I enjoy teams that play baseball, the right way. The right way is through fostering a farm system which focuses on defense, solid base running, pitching and precision in both the front office and in the dugout. The wrong way would be buying any and every free agent that has a pulse and a high price tag. The wrong way may include pinstripes, curses relating to bambinos or billy goats, and anything to do with being a New York Met. For your viewing pleasure I have included two lists. While neither list gives any kind of definitive outline on creating a winning franchise, I think that patterns can be seen in the lists of teams that spend and why they are forced to spend. If you do not take time to develop your farm system, you will ultimately pay. The first list is payroll for the 30 teams for 2010. The second list is Baseball America's rating of each organization's farm system after the 2010 campaign.
1. New York Yankees $206,738,389 1. Kansas City Royals
2. Boston Red Sox 160,913,333 2. Tampa Bay Rays
3. Chicago Cubs 146,609,000 3. Atlanta Braves
4. Philadelphia Phillies 142,728,379 4. Toronto Blue Jays
5. New York Mets 136,022,942 5. New York Yankees
6. Detroit Tigers 122,864,928 6. Cincinnati Reds
7. Chicago White Sox 105,530,000 7. Cleveland Indians
8. Los Angeles Angels 104,161,666 8. San Diego Padres
9. San Francisco Giants 98,586,333 9. Colorado Rockies
10. Los Angeles Dodgers 95,358,016 10. Philadelphia Phillies
11. St. Louis Cardinals 93,940,751 11. Los Angeles Dodgers
12. Houston Astros 92,355,500 12. Minnesota Twins
13. Minnesota Twins 90,309,166 13. Washington Nationals
14. Seattle Mariners 86,910,000 14. Texas Rangers
15. Atlanta Braves 84,423,666 15. Los Angeles Angels
16. Colorado Rockies 83,172,000 16. Chicago Cubs
17. Baltimore Orioles 81,202,500 17. Boston Red Sox
18. Milwaukee Brewers 81,108,278 18. Seattle Mariners
19. Tampa Bay Rays 72,323,471 19. Pittsburgh Pirates
20. Kansas City Royals 71,405,210 20. New York Mets
21. Cincinnati Reds 68,200,542 21. Baltimore Orioles
22. Washington Nationals 62,349,000 22. Arizona Diamondbacks
23. Toronto Blue Jays 61,484,400 23. San Francisco Giants
24. Cleveland Indians 60,778,966 24. St. Louis Cardinals
25. Florida Marlins 55,239,500 25. Detroit Tigers
26. Texas Rangers 55,168,114 26. Houston Astros
27. Oakland Athletics 50,839,900 27. Chicago White Sox
28. Arizona Diamondbacks 48,452,166 28. Oakland Athletics
29. San Diego Padres 38,199,300 29. Florida Marlins
30. Pittsburgh Pirates 34,933,000 30. Milwaukee Brewers
The 2010 playoffs provided us with an interesting cross section of talented organizations, big spenders and teams that were able to find the middle ground. Interestingly enough only 3 of the top 10 spenders managed a playoff spot. On the other list, 5 of the top 10 were playoff bound in 2010. Two organizations, the Phillies and the Yankees, made both top 10s, displaying what deep pocketed owners and a savvy front office can bring you. Of the eight playoff teams, only the Minnesota Twins and Texas Rangers failed to make their way into either top 10, but it should be noted that the Twins were 13th and 12th, respectively. This to me denotes an organization that is balanced. Then there's the AL Champ Texas Rangers, they're champs and they flat out beat my Rays, by playing sound defense, running the bases well and getting excellent pitching an key spots. A large portion of the big spenders have extraordinarily average farm systems, which to me exemplifies the fact that their big spending ways insist upon themselves. Like I mentioned before, these charts are not a predictor of greatness, just something worth wasting an hour of my life on.
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