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There was some speculation that the Nepo Baby would try to sell the team as soon as possible after the move to Las Vegas was approved. According to Bob Nightengale at USA Today, the move to Vegas was approved by the owners with one caveat - a "10-year flip tax" which will harshly penalise Fisher should he sell the team at any time before 2034. As part of the move to Vegas, the MLB waived the usual relocation fee (worth $300 million) but he will be taxed should he sell the team prior to 2034. If he sells the Athletics prior to 2028, he would be taxed 20% of the purchase price, which would be split between the other 29 owners. If he sells the Athletics in 2029, the tax is reduced to 10%. If he sells the Athletics between 2030-2033, the tax would reduce each year.

Glad the others instituted a measure like this so the cost would be closer to 1b if they tried to do the old property developer flip.
 
Eh, I would prefer that the Nepo Baby sells as quickly as possible so the amount of time he destroys this storied franchise is limited as much as possible. It's typical MLB owner shortsightedness. By imposing the tax on him selling, they're basically locking themselves in lockstep with the Nepo Baby for the next 5-6 years while underwriting his destruction of the roster. Seems arse backwards to me. Give him his move to Vegas and then wave goodbye to him as he sells to an owner more prepared to invest in the team, both onfield and off.
 
Eh, I would prefer that the Nepo Baby sells as quickly as possible so the amount of time he destroys this storied franchise is limited as much as possible. It's typical MLB owner shortsightedness. By imposing the tax on him selling, they're basically locking themselves in lockstep with the Nepo Baby for the next 5-6 years while underwriting his destruction of the roster. Seems arse backwards to me. Give him his move to Vegas and then wave goodbye to him as he sells to an owner more prepared to invest in the team, both onfield and off.
They're keen on not giving him the free ride without paying the relocation tax. If he wanted to flip, spend the cash
 

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Oakland Ballers are a new team playing in the independent leagues.

Reminds me a bit of some other grass roots teams that have formed in England after relocating or dissatisfaction, like AFC Wimbledon after they relocated to Milton Keynes.
Same colours, but that logo looks a bit wonky:
1701490487594.png
 
The A's managed to turn 100+ losses in two straight seasons into the sixth overall pick in the 2023 draft and the fourth overall pick in the 2024 draft, and no higher than the tenth overall pick in the 2025 draft, under the rules of the MLB draft. In the meantime, the Cincinnati Reds landed the second overall pick in the 2023 draft despite finishing two games outside the playoffs. GFY, Manfraud.
 
A lot of Dodgers fans in Las Vegas. I wonder how many will switch allegiance now to the Vegas Athletics?
At least Fisher will get his stadium sellouts when the Dodgers come to town!
 
A lot of Dodgers fans in Las Vegas. I wonder how many will switch allegiance now to the Vegas Athletics?
At least Fisher will get his stadium sellouts when the Dodgers come to town!
Last time I was in Vegas during summer it was 40 deg at midnight.
Tipping there’ll be some fatigue in the As players after a home stand.
 
A political action committee supported by the Nevada State Education Association's Strong Public Schools has filed a lawsuit against the State of Nevada and its governor, Joe Lombardo, seeking to overturn the law passed last US summer approving $380 million in public funding for the construction of a new ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip. Neither the Athletics nor the MLB are named as defendants. The suit alleges that the stadium funding law does not comply with the state constitution. Among the claims alleged is that the proposal required a super majority (two thirds of legislators in favour of the legislation) as opposed to a simple majority, which is the constitutional requirement in Nevada for bills creating or increasing public revenue.

The union had previously sought a referendum to allow voters to directly vote on the stadium deal. A judge rejected the proposal in November 2023, and that is the subject of an appeal.


 
Current 40 man roster nearing the start of Spring Training

PitchersJersey No.Bats/ThrowsHeightWeightDOB
Brady Basso78R/L6'2"2138 October 1997
Osvaldo Bido45R/R6'3"17518 October 1995
Paul Blackburn58R/R6'1"1964 December 1993
Joe Boyle35R/R6'7"24014 August 1999
Lucas Erceg70L/R6'2"2141 May 1995
Joey Estes68R/R6'2"1908 October 2001
Angel Felipe53R/R6'5"19030 August 1997
Trevor Gott17R/R5'11"18526 August 1992
Hogan Harris63R/L6'3"23026 December 1996
Zach Jackson61R/R6'4"23025 December 1994
Dany Jimenez56R/R6'1"18223 December 1993
Michael Kelly47R/R6'4"1856 September 1992
Adrian Martinez55R/R6'2"21510 December 1996
Luis Medina46R/R6'1"1753 May 1999
Mason Miller19R/R6'5"20024 August 1998
Kyle Muller39R/L6'7"2507 October 1997
Sean Newcomb16L/L6'5"25512 June 1993
Royber Salinas81R/R6'3"20510 April 2001
JP Sears38R/L5'11"18019 February 1996
Mitch Spence69R/R6'1"1856 May 1998
Ross Stripling36R/R6'1"21523 November 1989
Freddy Tarnok62R/R6'3"18524 November 1998
Ken Waldichuk64L/L6'4"2208 January 1998
Alex Wood57R/L6'4"21512 January 1991
CatchersNumberB/THeightWeightDOB
Shea Langeliers23R/R6'0"20518 November 1997
Tyler Soderstrom37L/R6'1"20024 November 2001
InfieldersNumberB/THeightWeightDOB
Nick Allen2R/R5'8"1668 October 1998
Jordan Diaz13R/R5'10"17513 August 2000
Aledmys Diaz6R/R6'1"1951 August 1990
Zack Gelof20R/R6'2"20519 October 1999
Darell Hernaiz48R/R5'11"1903 August 2001
Ryan Noda49L/L6'3"21730 March 1996
Abraham Toro31S/R6'0"22320 December 1996
OutfieldersNumberB/THeightWeightDOB
Miguel Andujar22R/R6'0"2112 March 1995
Lazaro Amentaros74R/R5'11"18222 May 1999
JJ Bleday33L/L6'2"20510 November 1997
Seth Brown15L/L6'1"22313 July 1992
Lawrence Butler22L/R6'3"21010 July 2000
Brent Rooker25R/R6'4"2251 November 1994
Esteury Ruiz1R/R6'0"16915 February 1999
 
