckersley and Mark McGwire both going to the Cardinals in 1996 and 1997 respectively).
*As chronicled in the book/movie Moneyball, throughout the late 90s and early 2000s Steve Schott's A's were run like a small market franchise and once again traded their stars before they ever actually had to pay them in free agency (goodbye Jason Giambi, Miguel Tejada, Mark Mulder and Tim Hudson).
*Until 2005 when John Fisher bought the team and managing partner Lew Wolff announced a year later that they were leaving Oakland and moving to Fremont. (Somehow in 2004 while the team was in the process of being sold, Billy Beane managed to get Eric Chavez re-signed for 6 years and $66 million. Presumably because Steve Schott already knew he was selling and wouldn't have to pay that money anyway and the soon to be owner was not actually in charge yet and had no say in the matter. This is
still, 20 years later, the largest contract in Oakland A's history. **The largest contract John Fisher has ever signed off on in nearly 20 years as owner was a 2 year extension for Khris Davis for $33.5 million of which he paid almost nothing because the 2020 season was only 60 games (player contracts were prorated) and Khris Davis was traded before the 2021 season with the Texas Rangers absorbing his whole contract.
*The Fremont stadium plan went nowhere after multiple lawsuits were filed on behalf of the residents of Fremont. The City of Oakland proposed two sites: the Howard Terminal site on the waterfront or a new stadium at the Coliseum site. John and Lew instead announced a new stadium plan in downtown San Jose, despite the Giants now holding territorial rights to San Jose and the MLB owners refusing to allow those rights to change hands. John and Lew wanted San Jose bad enough that the city of San Jose appealed to the US Supreme Court on their behalf to overrule MLB's anti-trust exemption and allow them to move anyway. The US Supreme Court rejected their appeal.
*The San Francisco Giants, who were once days away from leaving California, now have the best ballpark in the Bay Area and win the World Series in 2010, 2012, and 2014. In 2015, after spending the first 15 years of their existence as the AAA affiliate of the Oakland A's, the Sacramento River Cats announce that they are switching their affiliation to the San Francisco Giants. The A's announce their new AAA affiliate as the Nashville Sounds (later changed to the La Vegas Aviators). Regional market share for the A's hits an all-time low.
*By 2015, with Fremont and San Jose plans scrapped, the A's announce they were now considering three different sites. (1) Howard Terminal -- on land owned by the city of Oakland. (2) The Coliseum site -- on land jointly owned by the Oakland A's and the city of Oakland. (3) The Peralta Community college site -- on land that neither the city of Oakland nor the Oakland A's owned. Which site do you think the genius business man John Fisher chose? In late 2017 the A's announced their plans to build a new stadium at the Peralta site. It took only a couple months of negotiation for the Peralta College Board to tell them to eff off.
*While all of this is happening the A's front office continues to trade every star player they have -- though now they're not waiting until they're a year from free agency, now they're trading them with multiple years of arbitration on their contracts and the potential future stars returning to Oakland in these deals are coming from further and further down their team's top prospect lists. The word is already out that the A's front office is required to trade these players by ownership and thus they have no leverage. As fans we are repeatedly told that they will surely start spending money as soon as they get a new stadium. The same promise they have now made to the city of Las Vegas.
*If you chart these repeated fire sales, team attendance has gone up every time the team is winning -- peaking around 9th or 10th in the AL before the front office cuts the teams legs off, trades everybody, and it plummets back down again. Unfortunately when the life span of any given collection of players between each rebuilding cycle is only 4-5 years, it's hard to generate much momentum and with every fire sale the trust fans have in this front office and owner takes a hit.
*In 2020, with the A's coming off back-to-back 97 win seasons and attendance once again on the rise, Covid cuts the season short. John Fisher is the only owner in MLB who uses this national state of emergency as an excuse to not pay any of his minor league players -- until pressure from basically everyone in baseball forces him to "change his mind". Hometown hero Marcus Semien plays his last game with the Oakland A's in front of no fans as the A's lose a playoff series to the Houston Astros in an empty Dodger Stadium.
*While negotiating the terms of a new stadium at Howard Terminal with the city of Oakland, Fisher mandates another fire sale in 2022 with Matt Chapman, Matt Olson, and Sean Murphy all leaving in trades for B level prospects. As this is happening, season ticket prices are
nearly doubled with predictable results
. John Fisher announces his deal for land in Las Vegas in early 2023, stunning the mayor of Oakland who thought they were days away from making a binding agreement to build a new stadium at the Howard Terminal site.
Since you're so plugged in, I'm not telling you anything you don't already know but I do think it's worth spelling out the long sad history of this march toward re-location because most of the general sports fans here have not been following all of this and are probably prone to being misled by all of the blatant lies coming from John Fisher and the commissioner of MLB about how sad that they are that they now have to leave Oakland behind to continue to survive as a baseball franchise.
Since you deign to call me out of touch, have you actually been to an Oakland A's game in the last 10 years or are you just reading whatever is written about the A's in the news? Of course I'm emotional about the A's moving out of Oakland. Of course I'm biased. This is my team. Oakland (technically Richmond) is where I'm from. And I'm not selectively ignoring anything. John Fisher is so completely inept that he has not yet figured out a plan for where his team is going to play for the next 3 year nor has he shown evidence that they actually have a stadium plan in place at the Tropicana site let alone financing for it or shovels in the ground. MLB gave them a deadline of January 15th -- over a month ago -- to have all of this finalized and over a month later they still can't get their act together.
So yeah, I'm going to keep hoping there's a chance until there's no chance. You wishing the team moves to Sacramento for the next 3 years doesn't actually bother me at all (despite the blatant hypocrisy). You are your own person, you can wish for whatever you like. I just don't appreciate you spouting off a bunch of ignorant BS and then signing off in the most condescending way possible. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about -- regarding the city of Oakland or the fans of the Oakland A's.