Ned Colletti Jr. talks the business of college sports, the economic impact of sports on local communities, the health and well-being of athletes, the role of athletes in politics and society, and more.
Transcript:
Very pleased to partner today with the
Sports Management Program of the school
of kinesiology and the baseball team of
the University of Michigan in having this
conversation about the role and
impact of sports in an American society
in many respects I think we're overdue to
have a conversation about sports and for
that matter baseball at the ford school
it comes up a lot in conversation here.
Both the particulars the latest ups and
downs of the tigers and so forth but
also links to larger issues
of public policy and
it seems to me the last time we have
had a Ford school event that had a deep
baseball focus to it was in a very
early moment in the life of
the Ford school in this building some
of you recall in the year of 2007
after the passing of Ned Graham like
the 1st dean of the school as many of
you know Ned was a distinguished economist
was a model scholar an exemplary citizen
who used his work as a social scientist to
advance the public good in many areas of
public policy that included an extended
term on the Federal Reserve Board
he chaired a commission to look
at air safety after $911.00
worked on issues like housing
school reform Social Security.
And then was also a great baseball fan and
one thing he was particularly proud
of his serving as the research
director the staff director
on the economic study commission for
Major League Baseball in the 1990 S..
Professor Carette you were here for
Ned's memorial service I want
to ask you to revisit it but
was striking on that day when the faculty
the staff and the students were here and
fall and we talked a lot about Ned but
baseball just punctuated the conversation.
And I'll never remember I'll never
forget the very end of the service where
we all stood as a forward
school community and for
the 1st I think the last time in my career
sang a song it was Take Me Out to the bog
was not a dry eye in the house I'm not
going to ask anyone to sing today but
this is a day we're not only sports is
back but baseball is back in the Ford
school and to think about that and
all the senses of that term I thought for
some time certainly during the time
I've been directing close up that.
This is an issue we really should
explore and show why I enjoin but
I wasn't quite sure how to do it and
then on the evening of October 26th 2016
I was doing something a great many of you
were doing and certainly if you're like me
your from the Chicago area were doing and
that is watching Game 6 of the greatest
National League Championship Series of all
time involving Yes the Los Angeles Dodgers
but also the Chicago Cubs and
an interesting clip or
didn't bring moment came up on
the screen that we found for you to see.
So.
Look you can use.
As a gentle nature of.
The finger to hang the 1st one.
To hold the light the light
the sun was going on but.
It.
Was never going to close to my whole
soul is it stronger here let me look
closer is a lot Well look there's an
article in the Ganges River with a tough
sun one morning light is on
fire was well good father and
mother gave the World Series
of the talk right now and
said they were going with long
legs it was good next time.
Friend List it really
is where one lives and.
Listening he moves this year
Collishaw Seeger Chunder a Greek
salad just years ago as you know we.
Love.
To.
See what you see on the list for the.
God Here's what's on the front.
Of the list of what we're going to fund.
It.
Thank you God.
So upon watching that I
knew he should bring.
It wasn't Chris Bryant it wasn't Clayton
Kershaw it was Uncle Frank's nephew and
for me part of the attraction was
I actually met Uncle Frank once
I met his brother that's Dad once because
I used to work for net collecting
actually signed to one year contracts for
that and I wish I could say they were for
we met in the early arena for
me anyway of sports journalism
in suburban Chicago Ned Colletti
has had a remarkable career trajectory and
much of this is now reflected in a really
terrific book called The Big Chair
it's a lot of books on baseball so
interesting piece and take on his life
his observations and in a moment we're
going to talk about that book but
also his broader reflections on the World
us for what to say one thing you know
I have stood behind this lectern many many
times and introduced a great great many
people none who have ever been my boss
number no one who I've ever known for
over 30 some years and someone I had sat
in the same room with until just a few
hours ago after over 25 years.
Or ever you go in the world of
sport this man has an extraordinary
reputation I truly truly wish we could
somehow engage a conversation between
the 2 nets crammer Clytie that
have a lot to talk about but
I'm really really glad that we are joined
today by Ned Colletti and please
join me in welcoming him to this campus as
we begin a conversation about sport and
society up of our.
These are they fired.
So much has been written about baseball
by players by managers.
Different journalists but one of the
things that's striking about this net and
it's think it's true for other
professional franchises is that for all of
your colleagues who have been in the role
of general manager in this new territory
why do you think that is and what tell us
about the vantage point that you tried to
bring as a general manager the give us
a little different view on professional
sport than any of the other books that are
out there well I I love the G.M. job and
the G.M. job and anybody who plays fantasy
sports you know you are kind your own G.M.
a little bit different in Venice
you land that is real life and
I suddenly have a lot of time because
a G.M. job will take about 18 hours
of you that pretty much over the year
pretty much every year that you do.
And I needed a way to spend my time and
I just thought you know what it's be good
for me to get a disciplined work and
write down some of the things I had seen
some of the things I had traversed some of
the challenges I had gone through so
I overcame some I didn't and
some of the celebrations and
some of the people I've met and
I didn't write it to publish I wrote
it just to kind of get it out of them.
And one thing led to another and
I am not going to Random House and
they end up liking it and buying it and
publishing it but
I think I wanted to give a view that is a.
Rare view I think fantasy
sports has giving everybody
a chance to move their team around and
to be an app position which
many people try to get to but
I thought I would take it a.
Respecting that you also on the show
the picture of the reality of
how the personalities of the ownerships
how so many different things affect
the game and affect people inside
the game and people outside the game and
people who follow it get that that's what
I try to do I try to also pay homage to my
parents who were simple people who
if they were alive today they would
be as I am the some extent shocked that
I'm sitting at the University of Michigan
you know talking about baseball and
that I'm here today it's been a very
humble I'm very humbled to tell you
it's been an amazing career and
life that I've been able to have through
the blessings of God has been amazing
so you do in many ways explore
the realities of baseball.
I want to talk a little bit about the
future of the care there are several years
recently that I thought baseball
was really on a rebound on a roll
moving forward and really constructive
force poster Arts Post lots of others.