A political action committee supported by the Nevada State Education Association's Strong Public Schools has filed a lawsuit against the State of Nevada and its governor, Joe Lombardo, seeking to overturn the law passed last US summer approving $380 million in public funding for the construction of a new ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip. Neither the Athletics nor the MLB are named as defendants. The suit alleges that the stadium funding law does not comply with the state constitution. Among the claims alleged is that the proposal required a super majority (two thirds of legislators in favour of the legislation) as opposed to a simple majority, which is the constitutional requirement in Nevada for bills creating or increasing public revenue.

The union had previously sought a referendum to allow voters to directly vote on the stadium deal. A judge rejected the proposal in November 2023, and that is the subject of an appeal.


These things never work 😔
 

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It has been reported that Oakland Athletics have set up a meeting with officials from the Oakland City Council regarding an extension to the lease over the Coliseum to enable the A's to remain in Oakland until the stadium in Las Vegas is constructed.



The A's are slated to move to Las Vegas in time for opening day of the 2028 season, but the current lease at the Coliseum expires at the end of the current season. The A's have spent much of the off-season looking at alternate options but it seems that those options may have fallen through and they have re-opened discussions with the City of Oakland about extending the lease for the short term.

Possibly at the heart of the matter is the fact that the A's receive $70 million per season in broadcast rights provided that they stay in the Bay Area.

John Fisher reportedly will not attend the meeting, but his right hand man, Dave Kaval, is slated to meet with the City.

The A's mayor, Sheng Thao, has previously said publicly that the City of Oakland would want to retain the rights to use the "Athletics" name and moniker and that Oakland be prioritised as a future expansion site as conditions to allowing the team to extend its lease at the Coliseum.
 
Oakland has a new play by play commentator with NBC Sports California (the local broadcaster for A's games) announcing that Jenny Cavnar has been named as the primary play-by-play announcer for live game coverage. For the past 12 years, Cavnar has been the backup announcer, pregame and postgame host and a reporter for regional TV coverage of the Colorado Rockies. Cavnar replaces long-time commentator Glen Kuiper, who was fired by NBC Sports California for uttering a racial epithet on-air during a broadcast in May 2023.

 
And the baseball pre-season is underway with pitchers and catchers reporting to Oakland's spring training site located in Mesa, Arizona. Even with the spectre of Oakland's relocation hanging over the club, there's still plenty of intrigue to sort through in spring training.

The A's have acquired two veteran pitchers during the pre-season (one via trade, the other through free agency) which should fortify the front end of the rotation, and it looks like that the A's will take LHP JP Sears, RHP Paul Blackburn, RHP Ross Stripling and LHP Alex Wood as the first four starters (order TBC) into the season. The fifth starter remains yet to be determined, and spring training could go some way of sorting out who steps up to take that role. Luis Medina is probably the front-runner at this stage, having made 17 starts last season for the A's, but he'll face competition from Joe Boyle, Freddy Tarnok, Joey Estes and Adrian Martinez. The A's opened the season with LHP Kyle Muller last year, but he struggled and was demoted to the bullpen. He's out of options and will need to secure a spot on the active roster or be exposed to waivers.

The A's also have a question mark over shortstop. Incumbent Nick Allen has an impressive glove but has a pool noodle for a bat, putting up just 55 wRC+ in over 300 plate appearances for the A's, which (to put it mildly) is not good enough. Allen is probably best suited to being a bench player at this stage. Aledmys Diaz is in the second year of his contract with the A's, and could play short at a pinch, but he is not good enough to stick at the position in the long-term, and he also needs to improve his production at the plate (which would likely be affected by having to learn a new position).

The A's protected Darell Hernaiz (acquired from the O's in a trade last season) from the Rule 5 draft, and he was very productive in the minors. Even accounting for the necessary adjustment to major league pitching, he probably represents an upgrade in production over Allen but would likely be a significant downgrade defensively.
 
Here's CBS Sports 2024 season preview for the A's. The last paragraph is excellent:
Athletics 2024 season preview: Projected lineup, rotation and any hope for a future, in Las Vegas or not

What would make for a successful season?
Real talk: A successful 2024 for the A's would be the Las Vegas plan falling apart and Fisher having to sell the team. Fisher is a stain on the sport and thoroughly unfit to be the steward of a historic franchise that has won the second-most World Series titles among American League teams. Shame on commissioner Rob Manfred and the other 29 owners for aiding and abetting what Fisher has done to the A's. Sell the team, John.
 
This could be the final nail in the coffin as far as Oakland and the Athletics goes:

They should change the name to the Sacramento A's of Oakland and Las Vegas.

Time to start to find a new team 😞.
 

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