Blog Page 29

St. Louis Cardinals’ Hardball Tactics with Jack Flaherty Warrant Systemic Change

The immediate reaction to the St. Louis Cardinals’ renewing Jack Flaherty’s contract for the bare minimum they could under the collective bargaining agreement is that the team is behaving in a petty and cheap manner. It’s the latest example of a club taking advantage of the rules to keep salaries as low as it can regardless of results.

The glaring nature of the act has drawn headlines and negative attention. Not only did they renew him for as little as possible, but they used an arbitrary, team-created system in which it reduces the player’s salary by $10,000 if it is forced to renew his contract. As a “thank you for no longer beating me” conciliatory gesture, the Cardinals did not reduce his salary by that figure because he received a bonus – conveniently for that amount – for finishing fourth in the voting for the 2019 National League Cy Young Award.

Reportedly, Flaherty is set to receive $604,500. The technical sleight of hand in renewing him as they did is noteworthy in its apparent intent. It is not new. The contract renewal was only doable only because the system of player compensation allows for it in Major League Baseball.

The outrage over how Flaherty was treated and the rules that let it happen does not mimic the indentured servitude under which players performed before Curt Flood challenged the longstanding reserve clause by refusing to accept a trade saying he was not property to be moved against his will; before Catfish Hunter became the first free agent due to a contract technicality; and before Dave McNally and Andy Messersmith refused to sign contracts and were subsequently ruled by an arbitrator to be free agents serving as a precursor of what was to come. It is, however, a clear indicator of the inevitable labor strife for the upcoming CBA.

The players themselves allowed for this to happen. Arbitration eligibility does not come for three years; free agency for six. Young players were long subjected to the whims of baseball management and constrained by the rules that were ripe for exploitation. With the CBA set to expire at the end of 2021, labor strife appears unavoidable.

There was a certain naïveté in the players’ position for the CBA in seeking minor concessions like extra days off for the All-Star break, easier travel schedules and other negligible perks while compromising their early-career earning power. They allowed owners endless room to hire whiz kids whose main skill is to find loopholes and maximize their ability to squeeze the most juice from a player’s career at the cheapest price. This is how players were suddenly sent to the minors without sufficient justification simply to save an extra year of team control by sacrificing a couple of weeks of having them on the roster to start the season.

Kris Bryant’s grievance for the Chicago Cubs demoting him after a spring training in which he batted .425 with 9 home runs was decided in the Cubs’ favor, but the tidal wave is pushing the barrier to its limits. The wall will come down…or the owners will open it for their better interests.

Currently, the players remain at the mercy of the teams. With Flaherty and the Cardinals, the question as to whether this will doom the relationship is irrelevant. If he pitches well and remains healthy, the Cardinals will take care of him financially. They might make amends sooner than later by giving him a guaranteed contract through his arbitration years and first couple of years of free agency. The renewal does not necessarily mean that the relationship is destroyed beyond repair just as Flaherty refusing to sign it was not akin to a holdout. Jacob deGrom refused to sign his renewal contract with the New York Mets. It was a symbolic gesture that meant nothing. Eventually, the Mets paid him.

It is easily forgotten that the best and highest-paid player in the game, Mike Trout, was once angry with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim for renewing his 2013 contract for $510,000 the year after he won the Rookie of the Year, was runner-up for the Most Valuable Player Award, won a Silver Slugger and was an All-Star being compared favorably to Mickey Mantle – all at age 20. The sides buried the hatchet and the Angels opened the vault. Trout is set to spend the rest of his career in Anaheim, working under a $426.5 million contract through 2030.

The perception that the Cardinals are bullying the young player under the pretense of organizational policy masks the reality that every team tries to manipulate their finances and the salaries of young players as much as possible. Some are more ruthless about it than others as the Cubs were with Bryant. With the CBA in flux, teams are also in a rush to sign their young players to long-term contract extensions before they need to. The Chicago White Sox have been aggressive toward this end with Yoan Moncada, Eloy Jimenez and Luis Robert. The Atlanta Braves signed Ozzie Albies to a 7-year, $35 million that was decried for how much he supposedly shortchanged himself.

Are there solutions to this problem? It is impossible to tell a team that it cannot demote a player when it has a right to do so. The club does not need a reason to do it. Still, baseball has always been a sport where statistics are used to judge players. They are a fundamental way in which players are paid, especially in the arbitration process and, increasingly, during free agency. Since this is the case, perhaps a statistical formula could be used to determine a player’s rights to earlier arbitration and free agency.

Flaherty, for example, could parlay his 2019 season into having an automatic statistical kicker (formula to be determined by people who create such things) that will shave a commensurate number of years off his team control because of that performance.

