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What economic slowdown?Posted Monday, November 24, 2008, at 2:15 PM
Have you seen some of the figures that are being thrown around for next
years contracts? Baseball, football, and all pro sports are telling that the contracts will be pretty much the same as they have been. I have been tightening my belt and so have most of my friends and family. It doesn't seem like the owners are. I guess they will just have to pass the costs on to us! I can't take my family to a professional baseball or football game, as it is. Are we that taken with professional sports that we will take out a loan just to go watch a game. Some of my best memories are of my family going to a Cincinnati Reds game and watching the "Big Red Machine". Johnny Bench, Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, Ken Griffey Sr., and Tony Perez. I got to see them at least 5 times a year and my parents would tell us not to eat at the house because we would eat at the game. WHAT! That would cost me a weeks wages now. I guess it still proves that the rich get richer even in tough economic times. Comments Showing most recent comments first [Show in chronological order instead] |
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I sat in the bleachers in old Busch Stadium on Grand Avenue in St. Louis and the ticket cost one dollar. Stan Musial and Ted Williams were the highest paid baseball players in 1958 and they made a stupendous salary of $100,000 annually.
A player who got winner's share check for the World Series in the fifties got about three or four thousand dollars. Major league baseball players used to have to work in the off season in order to make a living. They used to do what was called "barnstorming." A group of major leaguers would travel to small towns and play local teams in order to make a little spare change. I saw some of these games at Burnham Field when the "barnstormers" played the team sponsored by the cotton mill. The cotton mill team always had the best players in Dyer County because they would give them a job at the mill and they would practice on company time. The DCP Panthers were actually what was called a semi-pro baseball team. There are some old-timers around Dyersburg still alive who played on the Dyersburg Cotton Products Panthers in the forties.
It goes a lot deeper than sports, you should watch Zeitgeist: Addendum