
Oakland vs. the A’s: The inside story of how it all went south (to Las Vegas)
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Tim Keown, ESPN Senior WriterSep 19, 2023, 08:42 PM ET
Close- Senior Writer for ESPN The Magazine
- Columnist for ESPN.com
- Author of five books (3 NYT best-sellers)
AT 6 P.M. ON Wednesday, April 19, Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao was driving home from an event for the opening of a local business when she received a call from A’s president Dave Kaval.
“Hey, just a heads-up,” Thao recalls Kaval saying. “Somebody leaked to the press that we have a binding deal with Vegas.”
Thao was stunned. Since taking office in January, she and her staff had picked up where previous mayor Libby Schaaf left off, negotiating with A’s owner John Fisher to facilitate a massive, city-altering $12 billion project for a ballpark village on 55 acres along the waterfront at Howard Terminal. The work to keep the A’s had been a long haul, spanning several mayoral administrations and three A’s ownership groups, but Thao believed they were $101 million away from procuring the required amount of public funding for the infrastructure outside the ballpark. It was a paltry sum for such a vast project, and Oakland had just been assured of another $65 million in federal grants that would have brought the difference down to $36 million. Thao had scheduled a week of intensive talks with the A’s and a team of mediators to bring the deal home. Hotel rooms were booked. Flights were reserved. Thao even gave it a name: The Negotiation Summit. At the event the evening of Kaval’s phone call, Thao told Leigh Hanson, her chief of staff, “I really think we’re going to get this over the finish line.”
The first meeting between the new mayor and the A’s, held in mid-February, was congenial but businesslike, with Thao intent on making sure Fisher was serious about building a stadium at Howard Terminal. When Fisher said he was, Thao said, “Good, because let’s be very clear: I don’t want to waste your time and I really don’t want you to waste mine.” The A’s had been holding similar meetings with officials in Las Vegas, part of Fisher and Kaval’s two-year-long “parallel paths” strategy that turned the team’s quest for a new stadium into a race to see which city would be first to satisfy Fisher. Rooted in Oakland had evolved into Whoever gets there first.
But Kaval’s phone call — “a blindside,” Thao says, “just ‘Hey, we’re gone'” — came after no breakdown in talks, no stalled process, no contentious back and forth. Kaval’s call triggered a sequence, one call begetting another. Thao hung up with Kaval and called Hanson, who called Steve Kawa, the lead negotiator for the deal and a longtime friend of the Fisher family.
“I can’t believe this is what’s happening,” Kawa said. “I’m calling John.”
Kawa called Fisher, suggesting he reach out directly to the mayor. Fisher called Thao to confirm the news.
Thao says Fisher told her, “I feel really bad. I really like you and I like working with you, but we’re going to focus all our energy on Las Vegas.”
“I’m disappointed,” Thao responded. “In the very beginning, I literally asked you, ‘Are you serious about Oakland?’ and you said yes. But if your focus is on Vegas, good luck.”
Thao hung up, and the two sides haven’t spoken since. Howard Terminal, as far as the A’s were concerned, was dead. Rooted in Oakland was dead, and the Oakland A’s were entering the hospice phase of their stay in the Bay Area. In the end, after switching from his “binding agreement” property — the site of the former Wild West Casino — to a different Las Vegas site within a month, it became clear that Fisher traded his 55-acre legacy development, one with a stunning design by world-famous Danish architect Bjarke Ingels that included a community park built right on top of the ballpark, one with the residential and commercial real estate, a city within the city, for nine acres in the parking lot of the Tropicana in Las Vegas, a project Oakland officials have derisively dubbed “Fisher’s putt-putt course.”
And when the “leaked” story was posted in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the Oakland contingent felt like they’d been played for fools. Kaval was quoted throughout the piece — by name — as was commissioner Rob Manfred.
“Not sure it’s a leak when you’re quoted in the story,” Hanson says. “Pretty sure that’s not how leaks work. If you’re going to be strategic, try not to be so sloppy.”