Especially as professional football
the National Football League deeply
struggle with concerns about the health
and well being of athletes and
concussions other controversies
was baseball going to rebound if
not to become the pure national pastime of
the dominant one much more significant.
And yet after another season
of games of extreme length
late starts that make it impossible for
school kids to ever see post-season play
Tera downs that take franchises
out of competition by early June
this idea of constantly changing pitchers
and adjustments intriguing at one level.
Is adding to the length of the game and
time is baseball blowing
an opportunity to really move back
to the center of American attention
I think that baseball is trying to
do too difficult things at once
I think they're trying to maintain
the tradition of the sport but
they're also trying to keep pace
with the ways of the world.
Life is much faster than it
was 10203040 years ago and
I don't I think patients is much thinner
I think also that the opportunities
people have to spend their time to
spend their disposable income is far
Vess are than it was I think baseball
struggles I think it struggles
to so maybe at this point I'm almost
find its niche in all of this.
Game time job or 3 hours for
the 1st time in the history of the sports
you have more strikeouts and it's
attendance went down a bit this year again
maybe 5 in the last 6 years it's dipped
not as much as the past year people at the
headquarters will tell you as to whether.
Maybe the weather might also be the length
of game might also be it's either
a strikeout a walk or a homerun it may
be a lot of young people are going
to something else and figuring out
where they want to spend their time and
what sport they want to play baseball one
of the few sports you cannot necessarily
practice on your own if you love
basketball you can go and find a hoop and
you can shoot all day long you will know
who baseball is not built like that and
also the ride to the big leagues
is like none other sport
you have a great university here with
a very famous football team that
when the players get drafted here they're
not going to the minor leagues for 5 or
there is an I.T.V. right Monday night T.V.
So I think baseball fights a lot of
issues that in a different period of time
were probably easier to overcome and I
think now is a time that I'm not sure that
they're blowing the opportunity as much
as to try to keep pace with society and
what about the role of analytics and
strategy versus other variables you talk
a lot about this question in the book and
if I understand it correctly when
you move back from Philadelphia and
energy occur in journalism basically
to deal with the family health issues
that the ultimately the death of your dad.
You worked into what would now be called
an earlier area of kind of sabermetrics
what the Chicago cops did you are you ran
the numbers you put those together and
yet you always in the book talk
a lot about having to go back and
forth between what
the numbers tell you and
other factors what what can you tell us
our view today is like an old time skull
unit somebody who will look at a player
and make a decision based on seeing
them play in finding out who they are
versus looking at the analytics and making
a decision that way 1st off I think that
the media will put you in one category or
another I don't think anybody does one
category or the other I think they should
say as a leader you're always looking for
as much information as possible but
as you just said ironically I began my
career my career started to take off in
a positive direction because of my use
of what would today be prehistoric
analytics it was before computers
it was before companies that would
would look into different spread charts
and and different ways pitchers pitch and
spin rates of launch angles and
example Ozzy's I kept track by hand
of a lot of different things runners in
scoring position of the how hitters in
a concerted pitchers so
I was always respectful but
if I had to sort it out it's tough for
me to take the human
being of the uniform and
not value that I think the analytics can
help you with some strategy from time
to time I think can be overdone I think
get yourself in trouble as a team
I think how you manage in the postseason
with Haven't starting pitchers go for
a couple of minutes regular season you
would need so many players to pull that
off you couldn't do it and the team that
actually won the World Series I think
used to starting pitching pretty much as
dominantly as they could possibly use so
I do think that it is different I
think the analytics is the resume.
I think anybody who has ever had to
hire anybody or has been hired by
anybody if all you needed to do was
look at a resume to hire somebody or
while you had to do to get a job was sent
a resume and I never talk to anybody
I think both cases are rare I think
the resume gets interesting resume able
as a supervisor will entice you to call
somebody in the talk to somebody and
get to know where their strengths
are where their weaknesses are where their
vulnerabilities were there where they
could really help impact the company or
the people around the to
do that on a piece of paper
like to turn to business and
sport issues and we live in an era where
to secure new investment new manufacturing
plants what have you state and
local governments will compete and invest
in some cases extraordinary amounts of
money was constant putting nearly
$5000000000.00 into a package to lure
a Foxconn development in
Racine County Detroit joining a great
many communities in the aggressive
pursuit through all kinds of tax and
other kinds of incentives to draw one
of the new Amazon headquarters and
on it goes but this also spoofed
us into the area of sport
stadia drawing franchise
retaining franchises and
with it common questions of net
value that a franchise presents
to a community and from a public policy
standpoint how far a state or local
government should go we're not that far
from the Little Caesars arena in Detroit
hundreds of millions of dollars
invested not to create a cross state
relocation of a franchise but to bring the
Detroit Pistons from suburban Auburn Hills
back downtown into Detroit
to keep the Red Wings there.
The initial understanding
was that the support and
subsidies from local governments
would run about $200000000.00 but
as the project kept going up we are now
pushing into the zone of about 350000000
dollars and
stadium that's an intriguing stadium but
has some challenges because
the 2 teams are performing so
poorly There's a now a need to spend a few
$1000000.00 to take out all the red seats
because there are people filling in
those seats and looks bad on T.V.
How do you think about these kinds of
issues having been in the business of
a professional sports franchise what
professional sports realistically should
expect state and local governments to do
to draw them in or provide facilities for
them to play in the case of baseball
$81.00 games a year or the N.F.L. 8 or
a tremendous question I think it's a very.
It contains many answers and difficult
answers I think sometimes at the pens and
the era you're in and I think the era of
that's just my opinion the era were in.
As a as I left the G.M.
chair a few years ago I've been able to
kind of slow my mind down and
look more globally at what's going on and
how the world is and again this is my
opinion I think that you see many and
I've traveled this land for decades I've
seen many inner cities crumble I've seen
homeless everywhere I've
seen school systems fracture
they see young people and
unsure of what's coming next and
how to get there and
I think I would have to if I was in a role
to have to make that type of
decision I think I'd struggle to say
let's spend hundreds of millions of
dollars out of what a facility that.