What are teams going to do? Tell the player to play worse? Send him down because he’s been too good at the highest level in the game?

Teams are not reluctant to use statistics of all kinds to determine how a player should be valued, so why shouldn’t the player benefit from those metrics to get closer to big money by playing well long before he would otherwise capitalize on it to the maximum?

This is just one example that would likely be more agreeable to the owners than simply giving the players arbitration earlier than they get it now while doing nothing other than accruing the necessary service time independent of how he plays.

Player anger at this treatment is cosmetic and a means to an end. They know what the owners are doing and can do nothing about it but hope for a better agreement once the new CBA is completed. That agreement will undoubtedly focus on service time calculation and manipulation, arbitration-eligibility and how long before players can become free agents.

A sticking point is how younger players are at teams’ mercy in their formative years in the majors. Under the current system, the teams can look at the players, shrug, and ask, “What are you gonna do about it?” The answer is nothing…until the next CBA negotiation, when they have the chance to do something to address these issues and close loopholes they left open wide enough for several armored cars, loaded with cash.

Uber to Resume Autonomous Car Trials in San Francisco

After a woman was hit and killed by a self-driving Uber vehicle in Arizona in 2018, the program was halted. At the time it seemed that all hopes for self-driving cars were crushed, but now Uber has announced that they are re-launching trials, this time in California’s San Francisco. The testing has been ongoing on the east coast, but the west is back in. There are safety features involved, the car isn’t left entirely to its own devices as there is a “backup driver” positioned behind the wheel just in case.

Read more about this story here

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Colleges Cancel In-Person Classes and Move Online Due to COVID-19 Concerns

As the numbers of those affected by coronavirus increase in the United States, colleges and universities are scrambling to figure out how to best respond. College campuses are dense populations and as such are at higher risks for outbreaks, so some are enforcing preventative measures. Amherst College, NYU and Ohio State are two that have cancelled all face-to-face classes, using their online resources to maintain education without exposing the students and professors to each other. The current plan is for a reevaluation on March 30th to decide if these measures will be continued or if the virus scare has declined enough to allow safe campus interactions.

Read more about Amherst College’s closing here

Read more about the Ohio State closing here

Read more about the closing of NYU here

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How the Gaming Industry is Also Being Hit by the Coronavirus (COVID-19)

Coronavirus (or COVID-19) is a disease that has a lot of people talking. Its spread has quickly taken the world and media by storm and put many plans for a multitude of events, product launches, and more in jeopardy. The gaming industry has been no different. Many gadgets are produced in or around China, and with many factories being completely shut down while the Chinese government tries to contain the virus, the rest of the world will feel the ripple effects.

The next generation of home consoles (the Xbox Series X and PlayStation) are set to launch this holiday season, and even though there’s no current announcement that they will be delayed, there are mounting questions from the community about their production. Aside from that, here is how the Coronavirus is affecting the video game industry.

Delays

While the PS5 and Xbox Series X have yet to be delayed, the TurboGrafx-16 mini has not been so lucky. The retro console remake was due to release March 19th but has since been postponed “until further notice.” Nintendo Switch and Oculus Quest production have taken a hit as well, with both products potentially being harder to find here soon. This is disappointing, especially if you want an Oculus Quest as that item is already challenging to find.

So far, the TuTurboGrafx-16 Is the only console to be affected by Coronavirus, but games have had more cases. The Nintendo Switch port of The Outer Worlds has received a delay to allow the team to work on it more time since their office remained closed for some time, according to publisher Private Division.

The Outer Worlds Switch port might be the only game we know delayed by Coronavirus so far, but PGS: Berlin, the PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds esports event scheduled for April, has also received a delay to protect esport fans, players, and staff. As of this writing, this is the only esports event affected by Coronavirus.

One interesting effect of Coronavirus in the world is the reemergence of mobile game Plague Inc. This game has you create sickness and adapt and evolve it to both infect and eradicate the human race before scientists can develop a cure. During the Coronavirus’ climb to social media prominence, this 2012 game made a big comeback. So much so, that developer Ndemic Creations had to remind people that the game did not accurately portray how sicknesses are spread throughout the world. Recently, China banned the game from being sold on Apple’s iOS store.

Conferences

The most affected area in the gaming industry has easily been conferences and events. The biggest scare with Coronavirus is spreading it (or catching it) by traveling, so it makes sense that so many events that would see a large number of people in a condensed area would either need to be delayed or canceled.

The first big event affected was the Game Developers Conference. GDC is usually a time where tons of the industry’s most prominent companies will meet and talk about their craft. It is also a significant time for independent developers to build up attention for their games or potentially strike a publishing deal. However, following Sony, Kojima Productions, and more announcing they would not be attending, the conference was postponed until sometime this summer hopefully.