THE WORD RECLUSIVE is affixed before John Fisher’s name so frequently it might as well be a title. He is part-owner and a member of the board of directors for The Gap, a company started by his parents, and is involved with various other family enterprises, including the Mendocino Redwood Company and Sansome Partners, an investment firm. He bought the Athletics along with Lew Wolff in 2005 for an estimated $180 million and became majority owner in 2016 when Wolff sold his remaining 10 percent of the team. Fisher, 62, had not granted a single interview during his 18 years with the A’s until speaking last month with two local outlets and ESPN.
“It’s a mistake to say Fisher is a mystery,” says Ignacio De La Fuente, who served on the Oakland City Council for 21 years (1992-2012) and was a mayoral candidate as recently as last year. “There’s nothing mysterious about him. He’s a rich guy who uses his money to make money. I don’t think he ever had a connection to Oakland. It’s an interesting dynamic when you look at the type of sports owners we get. The Haas family” — which owned the A’s from 1980 to 1995 — “was the only one that ever gave a s— about Oakland.”
This story is based on interviews with more than a dozen sources familiar with the negotiations and motivations, some of whom requested anonymity to speak freely. They reveal a messy, complicated and ultimately confounding path that led Fisher and the A’s to decide to take the A’s out of Oakland, their home for 55 years, and leave the city without a major professional sports franchise.
The A’s have filed a relocation application with Major League Baseball, where it will be reviewed by a three-man committee consisting of Kansas City Royals CEO John Sherman, Philadelphia Phillies CEO John Middleton and Milwaukee Brewers chairman Mark Attanasio. The committee will make a recommendation to commissioner Rob Manfred and MLB’s eight-member executive council. If it advances past the council, three-quarters of the league’s 30 team owners must vote in favor of the move for the A’s to become the third major professional franchise, after the Warriors and Raiders, to abandon the city since 2019, and the first MLB team to relocate since the Montreal Expos became the Washington Nationals in 2005. Recent media reports have indicated the vote could take place as soon as November.
To hear Oakland officials tell it, this is the tale of a risk-averse billionaire owner who chose the riskiest project possible, one that required nearly $1 billion in public funding for on-and off-site infrastructure, and then walked away when the finish line was in sight. The A’s contend that progress was too slow, that environmental and local groups put up roadblock after roadblock, and that Oakland city officials simply couldn’t guarantee a stadium deal before the team’s January 2024 deadline to continue to receive the franchise’s lifeblood: revenue sharing from Major League Baseball. Losing revenue sharing, Fisher said, “would be hugely detrimental to the organization.”
The deal Fisher chose in Las Vegas, should it be approved, consists of $380 million in public funding for the infrastructure surrounding the ballpark, nine acres of land and access to a growing media market — though far smaller than Oakland’s — that has long been viewed as ripe for an MLB expansion team. The projects in both cities called for Fisher, through a combination of his and his family’s vast wealth, and financing through Goldman Sachs, to privately pay for a ballpark predicted to cost in the neighborhood of $1.2 billion.
For a moment that typifies the disconnect between the Fisher and Oakland, look no further than Kaval’s initial call to Mayor Thao on the evening of April 19. “I can’t really understand how they can say they were blindsided,” Fisher says. “At the end of four years of negotiations, we were nowhere.” This contention mystifies those who worked to put together the financing on a project that was a source of both torment and delight; torment because the project was vast and unwieldy and expensive, delight because it was universally seen as having the potential to transform the city. The public infrastructure money Oakland was asked to raise dwarfed the $380 million in Las Vegas, and city officials say everyone understood it would take time. “To say we were nowhere is BS,” Mayor Thao says. “To say there was no proposal is total BS. Let’s be very clear: we did have a proposal. But maybe it wasn’t a proposal John Fisher could afford.”
Fisher, who calls himself a “superfan” but is more likely to be found courtside at a Warriors’ game than in the Diamond Level at the Coliseum, has become such a pariah he can no longer watch the team he owns in person. The target of fan vitriol and chants of “Sell the Team” that started in the right field bleachers of the Coliseum and spread across the country: to the All-Star Game in Seattle, to a random afternoon game in Washington D.C., to pretty much everywhere the A’s go. “Fisher Sucks” and “Stay in Oakland” have become the dominant sounds in a nearly empty ballpark, so much so that Fisher jokes that he “watches with the sound off.” The biggest crowds of the season came when the fans staged two “reverse boycotts” — rousing, daylong condemnations of Fisher’s ownership. A group that calls itself The Last Dive Bar — a reference to the Coliseum being baseball’s last dive bar — recently helped buy electronic billboard space in the stadium’s parking lot, visible to the thousands who sit in traffic on the infernal Nimitz Freeway, that addressed Fisher’s mother. In massive LED letters, it read: “Doris, get your kid.” The fashion statement of the season is a simple green T-shirt with “SELL” stamped in white across the chest.
