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|Headline=NA Clubs Struggle to Meet Payroll
|Headline=NA Clubs Struggle to Meet Payroll
|Salience=2
|Salience=2
|Tags=Business of Baseball
|Tags=Business of Baseball,
|Location=Baltimore, MD,
|Location=Baltimore, MD,
|Country=United States
|Country=United States
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|Comment=<p>Richard Hershberger, "150 Years Ago Today," 9/8/2022:</p>
|Comment=<p>Richard Hershberger, "150 Years Ago Today," 9/8/2022:</p>
<p><span>"The officers of the Baltimore Club are working to raise funds to carry the club over the coming winter. This speaks volumes. The Baltimores were a good team. At this point their record is 29-13-1, putting them in second place behind Boston. The quality of the product on the field is not their problem. Yet they aren't breaking even, and have to scramble to raise funds to stay afloat.</span><br /><br /><span>I have had two great realizations about the early business of baseball. It dawned on me years ago that the later 1870s makes sense only in light of the Panic of 1873 and the depression that followed. But that is in the future. My more recent realization is that even apart from the general economy, they did not yet have a viable business model. Competition for players inevitably drove salaries up beyond the break-even point. The scramble to raise funds we see here is the rule, not the exception. This is why the churn rate was so high. Investors got tired of being tapped for more cash. Two or three years was about the limit for most clubs.</span><br /><br /><span>The creation of "organized baseball" was all about controlling costs, by which I mostly mean player salaries. This will take a while for them to figure out. The great breakthrough will be the reserve system, but that won't come until the 1879/1880 offseason."&nbsp;</span></p>
<p><span>"The officers of the Baltimore Club are working to raise funds to carry the club over the coming winter. This speaks volumes. The Baltimores were a good team. At this point their record is 29-13-1, putting them in second place behind Boston. The quality of the product on the field is not their problem. Yet they aren't breaking even, and have to scramble to raise funds to stay afloat.</span><br /><br /><span>I have had two great realizations about the early business of baseball. It dawned on me years ago that the later 1870s makes sense only in light of the Panic of 1873 and the depression that followed. But that is in the future. My more recent realization is that even apart from the general economy, they did not yet have a viable business model. Competition for players inevitably drove salaries up beyond the break-even point. The scramble to raise funds we see here is the rule, not the exception. This is why the churn rate was so high. Investors got tired of being tapped for more cash. Two or three years was about the limit for most clubs.</span><br /><br /><span>The creation of "organized baseball" was all about controlling costs, by which I mostly mean player salaries. This will take a while for them to figure out. The great breakthrough will be the reserve system, but that won't come until the 1879/1880 offseason."&nbsp;</span></p>
<p><span>See also Steve Colbert comment, in Supplemental Text (Below).</span></p>
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|Source Image=Baltimore Finances 1872. jpeg
|Source Image=Baltimore Finances 1872. jpeg
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<p><span class="rse6dlih"><span class="fxk3tzhb"><span class="gvxzyvdx aeinzg81 t7p7dqev gh25dzvf exr7barw b6ax4al1 gem102v4 ncib64c9 mrvwc6qr sx8pxkcf f597kf1v cpcgwwas f5mw3jnl szxhu1pg nfkogyam kkmhubc1 innypi6y pbevjfx6" dir="auto">&nbsp;</span></span></span></p>
<p><span class="rse6dlih"><a class="qi72231t nu7423ey n3hqoq4p r86q59rh b3qcqh3k fq87ekyn bdao358l fsf7x5fv rse6dlih s5oniofx m8h3af8h l7ghb35v kjdc1dyq kmwttqpk srn514ro oxkhqvkx rl78xhln nch0832m cr00lzj9 rn8ck1ys s3jn8y49 icdlwmnq jxuftiz4 cxfqmxzd" tabindex="0" href="https://www.facebook.com/steve.colbert.9216?comment_id=Y29tbWVudDo1MzIzNDYwNDM3NzA3OTczXzQwNTYwNDYxNTAyNzI0NQ%3D%3D&amp;__tn__=R*F"><span class="fxk3tzhb"><span class="gvxzyvdx aeinzg81 t7p7dqev gh25dzvf exr7barw b6ax4al1 gem102v4 ncib64c9 mrvwc6qr sx8pxkcf f597kf1v cpcgwwas f5mw3jnl szxhu1pg nfkogyam kkmhubc1 innypi6y pbevjfx6" dir="auto">Steve Colbert</span></span></a>, FB Comment, 9/8/2022:</span></p>
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<div class="m8h3af8h l7ghb35v kjdc1dyq kmwttqpk gh25dzvf">
<div dir="auto">Although the salaries would be the biggest expense, the clubs also had to consider travel and room and board expenses when going on the road. So when management had to set up their schedules, they also had a challenge of the order in which their&nbsp;opponents would be scheduled to be most cost effective. Since much of the schedules were not defined prior to the season, that meant trying to coordinate when their opponents would be in their respective cities was another thing. This obviously was another business challenge that would grow into a more definitive role for the traveling secretary, the cost of the club traveling. One of the challenges that led to the collapse of the Kekiongas of Fort Wayne in 1871 was that very issue. Not only did the Kekionga management not pay the players on time, many times they failed to pay for the travel, room and board of the players. The believed those were the responsibility of the players even when they failed to pay their monthly salaries.</div>
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Latest revision as of 09:05, 8 September 2022