If you will use those that have its
benefits no doubt will the owner
of that franchise be able to sell their
team at some point in time instead of for.
$20000000.00 which is the team that I
started with the Cubs had just been sold
for $20000001.00 day perhaps to
Ricketts family who who bought it for
$850000000.00 maybe one day
they'll sell it for 3000000000
they happen to be a privately owned
baseball stadium but when I see
the areas in this in this country in the
world that and again just in my opinion.
Of should be of great value
education school systems
infrastructure and
hundreds of millions of dollars are going
into a facility that not everybody will
use or everybody will be entertained and
still pay for the right to be entertained
and no doubt they'll be entertained may or
may not be it I find that to
be a question that needs great
scrutiny to be able to continue down that
path I just it concerns me that that's
that's the choices people make
another area involving money and
sport involves athlete compensation
you spend a lot of time
in the book talking about what it's like
to deal with agents like Scott Boras and
others deal with players how do you
assess value it's interesting to note
that Boras has just said he's going to get
a $400000000.00 contract for Bryce Harper
the athletes I see on a more regular
basis are not professional athletes but
they're student athletes and one of the
things that struck me during my time on
this campus is the extraordinary
sacrifices they make and
the enormous amounts of time they
put into their work as athletes.
And it strikes me over the years that I
hear from athletes more and more about
so-called voluntary practices travel
commitments special meetings and
even in cases where a season
is maybe a few months
it's a year around commitment and so
I think of the Bryce Harper as perhaps
signing contracts for $400000000.00
The inevitable question is raised
how do we treat student athletes
when we are asking them to try to pack in
a full academic experience during their
years of eligibility while performing
at a very very very high level and
year round activity how do we think about
those issues how do we properly compensate
those athletes thoughts about that
side of the game since you've been so
heavily involved in recruiting players who
either come directly out of high school or
an equivalent experience or
the college level it is a.
It is a red hot topic and
it's been one for years and
I teach at Pepperdine University in
Malibu for the last couple of seasons and
we have division one programs there but
we don't have 105000 people watching.
Them and I think it's a it's a very
it's a very difficult issue to manage.
Because I think I have applets to
play in front of their parents and
their friends in a Division one and
their workload is the same I have tennis
players that are not in season or
miss after classes because they're on 2 or
they're trying.
To get better at their sport and
in a word do you draw the line and
if you do decide to compensate athletes
who are you compensated are you
compensating just your big division one
programs and in the sports that generate
great revenue while the people who don't
necessarily generate great revenue but
have as much time and
balance of life that they need to to learn
as those that are in sports or
to produce the gravity and who do you pay
the a page just the name players
we're going to pay the often hard or
the 12th man on the basketball
team you know I think it's.
It is such a big question and I and I see
it from a few different sides all the time
and I get it and I think you know
a football player the 1st prosperous
university that they have a a great
effect on the bottom line
you know if you take the players out
of the stadium who shows up you know
if you do if you don't have a chance
to play it is at a facility of great
note do you have a career in the N.F.L.
You know there's a there's such a give and
take to it but I think if I can wife
who are the things I struggled with and
Charlie in my life is balance and
figuring out what the right
balance is and I think that that's
that's one of these questions.
I have student athletes of Pepperdine
that crushed the vision one volleyball
champions but they're playing in front
of mom and dad and some friends.
Cut them out to cut out the programs of
the school that don't draw in a word or
draw the line and I think a tiny solution
perhaps would give those athletes that
are in revenue producing sports somebody
wanting months to use their like this for
a game or for a teacher or for something
might that they're that good yeah they
should be definitely compensated for
that without ruining their eligibility but
I think the rest of it it gets
to be a very dicey situation and
I I don't know did I don't know that it
would be as pure as people would make it
out to be there I think that would give
them a CD of who's getting paid and
how much they're getting paid will not
clean up the college game as far as any
teams that may be cheating and
maybe paying players under the table or
whatever I just think it's
just expounds a problem and
moves it to another level I think it's
one of the great issues that are.
Affecting.
Sports in America and
I don't have an answer for
I have a solution for
I just I cringe when I think about it and
I don't think it's balanced
I don't think it's fair but
I don't necessarily have
the magic answer to it as well.
Not there's a magic answer to this one but
I'll still pose the question
one thing that really struck
struck me about the book
is the frequency with which
you discuss the physical and
mental health of professional
athletes particularly in baseball so
on the one hand we have an era
of more trainers nutritionists
strength coaches mental health experts
on Entourage that I assume was not.
Available to players in decades gone
by and yet you talk about a rate and
intensity and frequency of injury
including measurement in time on the day
disabled list the moves in what would
seem to be the exact opposite direction
now within this issue are questions
that are raised by agents
potential parents who is acting in
the best interests of the athlete but
on the one hand we might assume the
discussion of the health and well being
of athletes is going to be primarily
focused on issues like say football and
concussions tell us about the health
physical and mental well being of baseball
players these days well in a professional
sport it's difficult to play it at that
level it takes a lot of dedication
a lot of time a lot of sacrifice
the baseball says and I spoke at the end
of a speak to the baseball team members of
it this afternoon and you know I get in
the stand what they're up against and
baseball particularly there's no
way to full season there's no quote
Cinderella teams that make it to the Fall
Classic or make it into the postseason so
the grind is their teams have taken
great steps as you point out to assure
mental health and physical conditioning
when I 1st started there was one trainer
major league team prior to that there
was one person who was the trainer and
also the travel coordinator there were
one in the set and players would play
day in day out there were less jobs the
money was not as lucrative all the money
in professional sports has always been
higher than that in other professions.
As people try to protect their investments
and their players stabs grew deeper and
deeper and deeper into the psychological
piece of it into the conditioning piece
of it into the rehabilitation piece of it
far different than it's ever been you have
name orthopedic surgeons that take
clientele from all over the country
that will fly coast to coast
to have their knee looked at.
So it's drastically changed and that that
baseball in particular would have so
many players on the disabled
list year after year after year
to me speaks to so many things that.
