O.K., so things didn’t go well last night, but the Stros can take some solace in that this interesting Allen St. John Wall Street Journal ($) article notes that the Stros are one of the top teams of the eight clubs in the playoffs in at least one important area — that is, getting the most bang for their buck. Mr. St. John calculates the each playoff team’s cost per win by simply taking a club’s total payroll and dividing that number by the club’s win total during the MLB season.
For example, compared to the Yankees, the Stros are remarkably efficient. The Yanks’ $208 million payroll was by far the highest in baseball, comparable to the combined payrolls of the second-place Red Sox and the Dodgers. Accordingly, the Yankees’ cost per win ($2.2 million) is almost 70% higher than that of the Red Sox ($1.3 million) and a whopping $1.437 million greater than the cost of each Stros’ win.
Monthly Archives: October 2005
The Cost of Victory
| Cost per Win | ||||||||||||
TEAM | PAYROLL | WINS | COST PER WIN | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White Sox | $75.2 million | 99 | $759,373 | |||||||||
| Padres | $63.3 million | 92 | $771,839 | |||||||||
| Stros | $76.8 million | 89 | $862,685 | |||||||||
| Cardinals | $92.1 million | 100 | $921,068 | |||||||||
| Braves | $86.5 million | 90 | $960,636 | |||||||||
| Angels | $97.7 million | 95 | $1.029 million | |||||||||
| Red Sox | $123.5 million | 95 | $1.30 million | |||||||||
| Yankees | $208.3 million | 95 | $2.19 million | |||||||||
The latest suicide bomber?
Maybe it’s due to the distraction of Texas-OU week or perhaps it’s just a sign of the times, but the fact that a suicide bomber nearly entered the University of Oklahoma’s football stadium last Saturday night while 84,000 people were watching OU thrash Kansas State sure seems to be flying a bit under the main radar screens, at least outside of Oklahoma. The bomber — Joel Hinrichs III — detonated an explosive device while sitting on a bench about 100 yards from the stadium after he apparently rushed off upon being required to have his backpack searched at the gate. This Counterterrorism blog post does a good job of summarizing the background and implications of the event, as does the TigerHawk in this post.
Louie Freeh goes J. Edgar on Bill Clinton
Does it ever seem as if, whenever 60 Minutes needs a rating boost, they do a Bill Clinton-scandal story?
At any rate, get ready for another such segment. Former Clinton Administration FBI Director Louis J. Freeh is promoting his new book My FBI: Bringing Down the Mafia, Investigating Bill Clinton, and Fighting the War on Terror (St. Martin’s Press 2005), and this Washington Post article indicates that his 60 Minutes interview with Mike Wallace will be a general hammering session on former President Clinton:
Former FBI director Louis J. Freeh has denounced Bill Clinton over the scandals that marred his presidency and for his record on terrorism, saying the level of distrust was so great that he stayed in his post so Clinton could not appoint his successor.
In a forthcoming book and “60 Minutes” interview, Freeh, whose strained relations with Clinton were no secret, says he was so determined to distance himself from Clinton that he sent back a White House pass so that all his visits would be deemed official. This, he said, antagonized Clinton.
The WaPo report triggered the crack Clinton Scandal Response Team into action:
Clinton spokesman Jay Carson said last night: “This is clearly a total work of fiction by a man who’s desperate to clear his name and sell books, and it’s unfortunate he’d stoop to this level in his attempt to rewrite history.” He noted Freeh contributed nearly $20,000 to Republicans, including President Bush, in the last campaign.
Gosh, seems like old times, eh? In fairness to the Clintonites, Mr. Freeh’s tenure at the FBI is not without its bipartisan critics.
United Airlines finalizes chapter 11 exit financing
Following on this earlier post, UAL Corp., the parent of United Airlines, announced that it has finalized $3 billion in debt financing commitments from Citigroup Inc. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. that will allow the company to exit its long-pending chapter 11 case early next year. Here are the previous posts about the United Airlines bankruptcy saga and related airline industry financial issues.
The airline industry is in a world of hurt right now, suffering under the toxic combination of record jet-fuel prices, stiff competition from lower-cost discount airlines, and dubious management decisions of legacy airline companies. UAL filed for Chapter 11 in December 2002, so even if it stays on course with its reorganization plan, it will emerge from chapter 11 after operating for over three years under bankruptcy court protection. US Airways Group Inc. has gone through a chapter 22 case (two Chapter 11 filings) over the past three years, and just recently emerged from bankruptcy under a plan based on a merger with America West Holdings Corp. Delta Air Lines and Northwest Airlines both filed chapter 11 cases on Sept. 14.
Interesting Stros’ stat of the day
As Stros fans bask in the warm glow of the Stros’ decisive victory over the Braves yesterday in the first game of their National League Divisional Series, ponder this — in games in which the Stros score at least six runs, their record is an astounding 48-4, which computes to a .923 winning percentage.
Stated simply, the Stros are nearly unbeatable if they score at least six runs in a game.
