Guac is Extra: How Did the Reds Suddenly Run Out of Money?

Guac is Extra: How Did the Reds Suddenly Run Out of Money?

crosley_room

There’s something happening here. What it is ain’t exactly clear.

Last year when the Baseball Gods placed a pillow over the fortunes of the Cincinnati Reds, sending eight important cogs to the disabled list before the team had left the Grand Canyon State for an even bigger hole — otherwise known as the 2014 season — it was clear it was going to be a year to forget. And although the club was a handful of games over .500 and one and one half games out of first place at the All Star break — most could see the writing on the outfield wall.

This season, the injuries haven’t been as severe — how could they be — and yet the results have been depressingly similar. Sure, there have been catastrophic injuries to key players — Homer Bailey and Devin Mesoraco, for two. But the injuries, important as they have been to the Reds, happen to all teams. Good clubs find a way to pick up the slack — pull a little from here, steal a little from there — and soldier on. Zack Cozart has been missed, but Eugenio Suarez has been a more than competent replacement. Anthony DeSclafani and J.J. Hoover have had surprising and welcome seasons so far. Joey Votto is the Votto of old. The team has even gotten more out of their aging second baseman than most anticipated.

No, the Reds have had deeper concerns that transcended injury in the form of a payroll retrenchment due to a sudden lack of cash. It compromised the starting pitching staff even before Bailey and Mesoraco left the building. It left the Reds with limited choices to fill left field and few resources to address a shorthanded bullpen.

Among the media, the narrative is that the front office, particularly owner Bob Castellini and GM Walt Jocketty, forgot who they were. They got greedy and lost their way, the airwaves bleat. The front office boys lost sight of their role as small market serfs in Baseball’s feudal kingdom.

This narrative not only survives — it thrives. The mega-signing of Joey Votto — which can be defended much more easily than you might think — plus the contracts extended to Brandon Phillips and Homer Bailey, have been largely rendered failures by the vox populi. And yes, it would be accurate to say that the Phillips contract, bookended by two arguably necessary signings, was foolish and likely born of owner-fueled emotion.

In essence, what local baseball watchers have done is draw a caricature of Castellini and Jocketty as daily customers at the local Chipotle, shuffling down the burrito line and suddenly forgetting that guacamole is extra. Forced to dig deep into their pockets due to their own buffoonery, they’ve had to make tough choices, divesting themselves of Mat Latos, Alfredo Simon and Jonathan Broxton, the way they might those expensive extras such as chips, salsa and guac.

Yes. This is really the explanation foisted upon fans. And it works, first and foremost because it’s simple. It also works because it feeds into the frustration of a collective fan base that spends seemingly every fall standing on the sidewalk of MLB’s storefront, watching yet another October production from the outside with their noses enviously pressed up against the window.

Nevertheless, as can be seen in the chart below, it’s easy to understand how even the most engaged fans might be fooled into thinking the Reds’ payroll just might have hit its natural small market ceiling due to accounting error:

payroll2008-15

Since 2010, it’s been moving steadily upward. Bob Castellini was pouring significant amounts of cash into the team each season — until this year when the money spigot was shut off. The timing is important here, because it came with Castellini’s beloved All Star Game just on the horizon. This is almost certainly not the course the owner had charted for the Reds as the city embarked on its national showcase. The last thing Bob Castellini had in mind was welcoming the baseball world to his town while his team was in full retreat.

And indeed, that’s not the message the front office was sending to Reds fans all the way up until they reversed course and began selling, starting with the salary dump of Jonathan Broxton in August of 2014 and continuing onward with a plethora of moves leading up to the trades of Johnny Cueto and Mike Leake at the 2015 non-waiver deadline.

In February of 2014, when people openly voiced concern over the $105M Bailey contract, Jocketty responded with this gem:

“I’d tell them,” Jocketty replied, “to relax and enjoy this.”