Are maybe the softening of
the approach not that you would
push somebody to a limit that they
couldn't sustain or put up with but
to have those numbers that I quote
in the book have them rise so
dramatically perhaps like
a lot of things in life
in baseball it was a shock against you.
If you went on that the civil
list I began my career begging
players to go on of the sable
this because they were I finished
my career begging players to stay off
the disabled list because they were.
And they just needed the break and
they needed the time off or
if they were a if you only had so
many innings in your arm is a pitcher and
you could figure out a way to
have 50 last a year does that add
over 4 years 200 innings to your career
which might mean another $20000000.00.
You know it's a fine players it
will play one hurt and some do but
many don't and many in my opinion
don't play when they're not heard
I think it's become an easy way to do
it a player in a club policy years ago
again it's balance not saying it was right
years ago but a player who will go one
of the several list years ago
would be scorned by this team.
Now it's not their big deal
people are going on it every day
you can watch a mill being
that worker here S.P.N. or
anything that's got a lot of baseball news
on it and their bottom line will scroll
during the baseball season count
the days count the days and
any 3 days count the days you don't
see some name come across they're the one
on the sable list and they count the days
that it's not somebody a prominence
that is going on the civil list.
It's a $1000000000.00 industry
multibillion dollar industry and
probably a 1000000000 of it a spine and
people who are playing a particular day
so again it's a changing of culture
such a inching of what is acceptable.
Was a right to be the way it was in the
past where people played I know you guys
are play through busted me caps
doubly collapsed on the field
not saying that's right either but
somewhere in there there's a balance and
I think we've shifted into an area
that it's OK not to play but
you will get paid if you're
good you will get paid
player makes $18000000.00 in
the big leagues the lot of them
today today was in seasons on
$100000.00 data it's a pretty good day.
That's YOUR they have their cable bill on
their refrigerator without the stamp with
a magnet on the electric bill with
a date on there where they don't
have enough money to a checking account to
put the bill in the mail I guess in that.
So when we 1st met in the Chicago area
the sport names were figures like
Ernie Banks Ron Santo Billy
Williams All Hall of Famers
then and now I have no idea
what their politics were
they may well have found ways to
give back to their community but
they were public figures essentially
because of what they did on the field it's
a very interesting question that always
emerges in sports but as we kind of move
beyond that model or even the model of
Michael Jordan really really concerned or
cautious in that case about damaging
possible investments and the like
we're now in an era where names
emerge like column Caprona
and other figures in one case someone
who may have lost ability to work
in professional sport because
they took a political position
what as you see going forward
is the appropriate role of
high visibility professional
athletes on the public stage
what should we expect what should we
encourage what should we call for
them to do in these roles I think it's
unclear what to expect from I think it's.
Anybody have access to him that
you know right now it's only do we
have a look up at Le Bron James and
how many would have followers he's got
$42000000.00.
It's more more than you and me combined
it's that's that's about a half and
half a 1000000 more than that but
it is about $42000000.00 more the blood
but you think of the impact
the athlete has.
People think.
And that is happiness I think social media
has changed the way people look at so
many different aspects of life right or
wrong it's.
An education is such value
information is of such value
but the source of it
is also of great value
or maybe not and
I do think that the world is so different.
And bad things have been going around
since Adam and Eve but it seems
like today perhaps because of social media
and all and things of that nature it is so
much faster and so much more probably you
know I don't you know I can remember.
I think John Smith and.
I made the names wrong Carlos and
Smith in the Olympics in Mexico City
in the 60 raising their fist for
for equal rights and
black in the black world you know and
I remember things like that I mean
they stood out in my mind that this was
a a sign of and years went by I remember
cashless player who became a Hama Ali and
wouldn't go to Vietnam and
stood up for his right but these are like
decades apart these things were.
And now it's it's obviously more prevalent
and you know the the the benefit of it
is that the social issues that need
to be brought to the fore can and
the value of that is immense
when a sports figure does it and
it's for the good of a community
the community the world community amen
because it's got huge breach the Bron
James can probably influence more people
almost anybody in this country
probably top 10 who plays basketball.
But he's got he's got a stance and
a platform that provides him
with a not only a platform but I also
think it was sponsibility that would and
would meld with with having
the opportunity to reach that many people
and I think that it's worth the world
is gone and I do think it's
in this again nothing to do it with James
and now as a Laker in the way I have
a chance to see more regularly than I do
when it was it the Cavs or the heat but
I think and this is not him but I think
that we have to be careful with and
we have to be wise with were we catch
our information and what we believe and
what we decide to follow and
I think that is probably again
nothing to do with Le Bron James but
just the world itself social media
can change the course of history
without any fact and
I'm not sure that's good but
I know this so when we met we used
to do this whole fashion thing
called File newspaper stories and
have a lot of time to develop it but
there's usually a 2 or 3 day period
between papers you could think of through
nothing like what we're talking about
now and say more about your experience
in dealing with social media which I
know from your experience you've seen it
used in very vicious and on constructive
ways but perhaps also in constructive ways
say more about the role of social
media and baseball both by players but
basically taking over the traditional role
of journalism yet it happened so fast
you know of obviously I'm on the back not
alive but I can remember going to Florida
to see my grandparents and
I couldn't get a cup score till
the next day in the newspaper
there were almost done playing the next
game before I got the score Dyleski Now
you can get pitch by pitch you can watch
a game on your phone right here right now.
Totally different and I think that.
In the right way as it has great
positive value in my last years or
social media the started to become more
and more popular was used more and more so
we would bring people in the spring
training experts and teaching
social media and the pros and the cons
of the pluses of the minuses of it and
we would show a video for 3 or
or maybe they were in
a bar clown around and
somebody took a movie of them on their
phone and sent them worldwide and
we would show 3 or 4 minutes of this and
I have 6070 players in this
room some minor league players in the
measure league roster to 40 man roster and
they would be laughing hysterically that
the left wing of what their peers in other
sports and other teams had done on social
media thinking how stupid they were and
how how embarrassing it would be for
them and their family and their team and
their coaches and their teammates
then the last $3040.00 seconds
we would show our own guys in the room
went from the greatest comedian
who could ever perform lighten
up a room to complete silence
so I'm sure they're still teaching that
I'm sure they're still going through it
because the media used to
be as you as you alluded to
some people had trouble with the media
because the media wouldn't get out
the story that they wanted out wouldn't
tell who the true character of
the player was and they get agitated and
they'd stop talking to the media or
social media has allowed players and
anybody to really tell their own story.