Chronologies
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Prominent Milestones

Misc BB Firsts
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About the Chronology
Tom Altherr Dedication

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Most Aged

NA Clubs Struggle to Meet Payroll

Salience Noteworthy
Tags Business of Baseball
Location Baltimore, MD
City/State/Country: Baltimore, MD, United States
Game Base Ball
Age of Players Adult
Sources

 Baltimore American September 7, 1872.

Comment

Richard Hershberger, "150 Years Ago Today," 9/8/2022:

"The officers of the Baltimore Club are working to raise funds to carry the club over the coming winter. This speaks volumes. The Baltimores were a good team. At this point their record is 29-13-1, putting them in second place behind Boston. The quality of the product on the field is not their problem. Yet they aren't breaking even, and have to scramble to raise funds to stay afloat.

I have had two great realizations about the early business of baseball. It dawned on me years ago that the later 1870s makes sense only in light of the Panic of 1873 and the depression that followed. But that is in the future. My more recent realization is that even apart from the general economy, they did not yet have a viable business model. Competition for players inevitably drove salaries up beyond the break-even point. The scramble to raise funds we see here is the rule, not the exception. This is why the churn rate was so high. Investors got tired of being tapped for more cash. Two or three years was about the limit for most clubs.

The creation of "organized baseball" was all about controlling costs, by which I mostly mean player salaries. This will take a while for them to figure out. The great breakthrough will be the reserve system, but that won't come until the 1879/1880 offseason." 

See also Steve Colbert comment, in Supplemental Text (Below).

Edit with form to add a comment
Query Edit with form to add a query
Source Image
Baltimore Finances 1872. jpeg
Submitted by Richard Hershberger
Submission Note FB Posting, 8/9/2022



Comments

<comments voting="Plus" />


 

Steve Colbert, FB Comment, 9/8/2022:

Although the salaries would be the biggest expense, the clubs also had to consider travel and room and board expenses when going on the road. So when management had to set up their schedules, they also had a challenge of the order in which their opponents would be scheduled to be most cost effective. Since much of the schedules were not defined prior to the season, that meant trying to coordinate when their opponents would be in their respective cities was another thing. This obviously was another business challenge that would grow into a more definitive role for the traveling secretary, the cost of the club traveling. One of the challenges that led to the collapse of the Kekiongas of Fort Wayne in 1871 was that very issue. Not only did the Kekionga management not pay the players on time, many times they failed to pay for the travel, room and board of the players. The believed those were the responsibility of the players even when they failed to pay their monthly salaries.