“I truly empathize with the fans,” Fisher says. “And I understand the hurt and disappointment and anger, frankly, that’s involved in that. The decision was mine. I understand where they’re coming from, and my answer to that is, ‘Look, I did absolutely everything, more than any other sports team owner has tried, to make it work in Oakland.'”
During a wide-ranging, 75-minute interview, I asked Fisher if he planned to attend a game at the Coliseum before the season’s end. He outlined all the reasons why fans don’t attend games to watch an owner, but when it was suggested that his case might be an exception, he nodded grudgingly and said, “They’d probably sell a lot of those shirts.”
BOTH SIDES CAN find agreement on one thing: Fisher fell in love with Howard Terminal.
He selected some of his personal sculptures from his renowned art collection — Forbes places his worth at $2.5 billion — to place in spots around the ballpark. He spent $100 million, a figure city officials don’t dispute, to acquire permits and clearances. He hired Ingels to design what Fisher describes as “a neighborhood park,” a place the public could enjoy for its art and nightlife even when there wasn’t a game. No idea was too grand; traffic would be a nightmare, with no public transportation and no existing thoroughfares, so the A’s tossed around the idea of a gondola that would transport fans to the stadium over the freeway and railroad tracks from a downtown BART station. The ballpark renderings show a spectacular, original plan that would incorporate two of the port’s decommissioned shipping cranes — widely but mistakenly believed to have provided the inspiration for George Lucas’s AT-AT snow walkers in “The Empire Strikes Back” — into the design. They would loom over right-centerfield to provide a sense of history, an homage to the days when Howard Terminal was a working port.
The only way to truly appreciate the grandeur of the site, Fisher was told, was to see it from the top of one of those cranes. And so one day in the early stages of the project’s development, Fisher, Ingels and Kaval climbed over a chain-link fence and entered federally protected land — “totally illegal,” a source says — where they stood at the base of one of the 393-foot tall cranes, took a deep breath and began their ascent. Ingels is known for his enthusiasm and charisma. He visualizes his projects from the air. They climbed the grated metal stairs until they reached the top, where they stood on a small platform and looked around, the breathtaking panorama encompassing the island of Alameda, the San Francisco skyline, the Golden Gate Bridge, the Marin Headlands, the Oakland hills and the Oakland skyline. They took a selfie and stared down at Howard Terminal, at its potholed streets and railroad tracks and the mountains of shredded metal at Schnitzer Steel, and saw nothing but possibility.
“I rarely want to use no comment,” Fisher says of the clandestine trip, “but this time I think I’ll use it in the most positive way I can. I will say this: the views are spectacular.”
One of the most valuable and beautiful pieces of property on the planet, all his. He wouldn’t have to purchase it, or pay for the sewer lines or the electricity or the fiber optic cables or the road construction. Local government had agreed to take care of that. All he had to do was create a vision that would come to life, and leverage some of his and his family’s money to build the commercial and residential real estate — and a $1.2 billion ballpark.
“John wanted to be one of the Andre Heinzes of the world, changing the world,” Hanson says, referencing the environmental activist and philanthropist. “You know, standing on top of cranes and envisioning things. Everybody loves a visionary.”
But Howard Terminal would remain just that: a vision.
Sources say Fisher’s fleeting love affair with Howard Terminal mirrored an earlier fling with another Oakland site: the area around Laney Community College, near Lake Merritt. Fisher targeted the spot after watching hundreds of thousands of fans at the 2015 parade honoring the first of the Golden State Warriors’ three NBA championships while playing in Oakland in the 2010s. The crowds ringed the lake and stood shoulder to shoulder around the steps of the venerable Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center, where the team basked in the adulation. Fisher became so enamored of the idea of building a ballpark there, despite insurmountable infrastructure problems and staunch opposition from the Peralta Community College District, that sources say he went so far as to inquire about purchasing what is known as the “Henry J,” a community landmark since 1914.
