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  • Ballpark Barrister - Baseball's 30-Year Time Loop
    2026/04/22

    In August 1994, MLB players walked out. The World Series was cancelled for the first time since 1904. They didn’t come back until April 1995.
    The strike ended not with an agreement but with a court order. A federal judge named Sonia Sotomayor restored the pre-strike terms and allowed the season to start. The parties eventually signed a new CBA in November 1996.

    There was no salary cap in it.

    The owners had spent two years, cancelled a World Series, damaged the sport’s relationship with its fans, and did not get the central thing they said they needed.

    Tomorrow’s issue covers the history of MLB work stoppages and makes the case that 1994 wasn’t actually resolved. It was postponed.

    The owners are back at the table in 2026 asking for a salary cap. The players are back at the table saying they won’t discuss it.

    Thirty-two years. Same argument. Different dollar amounts.

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    5 分
  • Baseball's Labor Matrix: Analyzing the Modern MLB Contract
    2026/04/16

    Baseball, Bonuses, and the Algorithmic Law

    The script explores the 2022–2026 MLB Collective Bargaining Agreement as the blueprint for players’ daily working conditions, showing how the sport’s mythology gives way to a tightly engineered system balancing player safety, compensation, and entertainment. It highlights the brutally dense 162-game season compressed into 182–187 days and explains CBA rules as injury-mitigation logistics, including mandated first-class air seating ratios, a 200-mile bus-travel ban, single hotel rooms, and guaranteed food service until 1:00 AM. Financially, it covers rising minimum salaries ($700,000 in 2022 to $780,000 in 2026), limits on salary cuts, and the high-stakes “either/or” salary arbitration process and its restricted evidence. It details the $50M pre-arbitration bonus pool tied to awards and “Joint WAR,” overseen via shared auditing of the SQL/code. It also explains postseason gate-receipt pools and player-voted share distribution, special-event stipends, interpreter and concussion protocols, and an All-Star tie resolved by a sudden-death home run derby, ending with a broader question about algorithm-driven compensation beyond baseball.

    00:00 Ballpark Barrister Intro
    00:30 Dystopian Bonus Audit
    01:44 CBA Blueprint Explained
    02:54 Season Density Reality
    03:52 Travel Rules For Recovery
    05:45 Hotels And Late Food
    07:08 Minimum Pay And Reserve
    08:45 Salary Arbitration Gamble
    12:15 Pre Arb Bonus Pool
    13:57 SQL Audited Joint WAR
    15:32 Playoff Players Pool
    18:47 Special Events Stipends
    19:52 Welfare And Safety Rules
    22:21 All Star Derby Twist
    23:04 Three Forces Of The CBA
    24:08 Wrap Up And Final Thought

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    26 分
  • The $100,000 Phone Call
    2026/04/09

    The script recounts Effa Manley’s 7:00 AM July 5, 1947 call that sent Newark Eagles star Larry Doby to the Cleveland Indians, using it to dissect how Negro League “integration” functioned as an economic extraction rather than a simple moral triumph. It explains the Negro National League as a major, contract-based, $2 million parallel business created by segregation, then details how MLB’s 1922 Supreme Court antitrust exemption enabled a cartel to ignore Negro League contracts and strip-mine talent. Branch Rickey is contrasted with Bill Veeck, who voluntarily paid for Doby’s contract, yet at a steep “racial discount” far below the $100,000 Manley said a comparable white asset would command. The episode links this to the collapse of Negro League attendance and franchises, framing integration as a wealth transfer and drawing parallels to modern gig, creator, and open-source economies.

    00:00 The 7 AM Call
    00:59 Meet Effa Manley
    02:46 Negro League Empire
    04:45 Contracts and Parallel Markets
    06:08 Why Leverage Vanishes
    07:19 MLB Antitrust Shield
    11:22 Exclusion Is Not Protection
    13:13 The Rickey Method
    17:06 Veeck Pays Anyway
    19:34 Negotiating the Discount
    25:43 Collapse and Wealth Transfer
    31:53 Where the $100K Lives Now

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    34 分
  • Major League Baseball Labor Dispute Primer
    39 分
  • Major League Baseball's Antitrust Exemption
    7 分