Two of the premier pitchers of this era — the Stros’ Roger Clemens and the Braves’ John Smoltz — hookup in tonight’s second game (tropical storm weather permitting) in Atlanta.
The Stoops Curse
On the surface, all things look rosy in Texas Longhorn football land these days.
The Horns are the second-ranked team in the U.S., dramatically defeated Michigan in the Rose Bowl after last season, have already beaten mighty Ohio State on the road this season, and have a bonafide Heisman Trophy candidate in QB Vince Young. So, coming into the annual Texas-OU game this weekend in Dallas against an Oklahoma team that has been relatively unimpressive this season, the Horns and their faithful should be calm and supremely confident, right?
Not a chance.
And you thought the recent hurricanes were bad?
As the U.S. goes about recovering from the double whammy punch of the two hurricanes that hit the Gulf Coast region over the past month or so, this NY Times article reminds us that a potentially much more serious threat to our well-being is looming on the horizon:
“Two teams of federal and university scientists announced today that they had resurrected the 1918 influenza virus, the cause of one of history’s most deadly epidemics, and had found that unlike the viruses that caused more recent flu pandemics of 1957 and 1968, the 1918 virus was actually a bird flu that jumped directly to humans.
The work, being published in the journals Nature and Science, involved getting the complete genetic sequence of the 1918 virus, using techniques of molecular biology to synthesize it, and then using it to infect mice and human lung cells in a specially equipped, secure lab at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
The findings, the scientists say, reveal a small number of genetic changes that may explain why the virus was so lethal. The work also confirms the legitimacy of worries about the bird flu viruses that are now emerging in Asia.
The new studies find that today’s bird flu viruses share some of the crucial genetic changes that occurred in the 1918 flu. The scientists suspect that with the 1918 flu, changes in just 25 to 30 out of about 4,400 amino acids in the viral proteins turned the virus into a killer. The bird flus, known as H5N1 viruses, have a few, but not all of those changes.”
WSJ editors do better, but where have they been?
After criticizing the Wall Street Journal yesterday for running a listless article about prosecutorial misconduct in the Enron-related criminal cases, it’s only fair to note that the WSJ editors do much better today in this editorial ($) (see this related NY Times article) decrying the fact that nine defendants — including eight former KPMG partners — have been sold out to the government by the firm (see also this post) and face criminal prosecution for tax shelters that have never even been determined to be illegal from a civil standpoint (here are the previous posts on the KPMG tax shelter saga). The WSJ notes as follows:
The KPMG case attempts to short-circuit the messy business of proving that a tax shelter is illegal by using the power of prosecution to target the tax advisers directly. And by cutting them off from the support of their firm through the threat of a death-sentence indictment of KPMG itself, the government seems intent on compelling the accused to cop a plea or settle the case, and so deny them their day in court.
Tax evasion is a serious matter, but so is a criminal indictment for conspiracy. KPMG’s partners in this case believed they were selling shelters that were entirely legal, and the underlying legality of those shelters has never been formally challenged. Yet the government has come down on those accountants and tax lawyers as if they belonged to the mob. A case of curiouser and curiouser, said Alice.
The Journal should be complimented for addressing the misuse of criminal law in the KPMG case, which is another example of the criminalization of business generally that has taken place in the U.S. since the hyper-publicized demise of Enron. However, precisely the same situation that is taking place with regard to the KPMG defendants — i.e., defendants sold out by their employer and pre-emptive criminalization of business conduct before it has even been determined to be illegal from a civil standpoint — has already resulted in egregious miscarriages of justice in the sad case of Jamie Olis and in the Enron-related Nigerian Barge case and Coyote Springs case. It’s convenient to criticize such conduct when the target is a high-profile executive or former partners in a highly-publicized accounting firm. But where has the WSJ been with regard to those lesser-known but equally misguided prosecutions, which have already resulted in untold misery to the imprisoned executives and their families?
Oh well, better late than never, I guess.
The Katrina and Rita ripples on the natural gas market
Following on this thread of posts over the past month, natural gas for November delivery rose 20.7 cents to a record $14.224 per million British thermal units on the New York Mercantile Exchange Tuesday afternoon after Interior Secretary Gale Norton warned it would probably take months before repairs to oil and gas production facilities in the Gulf of Mexico region would return production from that key region to normal. The Minerals Management Service reported that Gulf oil and gas production remains severely restricted, with 90% of the oil and over 70% of natural gas still off-line now a week and a half after Hurricane Rita came ashore.
The gas market was already stretched thin by heavy demand from power generators over the summer, but the double whammy of damage to production facilities from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita over the past month have jolted the natural gas market. As a result, futures contracts on the Nymex have nearly doubled since late July. The one good piece of news from the oil and gas markets was that crude oil, gasoline and heating-oil futures continue to weaken in the face of high pump prices and resultant diminished U.S. gasoline consumption in recent weeks. Oil futures fell for the third straight session on the Nymex as November light, sweet crude-oil futures slid $1.57 to $63.90 a barrel, the lowest price since mid-September.