this will sound weird. Im laying in bed. with the trophy next me.#dreamcometrue.
This was a tweet posted by Mark Cuban earlier this morning. Can't say I blame the man for enjoying his (and the Mavericks') first ever championship. His Mavericks have come a long way since he bought the team back in 2000. In the 20 years before he bought the team, the Mavs won only 40% of their regular season games, with only 1 division championship in that period of time (which was followed by a quick 3-1 first round exit in 1986). Since Cuban took over, they are now winning close to 70% of their regular season games and have made the playoffs every year in his reign - including two Finals appearances. Before this year, they had been known as a regular season team who faded come May - including a rare upset to the #8th seed Golden State Warriors in 2007.
Around that time, the Tribune company was looking to sell the Cubs - a team that Cuban highly coveted. So much so, that Cuban was rumored to be the highest bidder for the team ($1.3 billion). However, baseball being the way it is (Selig and Reinsdorf being the guys with power), it wanted nothing to do with a younger new age owner that may look to shake up MLB's status quo. His bid was never really taken seriously even though he did enter the 2nd round of negotiations (The Ricketts family ended up with the winning bid). To say that the Ricketts' tenure of ownership has been rocky would be an understatement, especially with this insistence for public funding to rebuild Wrigley seemingly his focus over the product he has been putting on the field. To be fair, the bad deals made were done before him. But he has done nothing to inspire the loyal fan base, a base whose faith is starting to crumble.
I don't know how much better Cuban could have done with this roster. But I do know his track record with the Mavericks (and his other business ventures) has been nothing but successful. He would have provided hope for a franchise needing a non-traditional owner to improve its long-term chances of winning. Instead of their franchise being in the hands of such an owner, Cubs fans will have to hope that Ricketts can get his focus more on the team and less on a stadium financing deal.
If the Cubs organization hopes to light up some victory Cuban cigars celebrating a World Series title, it will have to do so without Cuban.
Until then, cheaper knock-offs will be smoked, and likely only in situations involving stress, not celebration.
I believe Reinsdorf actually lobbied to get Cuban into ownership of the Cubs. Saying that Cuban was a fully competent owner, seeing as Reinsdorf owns team in both leagues he would have a greater knowledge of how Cuban works.
ReplyDeleteOk, you may be right. I got this idea for writing the blog from a respected Cubs friend who mentioned Reinsdorf in with Selig's name as an owner who wouldn't want Cuban.
ReplyDeleteEither way, the Cubs missed out on a great owner. No doubt in my mind, he would have made the Cubs a better franchise all-around.
Oh, I concur. Class move when he was trying to buy them and sat in the bleachers with the fans. He is definitely "of the people". It won't be long until he owns a team. The Dodgers will go up soon, and the Mets. I say within 10 years he is a majority owner of an MLB franchise. Book it!
ReplyDeleteI must have misremembered. Everywhere I look shows that jerry disliked cuban. I went back after reading the article in the SunTimes today(which looks like it was stolen from this blog). My apologies.
ReplyDeleteI just read that too and was going to tell you (Steve L?) on FB about this.
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