No playoffs for teams that go over the cap. No draft picks for teams under the cap floor.Big_Maple wrote: ↑Sun Jan 18, 2026 5:47 pmAgree with all of this. This is unsustainable.Pharmabro wrote: ↑Sun Jan 18, 2026 4:29 amMaybe they can do a floor and just increase the lux tax?
But these high end salaries just took a huge bump up. For about 20 years it was basically the Arod deal was about the max. AAV Now 60M to Tucker, 42M for Bo, 765M for Soto, 700M for Ohtani. That is a crazy jump up in terms of how much the top guys make.
Floor. Cap/ceiling. Stiff penalties for exceeding the cap and close loopholes like Ohtani’s deferred contract.
The popularity if the sport is waning and viewership has plummeted. These bloated contracts for the top 1% of pro ball guys is great for them, but this kind of spending is going to doom the sport. Why would you ever become a fan of a small market team like the Rockies or White Sox or Marlins? What’s the point? Unless you just like sitting in the sun and munching on peanuts, there is literally no reason to get excited about your team, and zero chance they will win a World Series. Fans will eventually figure out that you can sit in the sun and drink $14 pilsners without paying $75 just to get into the bar.
Baseball needs to save itself from itself.
The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
- Sexymarinersfan
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Re: The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
Re: The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
That's effectively a hard cap with a hard floor, which is presumably what the owners want, as opposed to the current system, which is super squishy on the top end and doesn't have a floor.Sexymarinersfan wrote: ↑Mon Jan 19, 2026 1:09 amNo playoffs for teams that go over the cap. No draft picks for teams under the cap floor.Big_Maple wrote: ↑Sun Jan 18, 2026 5:47 pmAgree with all of this. This is unsustainable.Pharmabro wrote: ↑Sun Jan 18, 2026 4:29 am
Maybe they can do a floor and just increase the lux tax?
But these high end salaries just took a huge bump up. For about 20 years it was basically the Arod deal was about the max. AAV Now 60M to Tucker, 42M for Bo, 765M for Soto, 700M for Ohtani. That is a crazy jump up in terms of how much the top guys make.
Floor. Cap/ceiling. Stiff penalties for exceeding the cap and close loopholes like Ohtani’s deferred contract.
The popularity if the sport is waning and viewership has plummeted. These bloated contracts for the top 1% of pro ball guys is great for them, but this kind of spending is going to doom the sport. Why would you ever become a fan of a small market team like the Rockies or White Sox or Marlins? What’s the point? Unless you just like sitting in the sun and munching on peanuts, there is literally no reason to get excited about your team, and zero chance they will win a World Series. Fans will eventually figure out that you can sit in the sun and drink $14 pilsners without paying $75 just to get into the bar.
Baseball needs to save itself from itself.
Re: The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
Hi bpj -
My claims about the waning popularity of baseball are based on long term trends, not on the last 5 years.Baseball has been tweaking rules the last 5 years (shift-banning, pitch clocks, bigger bases etc) specifically to address the concerns over declining interest in the sport, particularly among younger fans. It has had some positive effect, but in the big scheme of things, the renewed interest is nominal.
Claiming baseball is thriving based on a small post-rule-change bump is like saying a patient is cured because their heart rate spiked during a resuscitation attempt. The 2023-2025 rule changes - like the pitch clock - were not 'optional updates'; they were emergency measures specifically designed to reverse a decades-long 'slow death' caused by a product that had become too slow and too predictable. While these changes fixed the tempo, they didn't fix the math. Without a salary cap, the sport remains structurally broken; a faster game doesn't help fans in 'feeder' markets who know their team is mathematically eliminated by Opening Day. If MLB wants to move beyond a niche, aging audience, it must pair a faster pace with a level playing field where every fan’s investment is met with a fair chance to win.
Baseball has been in a structural freefall for decades. The recent, desperate rule changes to 'speed up' the game aren't proof of a cure; they are an admission that the product was dying. Here is some evidence for my claims:
- According to a 2024 Gallup poll, baseball has not been "America’s Pastime” for decades. In 1948, 39% of Americans named baseball their favorite sport (ranked #1) Today, only 9% of Americans name baseball as their favorite, falling behind both football (41%) and basketball. This isn't a "recent dip"; it is a steady, 75-year decline in cultural relevance.
- Baseball is less appealing to younger fans. In total, 36% of NBA fans were aged below 35. In contrast, 27% of MLB fans were aged 13 to 34, while 23% were over 65 years old. If baseball fails to capture Gen Z and Alpha, the fan base will literally age out.
- World Series Viewership Erosion: the "intensity" of interest is disappearing. In the 1980s, World Series games regularly averaged 35–40 million viewers. By the 2020s, viewership often struggles to break 10–12 million. Even with the recent "Shohei Ohtani effect," the national reach of the sport is a fraction of what it was before the payroll gap exploded in the 1990s.
- The small market exodus: since the 1990s (the era of no-cap dominance), attendance in several mid-to-small markets has entered a cycle of "permanent rebuilding." When fans know their team is a "farm system" for the Dodgers or Yankees, they stop buying tickets.
https://news.gallup.com/poll/610046/foo ... sport.aspx
https://www.statista.com/statistics/146 ... YmnoKpUVZZ
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Ser ... 019)%20%7C
Last edited by Big_Maple on Tue Jan 20, 2026 5:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
I think the key to the whole thing is going to be revenue sharing of some sort that is more aggressive than the current luxury tax situation. The Globetrotters need the Generals to keep make their product viable. The owners are going to have to recognize that keeping the small market teams reasonably competitive in the long run is going to mean a stronger sport and more revenue for everyone. The NFL has a great model. Everyone is on equal footing financially and the only blame that can be placed on lack of success how those resources are allocated.
Re: The official Hot Stove League Thread 2025-26 Offseason
I am aware. I rarely post something without fact checking. I don't type something into Google and copy/paste the first thing that pops up.
Maybe my post was a little unclear, but it is no less factually based. See my post to bpj for clarification.
I agree with you, D-Train, that soccer is mind-numbingly boring. Of course I feel that way; I prefer baseball. I have followed a baseball team for decades that has yet to win a World Series, and I spend time on a baseball discussion board. I am also a nearly 60-year-old, middle-class white dude. I fit the demographic.
Soccer, by contrast, is still a relatively “new” sport in the U.S. It has fewer recognizable stars and far fewer institutional teams with the kind of deep history and tradition that baseball enjoys. Even so, its popularity is arguably growing - not yet in revenue terms, but in overall interest. Give it another 10 years and it could push MLB further into the background, much as football did in the 1950s and 1960s. By some measures, it is already more popular, and the World Cup will likely accelerate that trend in the U.S.
https://www.foxsports.com/articles/socc ... rite-sport