I'm not sure I've ever been known to support David Samson or criticize Rob Neyer, but I'm going to do both in this post. In his blog today, Neyer wrote: "You know, it's really hard to like David Samson when he says stuff like this." The "stuff like this" in question linked to a Craig Calcaterra article about the Marlins out-of-town scoreboard disappearing, and I assume the specific thing Neyer was upset by was this quote:
In addition to this misplaced blame, Calcaterra titled his article "The Marlins no longer have an out-of-town scoreboard." This is simply not true. If national writers didn't resort to skimming the headlines and writing blog posts about it, Calcaterra would know that
Team president David Samson says the scoreboard and lineups aren't needed: "every fan has a handheld device with Internet accessibility.''
As we wrote on April 10th, the Teal Tower was replaced with ads for reasons that went beyond revenue. The Dolphins own the stadium and are supposed to manage its upkeep, but did not want to pay to fix the burned-out light bulbs in the scoreboard. Given that the Marlins are moving after next season, it simply did not pay for the Marlins to lay out thousands of dollars to fix something that isn't really theirs to begin with, and that they'll be abandoning in less than two seasons. I can't say I blame Dolphins owner Stephen Ross for balking at putting money into something he won't see any money from, but I sure don't blame Loria, Samson, & Co. for not wanting to fix it anyway. They are tenants and I do not believe it is their responsibility. If you were living in an apartment you were going to vacate in a few months and there was a crack in a tile that the super said he wasn't going to fix because after you moved out he was going to re-tile the whole place, would you pay out of your pocket to fix it?In addition to this misplaced blame, Calcaterra titled his article "The Marlins no longer have an out-of-town scoreboard." This is simply not true. If national writers didn't resort to skimming the headlines and writing blog posts about it, Calcaterra would know that
- A) out-of-town scores are now shown on a ribbon scoreboard, which actually displays much more information (hitter, pitcher, men on base, etc) than the old scoreboard did, and
- B) the lineups are shown on the biggest HD screens you've ever seen
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