And some of them they probably wish there
was the right to tell them their story
from years ago than today because
it's it's not necessary flattery
it's really flattering and
I've been grafting players for decades and
the advent of Facebook and
Instagram and Twitter and a few others
I would have our scouts as we got nearer
the draft check their social media
because if you think I'm going to draft
an 18 year old kid that at 17 years old is
putting up a video of him getting
hammered at some some bar
in somebodies backyard smokin some grass
and and drinkin some Jack Daniels and
taking his clothes off and acting like
you think I'm going to draft a kid and
Pam a couple 1000000 I don't
think I want to do that and
they want to do that so
it's there is a good evening
in life there's a good there's a bad
there's a positive and there's a negative.
You know a try to get the players we're
playing for us to understand that this
isn't going away this
isn't going to go away and
you better be wise in how you use it
it can become a tremendous benefit for
you in your career or
that can be the last thing
anybody remembers or
the only thing anybody has
technology also expands
the ability to do something that used to
be difficult that's betting on games.
That's true professionally critically
true as we move into college territory
how does the possibility of betting
at an instant on an at bat or
on the next pitching change or
you name it change the game
this one I may have the toughest time
with just from a social position.
I think it's going to change.
Sports dramatically I think it.
I think it tells me we're the quest for
more finance
is at a furious pace I think it
will jeopardize some parts of the sport.
And I think when you think about
some sports think the N.B.A.
because you're going to
be able to sit this close
if you've got money on that game and
somebody is at their free throw line and
you've maybe you've had too much
to drink maybe you haven't and
something goes haywire to your
pulp your personal interest and
you know out of the right character of
the right personality what happens.
In the I'm sad to see that this
isn't a good it's just an opinion
because I think it.
I think it changes I think
it changes where we go
I think it changes
the sports innocent now but
is it there's a change where we go
I think it changes where we go and.
I'm sad I'm more a new
thing I'm kind of sad.
And saddened by that you're going to
be able to legally but on a sporting
event that you can attend the probably
sit in the front row on your phone and
some point in time and
see what's going on and bet the next play
I think it being illegal
in most places except for
the Vadra I'm not sure about a lot of
city but I know that it was the sole
place where you could do that without a
professional team until hockey a year ago
is still had scandal even a point
shaving scandal basketball.
You bet an official in the N.B.A.
from that mistake and
that's what it was a little so
now you're going to make it legal and
you're not going to have any problem.
Too many factors involved are made
to not have any problem or
think that you're not going to have any
problem you have too many people involved
there's an old saying that
money is the root of all evil.
There are good and
when I asked one question but
I also want to note that we
want to give you an opportunity
to raise questions in a few moments and
so when we finish this last
question will be an opportunity for
you to raise your hand be called upon and
we will get microphones to you to
pose that question the final thought
here and actually reflects some things
you're turning to next in your writing
I often say to my students one of
the hardest things to do in public policy
is to do something well through political
action that works in the short term but
alas over a longer stretch of
time conversation we often have
in these halls is one of the really great
things we can do through government and
political action and
maintain that across the changes and
political leadership hard to do and
hard to do with any field
in sports so competitive so
many teams so many players so
many folks wanting to get to the top
to sustain performance since forte for
more than a short period of
time flukey season in a championship and
to do that at
a high level of performance
with a high level of integrity
has to be staggeringly difficult and
I know you've begun to think about this
question of excellence not just in who
gets the championship next year but
how you mean tain or sustain that over
a period of time it's taking you into new
areas and arenas though I don't know much
of the particulars how do you think about
sustained excellence in an area like
athletics I think it's still hard.
And I think the.
I think it gets harder and I'm I'm
studying those that have
been able to do it and
when I look at the things that I have
seen and probably 40 years now of
being intimately involved in
sports from one end over another
it's hard to play it's hard
to play at this level and
I could name $100.00 players that I
signed or that I intially acquired
that started off kind of in a humble
place I sang kids in Latin America
that their father may have made a dollar
a month cutting down sugar cane who was
I've seen.
Work hard be hungry fight through so
much versus.
Get to the highest level of a school or
get paid and
pretty much shut it down
Congar is not a bad thing
hunger for those that are for
all is that but I'm looking.
Because there are some players that
no matter what their bank accounts or
what their lifestyle looks like or
the number of houses cars or
exotic vacations they can take still play
it like it's the last day of their career
and they refuse to give in they refuse to
give up and they refuse to be satisfied
I'm pretty sure Kobe Bryant and L.A. of
somebody challenge him of note to a game
of horse with not a nickel on the line
would try to kick this guy's head.
And.
My study is really on those who
are like that we can like or
dislike the New England Patriots
you know they
took the air out of the ball they put
too much air in a ball that a coach and
a scout in the seats
doubting whatever you know.
I'm not condoning cheating but
in a look at their franchise of
the last 1718 years of have one owner one
coach and one quarterback players come and
go they want a lot of games and
they do that L.A.
Lakers for
Kareem all the way up through Colby when
a lot of championships the Boston Celtics
won a lot of championships baseball
the Yankees for a long time
hockey the Montreal Canadiens won 5 in
a row your crown is 140 How do you do that
how do you do that how do you do that
today when when it's so hard to play but
the money is so great and the disabled
list is so easy how do you do it
how do you do it and that's that's what
I'm that's what I'm looking into how do we
do it how do those do it no matter what
their make of it don't make any difference
they will compete to
the end they will try and
make something better
than it is always and
I think that list gets smaller as time
goes on I spend some time the summer.
Mention everybody one of them was probably
a dash to the fall here at Michigan
as a basketball coach in Indiana maybe
remember that I want to have to mention
his name but I also spent some time
with a Detroit hero Joe do moms.