Oakland has been haunted by stadium problems for close to 30 years, since the Raiders packed up the first time and left for Los Angeles. The city commissioned a study on seven potential ballpark sites in 2001, and De La Fuente, the former councilmember, says, “The most difficult, undoable, f—ing expensive site was Howard Terminal. From the beginning I said that site was bulls—. Total bulls—.”
Still, to seasoned developers, it seems incomprehensible that a $12 billion project could collapse over less than $100 million. Did Fisher, publicity-shy and risk-averse, get cold feet?
“I don’t think he got cold feet,” says Hanson, the mayor’s chief of staff. “I think he got an accountant.”
ON THE NIGHT of June 7 in Carson City, Nev., nearly two months after Kaval’s phone call to Thao, the Nevada State Senate convened a special session to debate SB1, the bill that would allocate $380 million in public funding for a new A’s stadium on the Tropicana site. Steve Pastorino sat home in Las Vegas and fumed. He was the team’s head of corporate sponsorships from 2013-17 before he was let go less than a year after Kaval became team president. As he watched the hearing unfold, Pastorino grew angrier and angrier that Kaval, long the voice of the team, was not a visible presence, choosing instead to let two Vegas lobbyists, fiscal analyst Jeremy Aguero and Vegas’ tourism chief Steve Hill, do the team’s bidding.
“They hired these two guys from Las Vegas to sell the deal?” Pastorino asked. “After Kaval had been the front man since he got there? It makes no sense.”
Hours into the meeting, state senator Fabian Doñate demanded Kaval take the stand to address the team’s willingness to contribute to the state’s live entertainment tax. The usually smooth-talking Kaval stumbled, failing to give a coherent answer despite being goaded four times by Donate. For Pastorino, that was the final straw. When it was announced that Las Vegas residents could contribute remotely to the public comment session, he grabbed his keys and headed out with one of his adult children, saying, “Let’s go see how government works.”
They drove to the Grant Sawyer State Office Building, arriving around 10 p.m. to find a locked parking lot. Undeterred, they parked in the loading dock, slid through a fence and knocked on a locked door. Pastorino told the security guard they were there to testify at the hearing, and they walked into the chamber five minutes before public comment opened.
“It was spur-of-the-moment, not some well-considered process,” Pastorino says. “I went in there as a Las Vegas taxpayer who doesn’t want to help John Fisher build a ballpark.”
When it was his turn, Pastorino leaned into the microphone, gave a brief history of his affiliation with the A’s and said, “You cannot trust Dave Kaval.” He called his former boss “a walking, talking bobblehead” and asked, “Where is John Fisher? Where the hell is John Fisher? John Fisher does not need a penny of our dollars.”
(Kaval declined to discuss Pastorino’s statements, citing human-resource concerns.)
When he became team president in 2016, Kaval, 47, brought hope to a franchise that always seemed to punch above its weight on the field despite a continuously uncertain future. Kaval came in hot; he was young and enthusiastic, full of ideas and charisma, savvy on social media. He was hired by Fisher to shepherd the team’s stadium efforts, but along the way he attempted to modernize the moribund Coliseum. He opened a bar called The Treehouse above the left-field bleachers. He established Championship Plaza, an area outside the stadium with food trucks and lawn games. He ushered in a flexible ticket program called “A’s Access” that proved to be wildly successful. He created the motto “Rooted in Oakland” and had it painted prominently on the vast concrete walls of the Coliseum. He buzzed around the stadium in a suit and tie and went on every radio program and held office hours with fans. He told the story of growing up in Cleveland and being heartbroken when Art Modell took the Browns to Baltimore to become the Ravens.
Even Kaval’s detractors, Pastorino included, admired his business acumen and ceaseless optimism.
“I honestly thought Kaval was going to be the one who was finally get it done in Oakland,” Pastorino says. “I think Dave is very smart and creative. I honestly think he thought he’d be the one to deliver the stadium, too. At the time, I didn’t think he was disingenuous.”
The A’s fostered an underdog mentality made famous by “Moneyball” and exacerbated by the success and perceived glitz of the Giants, their rivals across the Bay. Billy Beane exemplified the team’s do-more-with-less ethos, and it spread throughout every aspect of the business.
