MLB in Washington 'close to dying'


Recommended Posts

Dec. 15, 2004. 08:52 PM

MLB in Washington 'close to dying'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Washington's new baseball team shut down business and promotional operations indefinitely Wednesday as an unforeseen council vote left the deal to bring the Montreal Expos to the U.S. capital on the brink of collapse.

Major league baseball's September agreement to move the team to Washington called for a ballpark fully financed by government money, but the District of Columbia Council voted Tuesday to require private financing for at least half the cost.

A previously scheduled news conference to unveil new uniforms was called off and fans who bought tickets to watch the renamed Washington Nationals next season at RFK Stadium can get refunds, said Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief operating officer.

"Yes, I think baseball is now in jeopardy," Mayor Anthony A. Williams said.

Baseball will not resume talks with other cities until after Dec. 31, the deadline in the agreement for Washington to put a ballpark financing law in place.

"In the meantime, the club's baseball operations will proceed, but its business and promotional activities will cease until further notice," DuPuy said.

He did not address where the team would play its 2005 home schedule if the deal with Washington falls through. It remains unclear whether baseball would move the franchise to RFK Stadium on a temporary basis, remain at Montreal's Olympic Stadium or go to another city.

Williams signed the deal nearly three months ago, and publicly celebrated the return of major league baseball to Washington, which hasn't had a team since 1971.

"We had a deal. I believe the deal was broken, and the dream of 33 years is now once again close to dying," Williams said at a news conference Wednesday.

"I'm saddened that we can go so far in five years and step back so far in five minutes," he said.

Council Chair Linda W. Cropp proposed the amendment to require private financing, which was approved 10-3 after she threatened to withhold support from the overall package, which then passed on a 7-6 vote.

"I am not trying to kill the deal," Cropp said. "I'm putting some teeth in it because I'm really disappointed with what I got from major league baseball.''

The September agreement estimated the cost of building the ballpark and refurbishing RFK Stadium at $435 million (all funds US), but critics claimed it would cost far more. The proposal, as initially approved by the council Nov. 30, called for Washington to borrow up to $531 million to cover the cost.

Despite Tuesday's vote, Councilman Jack Evans, who supported Williams on the original financing plan, said that he was "very confident that we are going to be able to work through this and that we will have baseball here.''

Some cities that had lost out in the bidding for the team prepared to resume their efforts to lure the franchise.

"I don't think we've ever stopped," Norfolk, Va., group head Will Somerindyke Jr. said. "Whether we could get something done by next year, I think that's a stretch," he added. "It would be very, very tough.''

Groups from Portland, Ore., northern Virginia and Las Vegas also are among those seeking to attract a major league franchise.

Washington has lost teams twice before. The original Senators became the Minnesota Twins after the 1960 season and the expansion Senators transformed into the Texas Rangers following the 1971 season.

The Expos became the first major league team outside the United States when they started play in 1969, but attendance at Olympic Stadium slumped over the past decade and the franchise was bought by the other 29 teams before the 2002 season. In 2003 and 2004, some of the team's home games were played in Puerto Rico to raise revenue.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/257879-mlb-in-washington-close-to-dying/
Share on other sites

Dec. 22, 2004. 07:08 AM

Washington club back on track as stadium deal okayed

D.C. council vote seals Expos' move Nats `rounding third, heading for home'

DAVID NAKAMURA AND THOMAS HEATH

WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON?The Washington Nationals secured a home yesterday when a divided District of Columbia Council narrowly approved legislation that allows baseball to return to the U.S. capital after 33 years.

By a vote of 7-6, the council adopted a stadium package that contains several amendments to the original deal Mayor Anthony Williams struck with Major League Baseball in September. After three seasons at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, beginning in April, the former Montreal Expos are scheduled to move to a state-of-the-art ballpark in 2008.

The council's action came a day after a marathon negotiating session between Williams, council chair Linda Cropp and baseball officials, who found a middle ground between cost savings measures the council added last week and stadium funding guarantees sought by baseball officials.

The move punctuated weeks of debate among residents of Washington and its suburbs about the use of public money for a ballpark and officially returned baseball to Washington for the first time since the Senators left for Texas in 1971.

"Finally and at last, all of us have risen above the fray, and the Washington Nationals are rounding third and heading for home,'' Williams said at a news conference. "Isn't that great?''

Under the deal approved yesterday, a gross receipts tax on large businesses and a utilities tax on businesses and federal offices will fund part of the construction. The city will continue to search for private money to cover at least 50 per cent of the cost of the ballpark.

Also, the city and MLB will share the cost of insurance against cost overruns. And if the stadium does not open by March 2008, the city will be liable for $5.3 million (U.S.), one year's rent for RFK, compared with $19 million or more in the original deal.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Here's how to watch the Xbox Games Showcase today and what to expect by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The June games showcase week has been a packed one, with everything from major presentations like Sony and Summer Game Fest to indie-focused reveals coming in almost every day. Now, it's almost time for another big one, with Microsoft bringing its Xbox Games Showcase back later today. This is a double feature too, with a Gears of War E-Day deep dive also being attached to it. For anyone wanting to tune in online, the 2026 Xbox Games Showcase is kicking off at 10 AM PT | 1 PM ET | 6 PM BST | 7 PM CEST later today, June 7. The event will be available to watch on the official Xbox YouTube (4K 60FPS), Twitch, Facebook, Steam, Amazon Live, and other portals. Separate livestreams for American Sign Language and Audio Description will also be available. "This year marks 25 years of XBOX, and this Showcase is poised to be a true celebration, offering world premieres, new gameplay, fresh updates, and more for a swathe of projects we cannot wait to share," said Microsoft about this presentation. With a new CEO behind it that is pulling off some interesting moves, Xbox may have some surprises to reveal today. New looks at first-party games like Halo Campaign Evolved from Halo studios, Fable from Playground Games, InXile Entertainment's Clockwork Revolution, Mojang's Minecraft Dungeons II, and Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 from Infinity Ward are to be expected here. We may finally get to see the new Blade from Arcane Studios in action and a new Persona game from Atlus at the showcase too. Surprise announcements may also arrive from other Microsoft-owned studios like Bethesda, MachineGames, Ninja Theory, Obsidian, Rare, World's Edge, or Blizzard. Considering how every new release nowadays is staying away from November and December to avoid Grand Theft Auto VI's release, any launch dates Microsoft announces will probably skip those months as well. Once the Xbox Games Showcase ends, Microsoft will immediately kick off the Gears of War: E-Day Direct. This deep dive into the upcoming prequel from The Coalition should attach gameplay footage and perhaps a release window to the highly anticipated project.
    • People in the '50s and '60s had the same attitude, and we're still here over a half century later.
    • So after some fiddling I was able to get it to run at a pretty stable 30FPS. I'm slightly surprised about how much fiddling I had to do to get there though given what I thought was reasonable hardware: Processors: 16 × AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS w/ Radeon 780M Graphics Memory: 16 GiB of RAM Graphics Processor 1: AMD Radeon 780M Graphics Graphics Processor 2: AMD Radeon RX 7700S I think I could do it better if I use Linux rather than Windows, Windows RAM usage is stupid without stripping the system down. But once I got it working in a reasonable state, it was so awesome! I felt like a new Bond! If anyone has any advice to get things going a bit smoother FPS-wise, I'd appreciate it.
    • Something is rotten in the state of Denmark Australia
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Mark Spruce earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Collaborator
      conkir earned a badge
      Collaborator
    • Rising Star
      olavinto went up a rank
      Rising Star
    • One Month Later
      lamborghiniv10 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      lamborghiniv10 earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      482
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      256
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      74
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      70
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!