What a couple titles supplier one of
the titles of general manager comes from
a small town of the easy an OK his
dead rigged up on a bicycle tire on
a post to get all the spokes and
I was his 1st festival I love Joe Dumars
and I talk to him all the time inside and
he is going to be part of the book because
he couldn't shut it down the points
are and that have been an executive
in the city for 14 years I think and
one another title and continues to drive
in that direction with everything he does
every time I see him is in
Beverly Hills So he's doing pretty good
thing continues to drive forward to
try and be as great as he can be and
I moderate that so much and I look for
people like that the young people I teach
I try to make sure that they understand
that they understand the value of it
they understand the difficulty in it and
they understand the changes
that they can make for
other people's good along the way
if they do thank you well
thank you let's give you a chance
to pose questions as well
we have mikes ready to go would
you like to call on folks and
they are that's true however
you want to do all right yes.
Sorry works for you sorry.
I'm hearing a somber tone as you reflect
on these many dilemma is whether
to professional sports or in college
sports What are you optimistic about life.
Life is great.
Maybe I'm a perfectionist you know maybe I
don't want to get to the point where it's
all about money and maybe it's
always always been about money but
I'm trying to maybe continue to have
a little bit of the purest part of it but.
You know a lot.
Of Life is great.
But I'm delighted that it's tremendous for
you I but
I really would like your
reflection on the sports world and
whether the course that you've described
is is inevitably downward I mean I was
absolutely surprised by your lecture to
hear somebody who is more somber than I am
he asked about what state of sports I
think for many of the reasons that would
that you know that you've described I
think the compromises that have been made
in university athletics the conflict of
interest between success on the field and
the academic mission of the university I
mean that's been sullied beyond belief
you know I come from the years in North
Carolina 20 years of a fake you know fake
classes to enable athletes
to be to be eligible and
the leadership at the universities you
know is accepting of it and the N.C.
double layer you know refuted in
the university said we made a typo in our
you know in our in our self reflection and
so I'm I'm you know I'm somber for
the I'm pessimistic for that reason I'm
pessimistic about professional sports
you know baseball as you've described to.
All of the super specialisation the
instant replays my God let's get rid of
the answer replays in every sport
I think to this is my lecture but
I think the answer replays
are linked to gambling right I mean
I think I think there is a need to
assure that the decision is correct
because a lot of people have a lot
of money on the line but but so
I'd like to hear what you're optimistic
about in the world of sports I mean
extraordinary athletes to be sure but
you know we're harming them as well.
I had thought about the gambling.
That.
The ensemble part is I think
it's a tremendous way to.
Participate and to compete and there's
all sorts of ways to compete the way
I found of the most gratifying to
me is to compete through ethics.
I think it teaches you a lot about
life that you teaches you a so much so
many less life lessons come out of sports
and I'm not sure which imitates which but
so much of life that I
have experienced the same
with a baseball team and
I don't mean to be that somber about it.
I do love it I hope it I hope
it can maintain the status
all sports that is a as it began
to become popular in the 1920 S.
and thirty's in this country
when the pression hit and
people found that as an outlet for
everything else that they were going
through I would love it to continue
to have that power to it but
I think it's a healthy power and as long
as long as your man some form of balance
I think it's got a chance to be that but
I guess my somberness or my my.
My concern is that there are days when
I don't think there is a balanced.
So if I run into that.
Question over here.
Out of Here in Michigan on the athletic
department we kind of have a saying like
the team the team the team and
we really emphasize like playing for
the team do you find that as
players move on to professional and
especially now and nowadays is
the salaries are getting bigger and
bigger that the focus is shifting towards
just being an individual playing for
money versus just
the passion of the game and
playing for you know the team and winning
when you are a very somber person and.
That's a great question and
I do think that the what you just laid out
is accurate in case I think players
are not necessarily attracted to their
teammates or their team as much as they
are to how much money they can make why.
I do think I've seen that more and
more and more it's a rarity
in the olden days it was a rarity to
have a player go to a different game
now the rarity is the player
staying with the team.
And I do think that sometimes it's how
much can you make I know players who have
told their agents It doesn't
matter were you place me so
long as I can get the most money so
I think it is part of I don't
think they will go and so
you have to get a 2nd part your
question is so worst of value point is
it in your bank statement or is it in
what you've accomplished as a team.
Regarding.
The pace of play in baseball what
what it what are they considering
doing well what are what's on
the table 1st speeding it up
I don't know everything that's on the
table I'm not in those meetings anymore.
But I think would speed it up would be
a strike zone there be a little bit
larger pitchers who could throw strikes.
At the grid speed it up then if you
had more activity and guys out and
not wait out Townson run pitch counts up
which leads your book down management
relates to your changing pitchers really
the so many different things if you had
better pitching guys who could throw
strikes it wouldn't have that much time to
figure it out that the put
the ball in play a little bit more
I think that would speed it up but I I
think it's also just the way the world is
if you were going to go to a movie and
they said this movie might be
the best movie I've ever seen one of
the best it's going to be a classic
movie when you say it was going to be 2
hours and 30 minutes if it was 2 hours and
it's a 10 minutes I'm not sure it's
the time a game that agitates people
I think it's the pace of the game.
I think if there's activity I think people
will watch it if it's 3 and a half hours
there's a lot of stand on Iran a lot of
walking around a lot of this conversation
I don't mean this I think that some people
start to look at their watch the Yankees
and the Red Sox used to be on E.S.P.N.
some then a baseball seemingly every week
and those games were never 3 hours long
there were 3 and a half 4 hours long but
they were exciting people would watch
him because it was a lot of activity so
I don't think it's the time at the end at
the in the bottom of a box score where
it says 3 hours and 18 minutes or 3 hours
and one minute I don't think that's what
people go up too much I think it's when
they when they don't see activity and
they see mom visits or
they see her stepping out of the box or
to see a pitcher to can command a fastball
so it's ball one ball to fall ball ball
on base color Bopanna I think that's
what drives people crazy.
