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Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."
http://chicagofanatics.com/viewtopic.php?f=92&t=100430
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Author:  Hatchetman [ Mon May 23, 2016 8:45 am ]
Post subject:  Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Got any suggestions? I may be interested in switching my loyalties now that I know the White Sox are supported by tax dollars.

Author:  Terry's Peeps [ Mon May 23, 2016 8:54 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Image

Author:  bigfan [ Mon May 23, 2016 8:55 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Ted Cruz owns a baseball team?

Author:  Gloopan Kuratz [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:10 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Image

Author:  Peoria Matt [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:15 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

bigfan wrote:
Ted Cruz owns a baseball team?


Creepy how much they look alike.

Author:  Brick [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:17 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Hatchetman wrote:
Got any suggestions? I may be interested in switching my loyalties now that I know the White Sox are supported by tax dollars.
Ironically, the McCaskeys may be the best owners in sports in terms of being good.

But, it puts a pretty bad product on the field and puts them at a major disadvantage to most other teams in the league.

Author:  312player [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:30 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Hatchetman wrote:
Got any suggestions? I may be interested in switching my loyalties now that I know the White Sox are supported by tax dollars.
Ironically, the McCaskeys may be the best owners in sports in terms of being good.

But, it puts a pretty bad product on the field and puts them at a major disadvantage to most other teams in the league.





Huh? How so... I thought the Roonies were the big hearted NFL owners and they seem to do just fine with their on field product.

Author:  Hatchetman [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:36 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Please limit discussion to MLB. Thanks.

Author:  312player [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:39 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Okay... I'll go with Artie Moreno

Author:  Joe Orr Road Rod [ Mon May 23, 2016 10:47 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

I would go with Todd Ricketts. You know he must be hard-working to be as rich as he is in spite of his inability to mop a floor, park a car, or sell a hot dog.

Author:  donspiracy [ Mon May 23, 2016 1:58 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Go with the Detroit Tigers.

Author:  rogers park bryan [ Mon May 23, 2016 2:01 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Image

Author:  312player [ Mon May 23, 2016 2:09 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Moreno was born poor, self made and one of 12 kids from Arizona... I bet he's not donating millions to Super PACs and begging for public taxpayer $ while campaigning against it.

Author:  Gloopan Kuratz [ Mon May 23, 2016 3:10 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Image

Author:  Curious Hair [ Mon May 23, 2016 3:46 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Not a lot of good-guy owners in baseball. The Braves, Blue Jays, and Mariners are owned by corporations. The Dodgers are owned by a venture-capital firm. The Phillies and Giants are owned by groups of local businessmen whom no one gives much thought, and the owners of the Marlins, Mets, Royals, Cubs, and White Sox are among the biggest scoundrels in professional sports.

It might be, of all people, Peter Angelos:
http://www.mrdestructo.com/2011/11/man- ... learn.html

Quote:
There was a time, and it wasn't too long ago, that Peter Angelos was a great man. In many ways—ways perhaps more important than baseball—he still is.

He was born on the last Independence Day of the Roaring Twenties and grew up during the Depression. The son of Greek immigrants and a few years too young for the Second World War, he made his way through college and then the University of Baltimore Law School. He began his career as a trial lawyer in criminal defense, where he remained for a time; in 1961, he founded the Law Offices of Peter G. Angelos. Immediately his eye turned to Baltimore's labor unions; from the early 1960s through the 1980s, his firm represented Baltimore's steelworkers and longshoremen against company owners and the city itself. Then, in the 1980s, like just about every savvy activist attorney with an established private practice, he embraced the class action lawsuit.

Never forget that the reason Peter Angelos owns a baseball team in 2011 is because he helped make asbestos a household word in Maryland in the 1990s, when a series of suits on behalf of Baltimore workers were consolidated. When a Circuit Court jury ruled that manufacturers knew their product was a slow killer and had sold it to the city's manufacturing base anyway, Angelos not only became a rich man but a hero. He was the man whose firm represented unions and tradesmen, whose landmark litigation punished one of the most negligent and in many cases actively malevolent industries in the country.

Angelos didn't stop at asbestos: his firm later pursued class actions against tobacco companies, as well as pharmaceutical giants that knew their diet pills were dangerous. He was and remains a generous philanthropist, a staunch, lifelong contributor to the Democratic Party—both tremendous positives in the city of Baltimore—and by the mid-1990s, he was the owner of the Baltimore Orioles.

There's no need to unduly canonize Angelos; after all, these cases did make him wealthy. But in a country where many of the men and occasional women who own professional sports teams do so either from inheritances or their more-than-occasionally dubious careers in the world of finance, a man whose wealth has a legitimate background in social justice is something to be recognized and applauded. And when Angelos bought the team, he seemed precisely the sort of owner with the money and the interest to keep them relevant for years to come.


Only owner to oppose replacement players during the strike.

Author:  312player [ Mon May 23, 2016 4:29 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Lotta words but I didn't see you take any shots @ Arturo Moreno.

Author:  Curious Hair [ Mon May 23, 2016 5:27 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Arte Moreno lowered beer prices at Angel Stadium upon buying the team and ripped Albert Pujols from St. Louis. Okay, official good guy.

Author:  Edward Dickman [ Mon May 23, 2016 5:33 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Peoria Matt wrote:
bigfan wrote:
Ted Cruz owns a baseball team?


Creepy how much they look alike.


Same bad political thoughts too.

Author:  bigfan [ Mon May 23, 2016 7:31 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Image

Milwaukee

Author:  jimmypasta [ Tue May 24, 2016 5:55 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

This one wore a white hat and everything!

Also has one of the most popular recordings in history!



Image

Author:  Walt Williams Neck [ Tue May 24, 2016 6:50 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

jimmypasta wrote:
This one wore a white hat and everything!

Also has one of the most popular recordings in history!



Image


Image


this guy thinks so

Author:  Frank Coztansa [ Tue May 24, 2016 7:05 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

bigfan wrote:
Image

Milwaukee
Just because he is friends with you doesn't necessarily make him a good guy.

Try to rebut this without bringing up Jerry or the White Sox.

Author:  Curious Hair [ Tue May 24, 2016 8:34 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

To be fair, I haven't heard much bad stuff about Attanasio. Pretty fan-friendly owner, and a vast improvement over Selig's daughter. Selig himself actually ran a ship-shape operation through the '80s.

Author:  bigfan [ Tue May 24, 2016 8:54 am ]
Post subject:  Re: Looking for an owner who is a "good guy."

Frank Coztansa wrote:
bigfan wrote:
Image

Milwaukee
Just because he is friends with you doesn't necessarily make him a good guy.

Try to rebut this without bringing up Jerry or the White Sox.


OK, Mark is a pure baseball fan, he undertands the financial limits of his team and will strecth it and go beyond if he feels they have a chance to win. He didnt negotiate the deal for Miller aprk (Although he might have) and often relays messages for the fans communicating his appreciation for their support.

His "Skybox" sits on the main concourse and you can walk by and shake the guys hand or talk to him, if he is there,

Have I fulfilled the requirements?

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