Lord_Byron wrote:NWLB wrote:
Not trying to dump on the hope he stays in Cleveland, but again, its numbers. More money to play, more fans, etc. The wider world just isn't going to buy the idea that leaving Cleveland is somehow a great sin. I don't know if I've ever heard of anybody talk about "small market franchise" fans before. And for most of them, who aren't Cleveland fan, it is a none issue. Sponsors would love the fact he moves to a market where he is easily more promotable. As for Flipper, well, do we really have to explain him?
You most certainly are trying to "dump on the hope that he stays in Cleveland". Otherwise, you wouldn't fill your posts with non-sequitur arguments:
More money to play? -- He can get more by staying in Cleveland
More fans? In the arena-- hardly. More in the population, of another city, yes. But he'll hardly receive the beatification he gets in Cleveland.
Never heard of fans of Pittsburgh Pirates, Kansas City Royals, Minnesota Twins, etc? Never heard those fans complain about revenues and free agents? Do a google search on "Twins Joe Mauer" to get an example of small-market hometown athlete.
More promotable? For whom, "Nobody Beats the Wiz"? He won't be more famous than he is now no matter where he plays. He's already a worldwide brand.
I'll stand by my thought that he and his people are not going to put the Cleveland fans through the agony of a TV show to say he's going somewhere else. He's self absorbed, but I don't think he's cruel.
OK, so you think I'm dumping on Cleveland for stating what I see as the reality. Whatever.
I'll be more blunt. Right or wrong, I think you have a lot of marketing types that figure LBJ is worth more to companies, if he is endorsing their products while playing in the biggest city in America, than playing in a town in fly-over country. I think it is naive to say he can't do better as a national brand by playing in what is a vastly larger, more wealthy, and bluntly more cosmopolitan region as a New York, Chicago, or Miami. The raw secondary PR he can gain from being seen and appearing around New York City would be huge compared to anything Cleveland can muster.
As for the TV show, that is a simple difference of view. I don't think you book an hour to say "I'm staying in....Cleveland." That would be like "waste an hour saying nothing is changing." I'm sure most of that hour will be talking heads talking to "experts" about how this changes a team, the league, etc. And I'm sure ESPN is far more a willing partner in the farce than is being said. They know its a drama they can sell ads for.
It isn't "dumping" on Cleveland to argue about what are basic truths here. It is a nice town, lots of great suburbs. More culture than all of NW Ohio could muster for sure. But in the pecking order of such things, it isn't in the same circle as Chicago or New York.
I'm not about to come to AZZ, being a good BGSU grad, knowing full well that the majority here are either from the Cleveland area or sympathetic to it, and "dump" on the town. Not being big on pro sports in general, maybe if anything, I'm just not buying into the "hope" folks have in this case.