Image result for south by southwest

For the first time in 34 years, the South by Southwest festival in Austin, TX, will be canceled. The event usually adheres more to arts and movies, but video games have begun popping up during the event. Companies, including Twitter, Facebook, and Remedy Games, had already pulled out of the event.

Eve Fanfest was canceled after developers CCP announced they realized it was “a necessary step to take.”

TwitchCon Amsterdam was set to take place in May but was canceled to protect any attendees or staff.

Minecraft Festival has been delayed into 2021 to allow planners a better chance to book a fun experience for attendees.

As of this writing, both E3 and Gamescom are expecting to happen on time and as planned, but that could change in the coming months. Both events are said to be monitoring the situation closely.

While E3 has not been postponed or canceled yet, merchandise and event production company Iam8bit resigned from the event with “mixed feelings,” but no reason was given, so this could not be linked to Coronavirus.

How companies are adapting

As stated above, the biggest concern with Coronavirus is spreading or catching it while traveling. The following are steps game companies taking to prevent that from happening.

Destiny 2 developer Bungie has told all employees to work remotely until they feel the office is safe to open again. The Season of the Worth on March 10th and Trials of Osiris on March 13th are expected to release on time still.

Both Twitter and Facebook have canceled any non-essential travel for employees.

Microsoft has encouraged any employees in the Seattle and San Francisco area to work from home. Also, any other employees who potentially could have been in contact with someone who has Coronavirus or might be ill themselves should work remotely.

What is next?

xbox ps5

As with any illnesses, we kind of has to wait and see what else happens with the gaming industry with Coronavirus. Expect more events to either be canceled or postponed. E3 might be planning to occur on time, but California has declared a state of emergency. If it comes down to it, the event could be postponed or canceled without the ESA’s say on the matter. Gamescom happens later in the year, so it might depend on how the situation looks this spring and summer before we know what is happening there.

As for the PS5 and Xbox Series X, all eyes will be focused on that situation. Console productions mainly happen in China. According to Daniel Ahmad, senior analyst at video game market research firm Niko Partners, nearly 90% of consoles imported to the United States were made there. With factories shutting down across the country and no end in sight as of yet, it is tough to know what the console releases will look like. Do they sell with short supply? Do they delay into 2021? It is impossible to know until we know more about the situation or find some resolution.

Regardless, Coronavirus has made a significant impact on the gaming industry, and there may be more to come.

Uber and Lyft Being Pushed to Provide Sick Days For Workers

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More and more Ride-share drivers are stopping their usual driving hours as the threat of the coronavirus increases. Drivers are reportedly wiping down their cars with disinfectant between riders and wearing masks and gloves during rides. More and more report that they aren’t taking rides from airports, and that they are considering stopping taking routes altogether. This is, of course, a decrease in income for them, which is concerning to some. Including Senator Warner (D-VA). Per Senator Warner, “[An] option would be to pay workers their regular average pay independent of whether they are able to meet their average hours worked during this time.”

Read more on the story here

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Common Allergy Medication Found to Cause Mental Health Issues

You may have heard of singulair, also known as montelukast. It is one of the most common allergy medications given to children, but it can be used in adults as well. The FDA has just added a new black box label to the popular allergy drug for “mental health issues.” Per the official statement, “The incidence of neuro-psychiatric events associated with montelukast is unknown, but some reports are serious, and many patients and health care professionals are not fully aware of these risks.” There will be more studies done to determine the actual incidence, but for now, be aware of this new development.

Read more here

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Doctor in Melbourne with COVID-19 Symptoms Kept Seeing Patients

Health officials in Victoria, Australia are attempting to contact about 70 patients in Melbourne. Their doctor flew from San Francisco to Australia with a runny nose and cold symptoms. He continued to treat patients throughout the week, but was diagnosed with the coronavirus the following weekend. There are concerns that he contracted the virus on the flight from the USA, and others on this flight are asked to come forward and be tested. All of the office staff and the patients who have been contacted have placed themselves in at home quarantine.

Read more on the story here

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Harvey Weinstein Moved To Rikers Island

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After the trial in New York City, Harvey Weinstein was set to go to jail immediately. This did not occur, as he was rushed to the hospital for heart palpitations and chest pain. He reportedly underwent heart surgery and stayed in the hospital for a week. He is now on his way to an infirmary unit in the notorious Rikers Island prison in New York City. Per a source at the prison, the infirmary is more like a regular prison unit than a hospital. Weinstein is set to be tried in Los Angeles later this year.

Read more on the story here

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Revisiting the Christian Yelich Trade From Miami to Milwaukee

As the Milwaukee Brewers and star outfielder Christian Yelich are completing a long-term contract extension that will likely keep him with the club for at least the prime years of his career and a few years beyond that, the trade that brought him to Milwaukee in the first place is looking better and better.