Hardly the message of a GM who would begin trading away contracts big and small just six months later. If you were paying attention, Jocketty’s seemingly flippant remark was just another reinforcement of a message owner Castellini has been sending since day one of his majority ownership:

“We are built to maintain our competitiveness well into the future. We have structured and continue to structure some of our long term contracts knowing about the expected future increases in revenues from both national and local broadcasting arrangements, along with the continued support from our fans and corporate partners.”

Nor does that sound like a man who doesn’t know where his next baseball meal is coming from. And if Castellini and Co. were living in a dream world, there were other baseball followers taking that magical mystery tour with them. After the Bailey contract, Jeff Euston, Cot’s Baseball Contracts founder and contributor at Baseball Prospectus said:

“They haven’t hamstrung themselves. Part of the poker game is you discard some and keep others, and you make your bets. Jocketty has consistently done a very good job at that. He hasn’t gone overboard.”

“They’ve done a really good job, They’re a legitimate contender and a favorite (to win the division) practically every year. They’ve spent effectively. Jocketty is effective enough to never get in a position where they’re stuck. As long as they manage their resources well, and they’ve proven they can do that, they should be fine. They’re not one bad decision away from disaster.”

Wendy Thurm, a sports business writer at places like FanGraphs and The New Yorker was very friendly toward the Votto contract:

“Votto is going to be their highest-paid player, and he should be. He’s significantly more valuable than anyone else on that team. That doesn’t strike me as a problem at all.”

 

Yet, problems there were. Unforeseen, major payroll problems behind the scenes to which no one has been privy.

It seems pretty clear from contract moves made leading into the 2014 season, that the Reds believed they would have the income in place to keep driving payroll upward at a steady climb. Castellini wants to be competitive EVERY year. Taking a step backward is anathema to the Cincinnati produce millionaire. His minority partners reportedly don’t dip their beaks into the profits, allowing them to be poured back into the organization. A new, local television contract is in the offing after 2016.

So, what happened?

Have the television negotiations with Fox Sports Ohio gone seriously off the rails? Did ownership expect a bidding war between FSO and Time Warner Cable SportsChannel, one that failed to materialize? Were the Reds eyeing an equity stake in FSO that will not come to fruition? Did season ticket sales fall woefully short of club expectations leading up to this All Star season? Have minority partners broken ranks with the owner? Is there another reason altogether?

Perhaps I’ve missed something, but it looked as if the Reds were spending like a team ready to break another glass payroll ceiling. Given the recent massive influx of dollars to MLB from ESPN, FOX and TBS, the extraordinary health of the club’s TV and radio ratings, and given that payroll experts were on board with the organization’s long-term plan, I haven’t seen the important question of the 2015 season asked: where did the money go? Only declarative statements that the Reds never had the money to begin with and they simply mismanaged their bottom line.

Of one thing I’m fairly certain. The owner who has been a highly successful businessman for decades, who laid the groundwork that brought winning back to this old baseball town in 2010, 2012 and 2013, who gave this city and Baseball one of the most well produced All Star weeks in recent memory …

… this guy didn’t just forget how to tally a spreadsheet.

It feels for all the world as if sometime after the Bailey signing, the portfolio went into a sudden and steep dive and the baseball version of a Wall Street margin call was made. Whatever events took place, the Cincinnati Reds haven’t been the same since.

You Might Also Like

2 Comments

  • The Weight | Richard Fitch

    […] giving up valuable prospects for the player Bruce has been for the past two seasons. The Reds have money problems that no one has fully explained, and now seem willing to give him away, rather than waste $12.5M during a lost season or wait until […]

    March 31, 2016 at 4:09 am Reply
  • Guest TML: Keep Calm and wait for Cody Reed - Cincinnati.com - Dectimes

    […] had nearly an entire pitching staff reach free agency at the same time. They ran out of time and somehow ran out of money. Unlike Houston at the time, they did not possess the worst farm system in the majors, nor were […]

    May 13, 2016 at 3:48 pm Reply
  • Leave a Reply to The Weight | Richard Fitch Cancel Reply

    And The Wheel Turns

    A Brief History of Billy