This point about replays you know what
if you bring up an interesting point
about the replay of the gambling I had and
I hadn't really looked at it that way
I figured that it was really
a benefit to the fans in the stadium
because so many times that there was
a close play in baseball before replay.
It less or sitting up in a suite would
have television you just sit there go
would have been a tag of the not tag then
you missed the point it was would have
Fair Ball Foul Ball I don't know if we
thought at all My guess so your but
you went to the game and
you don't even know what really transpired
now at least you get to see
the replay does it take extra time
yeah it does take some expert and maybe
they can shorten it a little bit but and
I hadn't thought about your perspective
with the with the money on the line but
I do think it's better for the fans in
that way because they do get to see what
only goes at Matt Hall where those sit in
a suite with a television set can sit.
Thank you for coming today a question
concerning the Tigers when they play
the San Francisco Giants in that
World Series the Tigers a one of the best
pitching stance in baseball
that year in how come
none of the players the pitchers nobody
really volunteered to go to the bull pin
to secure that win when
the booking was struggling and
never quite understood how commencement
didn't say hey look we want to win this at
all costs so I know you contract me state
that you are a starting pitcher but
you know for the sake of
the team let's go to the bullpen.
Well had I been one of the Detroit Tigers
and I could probably give you the answer
but on that I don't know exactly I can
tell you a contract does not specify what
a player will do it doesn't
say you can only start or
you can only pitch of a Patrick and
only play 2nd base or only that
I think that a lot of times in
any sport we always don't know
what's really transpiring behind
the scenes and I don't know what specific
to your your question with that Siri that
remember the series very well I think
there was a guy named Pavel's and the ball
may have hit a homerun or 2 or maybe 3.
Happened at the.
But sometimes somebody is not available
sometimes of a manager war wait for
a different opportunity and
that opportunity never shows up and so
he's left with somebody in a spot
that he wishes he had somebody else
a lot of things that do happen that.
We're not aware of and
now you know there's probably different
things that went on the gym really
when manager Tim where was at the gym Well
I know Jimmy if that summer went into.
I may ask what the heck.
So but there's a lot of things that
happens when our work you know how can
this guy's not plan for a person so they
all went by we're seeing a 4th quarter we
don't know if he didn't feel well if you
like tweak the muscle if if is something
he shouldn't we you know there's the so
much we don't know that does go on and
then we try to do the best we can as
fans try to make sense of it all.
So before asked my question I
just wanted to say thank you for
taking time to speak with the city and
also for mentioning
what you feel your weakness was which is
something that we don't always hear and
that's something that we can
all learn from so thank you for
my question specifically release a player
contracts it's funny because last year
the Kansas City Royals were attacked from
both sides they were attacked because of
their presence contract up the dishes pay
more because they signed for too little
and they were stuck and they were attacked
for not signing Hosmer again because he
didn't even want to give him another
year of contract when it comes to those
dealings the negotiations what does that
tell you about a player's character and
we value the Nowadays in baseball and
other sports as well the players character
their ethics the person they are what does
that tell you when a player is not willing
to sang with you for that additional year
which they have all the right in the world
to not do they have that right they are in
that but as a general manager as somebody
running an organization what does
it tell you that the player and
their future in the organization if
they're not willing to go that extra year
or take $2000000.00 for example are they
part of your team already Yes and
she is looking for an extension Yes.
But in that case or not yeah well.
This might be old school you know but
it's.
I would always obviously talk to players
all the time to find out how they saw
how their mom worked what was going to
be important to them at the end and
if it's the extra year or
the extra money or
whatever it would it would
give me an indication as to.
What I want to do and sometimes you
don't necessarily want somebody
around no matter what walk of
life it is that it's all about
how much they can make doing something
we understand the value of it but
again it you know I always take a lot of
different things in the consideration of
making decisions on who I put on teams or
what I put my life and
you know it's a different a lot
of different things go into that
it's kind of the same someone is to say
matches a lot of things we don't know.
And a lot of things we don't know
about everybody involved and
we also sometimes don't know how much
information is being shared back and
forth that you do have somebody
in between sometimes as
information that is 100 percent pure and
clean and clear and sometimes it's should
so you're well from the ones.
Parlance fan club is very very
courageous to make you know.
A lot of people would say the.
Good man.
Over here is some show you get all
the time how do you think spaceball bust
pacifically I believe that baseball is
a regional problem you see in the N.B.A.
in the N.F.L. that there are areas like
Oklahoma City they have superstars
in these small market
areas where it is and
will be I'm sure you know you have
to go to New York City or L.A.
It's become a superstar and he's out with
much out of this year so how big do you
believe this problem is and how do you fix
this problem well I don't know that it's
the biggest problem as you think it might
be I mean the Detroit Tigers have a guy in
them could burrow that's a definite
superstar they had a pitcher here for
a long time they Verlander who would
pick as a probably a superstar.
I think the markets
are different I think when
the main difference I don't I don't
see is a superstar issue I see it as
a market size consideration how
many games they play in the N.B.A.
I'm going to play at home I'm going
to play Major League Baseball.
How many home.
So you have a difference right
there you know you have and
you know the salaries of baseball the
perils of baseball are far greater than
they are in any other sport in this
country you have more games and
you have you have a bigger
wheel to turn all the time so
if you're going to put a major league
franchise in a city my 1st question is
going to be from a business perspective
how many companies do we have
that are going to buy sweets with their
season ticket base going to be how we're
going to fill 80 suites not
$41.00 times a year but
$162.00 times a year are we going to do
that and how are we going to do it in
the summertime when people are out of
school out of occasion and traveling how
are we going to do that so I think Major
League Baseball has a tougher criteria and
a tough a bigger hurdle to go over there
or the side what city is good franchises
I don't I don't think every city could
support it the way other cities can.