Yelich’s former team, the Miami Marlins, were in the middle of their housecleaning under the new ownership of Bruce Sherman and Derek Jeter when they traded him, Giancarlo Stanton, Dee Gordon and Marcell Ozuna, all for prospects.

At the time, there was a debate as to which of the two biggest stars – Yelich and Stanton – would yield more on the trade market. Both are tremendous talents. However, with the team-friendly contract he’d signed with the Marlins and his general durability, Yelich was clearly a superior option even if he was costlier in terms of prospects. With Stanton, the only thing a team needed to be willing to do was to take that $325 million pallet of anvils through 2027. Prior to the new contract with the Brewers, Yelich was guaranteed $49.57 million through 2021 with a $15 million club option and $1.25 million buyout for 2022.

With Yelich blossoming from an excellent player into an outright superstar with consecutive seasons in which he won the Most Valuable Player in 2018 and was the runner-up in 2019, the Brewers chose to lock him up.

The trade itself does not appear to be costly now given what Yelich has provided them, but the Brewers surrendered a chunk of their system to complete the deal. To Miami, they sent three top-100 prospects in Lewis Brinson, Isan Diaz and Monte Harrison along with an alluring arm in Jordan Yamamoto. Brinson is running out of chances to prove he can hit big league pitching, but Diaz looks like a future star. Harrison could end up replacing Brinson as the Marlins’ center fielder of the future.

Yelich boosted his production from an .800 OPS in five years in Miami to 1.046 and the previously mentioned hardware in his two years in Milwaukee. He has justified the cost and then some. Certainly, he was helped by moving from a home ballpark with friendlier dimensions in Miller Park vs. the cavernous Marlins Park.

The Philadelphia Phillies and Atlanta Braves were two known suitors for Yelich at the time he was traded to Milwaukee. There were others. The Yankees ended up with Stanton and undoubtedly regret it. They have no one to blame other than themselves. They had the prospects to get Yelich had they taken that route, but they allowed themselves to essentially be forced into taking Stanton because there was a marketing ploy to combine Stanton and Aaron Judge in the same lineup.

Yelich might not have had the glamour of Stanton, but he was and is a more useful player. Stanton steered the deal to pinstripes when he refused trades to both the St. Louis Cardinals and the San Francisco Giants, basically telling Jeter it was the Yankees or nothing. At the time, Jeter was mocked for supposedly helping the Yankees; that a diabolical plan to turn the Yankees back into a dynastic powerhouse including him taking over the Marlins and sending them Stanton for nothing. In retrospect, he got unintentional(?) vengeance against Brian Cashman for his contentious final free agent contract negotiation with the Yankees in which the GM told Jeter to leave if he didn’t like the offer.

The Marlins did quite well in both trades. For Stanton, they received two good prospects in Jorge Guzman and Jose Devers, some veteran production in Starlin Castro, and cleared that horrendous contract.

The Yankees did not need Stanton. Yelich has been ahead of Stanton in every conceivable context. This is not hindsight given the comparisons of the players’ two seasons after leaving Miami. It was known at the time that Yelich was the true prize and that has proven to be so. Even as he signs a long-term contract extension for $215 million, it’s $110 million less than the full freight of Stanton’s deal.

The argument could be made that the Brewers were under no pressure to give him a contract extension now. Still, owner Mark Attanasio is generous with his players, treats them well and wants to win despite mid-market constraints. The uncertainty of the upcoming collective bargaining agreement negotiations and how it will impact just about everything involved with the game is not a small concern. An understated factor could be that the Brewers would prefer to add Yelich to their organization’s Mount Rushmore with Robin Yount and Paul Molitor instead of current team home run leader Ryan Braun, whose reputation is still suffering from his PED suspension and his series of lies about it. Braun’s contract is up at the end of 2020 with a mutual option for 2021. Though Braun is still a Brewer, it’s Yelich’s team now.

The Brewers made certain Yelich is theirs basically for the rest of his career by going beyond the team-friendly contract and tearing up the club option for 2022. It all started with that trade. It was expensive, but it was worth it.

Medical Screener at LAX Had Coronavirus for Weeks Before Being Tested

Per an internal email, and now a public statement, the Los Angeles Airport has disclosed that one of their contracted medical screeners has tested positive for the coronavirus. He last worked on February 21st, and is currently under self-imposed home quarantine. His immediate family is under observation as well. He has mild symptoms and has not needed any external medical care. He became symptomatic one week after the day he last worked and was diagnosed the following weekend.

Read more on the story here

Click here to see the latest press conference from the Governor of California and the California Department of Health

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