“‘Moneyball’ really glorified what it was like to work for the A’s,” Pastorino says. “This team — even if it would rip your heart out, you wanted to fight for it. The offices were small and cramped and not as nice or as big as the Giants’ offices, but there was a lot of pride in working for the A’s. People loved working there, and if you have roots in the Bay Area, it was the best job you could ever hope to have.”
Kaval boasts of working 120-hour weeks to get a deal done in Oakland, but sources say his Type-A ways “drove city staff crazy.” His friend and Stanford classmate, Brad Null, says Kaval “is always on, and it’s totally genuine.” Upon graduating from Stanford in 1998, Kaval and Null attended games in all 30 big-league ballparks and wrote a book titled, “The Summer that Saved Baseball.” During their breakneck tour — 30 cities in 38 days — Null was continually amazed at Kaval’s ability to drum up media attention, free tickets and free food at nearly every stop.
“I saw all the reasons Dave was great for this A’s job,” Null says. “He’s tireless, and he can handle rejection and adversity. He’s much thicker-skinned than I am. Just like anybody, he’d love for people to say positive things about him, but if they don’t, he can handle that.”
Kaval’s star with A’s fans began to lose its shine early in the 2021 season, when he announced the team’s much-derided “parallel path” with Las Vegas. After the April 19 phone call to Thao and subsequent announcement that the team would be leaving Oakland, fans began hanging bedsheets from the Coliseum bleachers bearing such sentiments as “Kaval=Liar.”
Kaval terms any characterization that he was not a serious and honest player in the negotiations “categorically false. If anyone was paying attention, they’d know that we spent five years, and I spent whatever — 20 hours a day, whatever it took — leading an effort to try to get the stadium built at the waterfront.”
One oft-cited example of Kaval’s changing public statements concerns the Coliseum site. The A’s bought half of the 155-acre property from Alameda County in October of 2020, a move Kaval termed a backup in case Howard Terminal fell through. Roughly six months after the sale was finalized, Kaval announced the “parallel path” and began discounting the Coliseum as a viable site. The sale price of the Coliseum land was $85 million, far below market value. The team has paid $40 million to date, and the outstanding $45 million is due in three equal payments in January 2024, 2025 and 2026. But terms of the sale include a clause that calls for the entirety of the remaining $45 million to be paid within 180 days of the A’s “announcement of their relocation” from Oakland. It contained no provision that the team remain in Oakland.
“Fisher went to the county without any plan, and the county sells its half of the [Coliseum] to the A’s?” De La Fuente says. “Whose fault is that? Fisher, or the stupid elected officials who sold it to him?”
There’s a reason, sources say, that the A’s immediately discounted the Coliseum as a potential site once they chose Las Vegas: The relocation application with Major League Baseball pertains to the city of Oakland, not just the team’s current ballpark, so the A’s have to convince three-quarters of the MLB owners that Oakland — all of it, not just Howard Terminal or the Laney site or the Coliseum — is not a viable location for the team despite being the 10th-biggest media market in the country. (Las Vegas is 40th.)
Kaval cited sea-level rise and the cost of mitigating the brackish groundwater under the Coliseum (it sits 22 feet below sea level) and claimed the outstanding debt on the bonds related to the Coliseum’s 1995 “Mount Davis” renovation (which will cost the city of Oakland roughly $15 million per year through 2026) would have to be retired before any new construction could proceed. (“Not true,” Thao says. “They could have broken ground right after the Raiders left.”) Fisher says the Coliseum site, despite its endless parking lots and access to public transit, is not suited to be the “ballpark village” concept that allows for walk-up ticket sales and appeals to businesses such as bars and restaurants.
“To be able to attract the 2.4 million fans that we were hoping to attract here for our stadium, it had to be great,” Fisher says. “It had to be at least as good, if not better, than Oracle field in San Francisco. And I also felt like, why should our fans settle for anything else? Our fans deserve a great ballpark, and that was always my North Star.”