With the firm's ID leaving for
the Giants Where do you see the future
of the Dodgers from office going and
do you personally think that the perceived
like overmanaging of your Freeman and
Dave Roberts will lead to a new direction
for the Dodgers or to think they'll stick
to the Course is actually well I don't
know if we really know how much managing
comes from up stairs and how much money
because of balances I think it's a gun
there's a lot of things that we we surmise
that we don't necessarily know I think
that you know their quest no doubt you
get the World Series 2 years in a row and
you don't win it if they're not winning
as this 1988 I mean that's painful
Nobody is trying to experiment with see
if this will work and if it doesn't so
what we made it you know I think that it's
the best intention of everybody to be able
to figure out how is the best way to do it
and they give us some things we don't know
that do go on inside a clubhouse and
set a dugout moment to moment I
think foreign Zite is here to do a great
job in San Francisco is a very smart guy
I've known him a few years it's got
tremendous tremendous thought process
way way out there and he's been around
good organizations that are around
organizations that have big payrolls
little payrolls and he knows how to manage
it I think he'll do 5 and you know what
he's also got a sense of humor and
I think sometimes in these jobs you've
got to have a sense of humor so
you're not always somber You
know you have a little bit
of a sense of humor to get you
through some of the days when
all you want to do would be so.
It's.
Time for 2 more questions over here.
Thank you for coming you talk about
both of you researching sustained
excellence and dynasties and also you
know seeing complacency when players
get big contracts and they stop working
as hard have you noticed or seen any link
between it being harder in there
might be with a lack of salary cap or
a increased payroll to sustain excellence
because of this increasing complacency or
is there another factor that you think
it's harder to sustain excellence in
majorly the major leagues.
Good question I think as I watch other
sports I think those with hard salary caps
had the toughest time sustaining
ourselves I mean huge hockey fan and
I watched the team I grew up following the
Chicago Blackhawks went 3 cups and 5 or
last year to probably have a difficult
time this year the spire or Hall of Fame
coach they can't go any further with their
finances they had to sign
the players they signed Kane today's
kid so you brought it there with the
Crawford So I think that is where it is
more difficult to do it I think and those
sports that do not have that the hard sell
he kept I think then it's really the poor
the persistence of the individual.
The young lady's point over there in
the early questioning I think that's where
they can get a little bit softer with
the worse it's going to happen but
to go home with 20000000 OK you know and
you know what a player ever met
that never in a 1000 years but
does it happen I sense it happens so
I think that when you have the cap and
makes it tougher to sustain that that may
be also why the New England Patriots kind
of stand out to me and the San Antonio
Spurs a little bit of late to stand out to
me that they're able to do this
with a ceiling on what they do and
when you change the characters
in the play every year and
you still have an award winning play
somebody wrote a pretty good play.
Final question.
So I will amend for 2 questions OK.
I think that's what's being
signaled please go right ahead.
OK so speaking to your.
Theme on balance I feel like especially
based both outside our cap you have.
An obligation from the front office to
you know handle the business
side of things but also.
Try and produce a team that
people want to watch so
I always wrestle with the idea of like
front offices and specifically tanking
and and I understand that like sometimes
especially when you're in a smaller market
like it's it might be your only way to
compete with the big payroll teams but
at the same point how do you feel that
Major League Baseball is kind of OK with
purposefully being bad for years and
years accumulating no one picks and
then you know hoping that you know
looking shore up enough like cheap free
agents to make a good you know post-season
push I think it's a perilous path.
I think it's I think you're running
a great risk as an organization by doing.
The most seasons long and so
if you're really telling people either
by what you've done or not done.
If you ever say a burble there but
you would not have to say
that you were really kind of shut down for
the next 3 or 4 years.
To do it because you have no guarantee
in 3 or 4 years it's going to be 0.
And so the teams that I see do that
there were 8 teams that lost 95 or
more games in baseball this year 3 of them
all in the American League last 100 or
more in NO I WAS WITH A comes along
to my favorite thing Rob We never
you know when I work with or even when
we struggle we were never like that and
I find that I find that a difficult
path to walk and continue to maintain.
A great fan base in
every market you're in.
They get stuff to tell
people come on watch us play
you know we're not we're hoping
we get the number one pick.
The good stuff to do the.
Number one pick a guarantee that you know
that the gets the biggest one of the you
know you brought the question of Barry
you know about where the sports are read
different things like that I find that to
be a very perilous path to be walking and
I would never ever work for a team
that the sight of the do it that way.
I don't have that much time
I've never had that much time.
To say you know.
I don't know the process will produce the
result there's no guarantee there's a lot
of teams that are going to quote tanks
that are worth their style tatty they've
been standing for 4 or 5 years they're
still tanking in the style trying to when
he won games the try to finish 51
of the trying to do it now I just
you know losing to losing to me was so
painful and one of the things
one of the things that the greatest G.M.'s
I've been around and we all agree that.
The wins don't feel as
good as the losses hurt so
to go through a year with
You know what with the talk
about stretching it up.
Now that I have it here interested.
And I think on any challenge anywhere but
there's one thing I need to take
on any challenge it's a chance.
You know one more quick question here
about contract signings which one was
what was the biggest one you
were ever involved with.
The work to didn't work.
Bogus what was Clayton Kershaw
The best one might have been Zack Greinke.
Who I signed for 6 years but
I gave him a chance to leave after 3 and
in those 3 he was 5115 I think
in the 2nd the area in the SO
YOUNG It may have been the best
I have a long list of the worst
to find them either over the hall or
on my tombstone.
Thank you very good.
On that cheery note.
And want to note that the conversation
actually can continue
out of the great hall where among other
things there will be books available for
purchase and signing but before we
close I want to thank everyone for
joining us on this afternoon or
how our particular knowledge the Norma
separates that body Roberts has put
forth to pull together this of that with
characteristic grace and
good cheer by particularly want to
add to that by asking you to join me
in thanking that Cody for coming and
spending some time with us and
sharing sharing his very thoughtful and
candid reflection I say so of course I
want to thank you I want to thank you for
having an interest I want to thank you for
coming out I want to echo of those
thoughts on Bonnie who made this save
us with as much as I love this guy would
have been here if she would make it easy.
But thank you and thank you for
cared about sport and thank you for
coming out here today and it's truly
an honor people say this all the time and
mean it it's an honor to be at
the campus of the universe in this
thank you thank you a.