Baltimore Orioles Owners Demand Even More Unnecessary Taxpayer Money
Apparently $600 million to improve a very nice stadium isn’t enough.
Apparently $600 million to improve a very nice stadium isn’t enough.
But it didn't matter, as Nevada lawmakers approved a $600 million handout to the team.
Why are so many filmgoers and politicians eager to prop up baseball's boondoggles?
Iván Prieto didn’t board the flight back to the communist island on Monday.
Does he want to limit government, or is he just out to win at all costs?
Is there a single movie more tied up with lousy government policy than Field of Dreams?
Plus: Why one pitcher wants the MLB to stop COVID testing, how shipping industry protectionism is slowing aid to Ukraine, and more...
White player suspended for calling black player "Jackie"; many journalists conclude that the player (and Yankees fans!) are racist.
The economic benefits are a home run that never came, and never should have been expected.
Opening Day and a bad New York Times op-ed are timely reminders that much of what ails professional baseball is the intrusion of government.
And why stopping the subsidies can help bring it back.
Taxpayers already spend millions to build minor league ballparks. Sen. Richard Blumenthal thinks they should financially support the teams, too.
A reshuffling and reduction of Major League Baseball's feeder system means spending taxpayer money on stadiums looks even more foolish than it was before.
Jim Bouton pulled back the curtain on the MLB and changed the perception of sports forever.
Baseball teams are finding unusual ways to make up for lost revenue.
Some parents with valuable skills will find some way to transmit those skills to their children, and some children will find ways to learn them from parents.
Playing baseball in the uncanny valley
A new documentary chronicles the defeat of a grassroots protest to halt the Texas Rangers' subsidized stadium deal.
But then, those stadiums weren't likely to bring the growth the cities wanted in the first place.
Plus: A majority of Americans support policing reforms, say goodbye to Aunt Jemima and Uncle Ben, and more....
Why are so many people in Washington DC walking around wearing Walgreens gear all of a sudden?
Administration appears to value hardline Cuba stance over ballplayer safety.
Across the country, minor league teams are exploiting civic enthusiasm for small town sports.
Harper considered signing with two California-based teams, but he would have had to pay millions more to the taxman.
The stadium never turned a profit and the team skipped town when local officials decided to start charging rent.
The postseason no longer features baseball at its best.
Congress kneecapped minor league ballplayers' lawsuit with last week's omnibus bill. Even if that was the right thing to do, the way it was done is wrong.
Is Edgar Martinez the Gary Johnson of baseball? No, but his inevitable election to Cooperstown can teach us something useful about politics.
A new study shines a light on public health protection at America's stadiums.
Loria is determined to squeeze every last dollar out of any fan foolish enough to believe his promises.
A Red Sox fan's bigoted comment about a singer's rendition of the national anthem prompts a police investigation.
The Cuban defector and Chicago White Sox star's bizarre tale is indicative of how ridiculous immigration policy can be.
And how baseball can explain complicated pension math.
Sarasota-area officials want to hand over tens of millions for a spring training facility without letting taxpayers have a say.
80 percent of Chicago aldermen blew off the annual ethics board hearing after it ruled they had to buy tickets on the open market like everybody else.
Maybe it should, but that's not how government works.
The father-to-be was one of three killed in a late-night boating accident.
Disastrous financial dealings and flirtations with fascism set the stage for his planned run for the presidency.
Freedom of expression and a tolerance for ideas that might offend are American ideals worth fighting for.
Neighboring businesses don't want the competition.
Voters supported funding parks, but not a billionaire's ballpark.
One of baseball's weirdest players ever wants to be chief executive of America's crunchiest state.
The centerpiece of Hartford's $400 million development misses another deadline.
Small-town Southern taxpayers subsidize minor league ballparks for baseball's worst team.