Asked if he understands why Oakland fans might be willing to settle for a stadium that is slightly less than great if it meant the team would stay in Oakland, Fisher hesitated before saying, “Yeah, I can appreciate that. But, you know, for us to be successful, which is being able to be competitive with some of the other really strong teams in baseball and with our sibling club across the Bay in San Francisco, we had to be able to have revenues and success comparable to those other clubs.” A lesser ballpark, Fisher says, “would not solve the fundamental need for the A’s to be in a great, successful ballpark and be able to drive our goals to win a World Series.”
De La Fuente, the former councilmember who negotiated the financially disastrous deal for the Raiders to return in 1995, says, “There’s no mystery to anything they do. From the beginning it was a way to increase the value of the team and then go to the highest bidder. They don’t give a s— where it is.”
THE A’S RELOCATION application, filed August 23, is notable for its omissions. There is no set ballpark design for the corner of Las Vegas Blvd. and Tropicana Ave. There is no indication whether the stadium will be domed or have a retractable roof, the only two options for a southern Nevada summer. There is no firm financing plan, although Fisher says he has been working with Goldman Sachs to finalize that part of the deal. And there is no defined site for where the A’s will play during the three-year — minimum — interim between the expiration of their Coliseum lease after next season and the proposed opening of the Las Vegas stadium in 2028.
The A’s have hired a construction developer but no architect. (Crane-climbing Ingels is among the finalists.) The team says MLB will make the determination on the team’s temporary home, and an MLB source says the A’s will need to provide answers to all of those open questions before the relocation committee can take up the team’s request in earnest. Given those conditions, a November vote, or at least a fully informed November vote, seems wildly optimistic.
“It doesn’t surprise me that the plan they proposed was half-baked,” Thao says. “That’s been their track record: half-baked plans.”
At one point the A’s based revenue projections on an annual attendance of 2.5 million in a Vegas ballpark that was to seat 30,000 — a statistical impossibility for 81 home dates. Kaval has since revised the projected capacity to 33,000. The original renditions of the Vegas stadium, since discarded, showed it taking up far more than nine of the Tropicana’s 36 acres, and the dimensions of the field looked suspiciously similar to the Coliseum, complete with its intercontinental foul territory. Target Field in Minnesota sits on the smallest footprint of any MLB stadium at 8½ acres. It is an open-air stadium, and some architects suggest a retractable roof is nearly impossible to fit onto the nine-acre Las Vegas site, which A’s pre- and postgame television host Brodie Brazil determined is roughly the amount of land occupied by the Bellagio fountain.
The Coliseum remains the most likely interim home for the A’s. The team has floated the idea of playing in its Triple-A stadium, Las Vegas Ballpark, but an open-air stadium with fewer than 10,000 seats in the desert is unlikely to gain the approval of the Major League Baseball Players Association. Kaval has mentioned the possibility of sharing Oracle Park with the Giants, but the Giants have yet to comment on that possibility. Extending the lease on the Coliseum would require reaching out to the city, something the A’s have yet to do. Thao says she will attempt to impose conditions on the team, including leaving the name behind for a future expansion team “because the A’s brand belongs to Oakland.”
“To see this blow up in Oakland for really no reason and then to hear how little they have in Vegas is mind-blowing,” says Hanson. “When they said they had a signed deal, a binding deal, I thought, ‘Holy s—, they’ve been playing us all along.’ But then to see this nine-acre parking lot … what? You walked away from us for that? Not to be a jilted lover, but God is she ugly.”
The A’s, of course, tell a different story. “That’s the busiest intersection in the West,” Kaval says. “There are more people there — cars, people, eyeballs. If you go to Vegas, you end up there. And so, it’s quintessential Vegas. It’s right on The Strip. And so, I think it will, in many ways, be one of the most exciting and iconic locations for a sports venue in the world, because we’re there.”
Hurdles remain. A Nevada group called “Schools Over Stadiums,” a political action group affiliated with the state’s teacher union, filed a petition to force a statewide vote on the use of public funding for the A’s ballpark. The petition, which points out that Nevada is 48th in the U.S. in per-pupil funding, would need roughly 150,000 signatures to qualify for the ballot. Internally, Manfred’s decision to waive the A’s relocation fee, estimated at anywhere from $300 million to $1 billion, might prove to be a sticking point with owners. Why should Fisher, with the lowest payroll in baseball and a Forbes estimated franchise valuation of $1.2 billion before the relocation, cost every team more than $10 million and get the Las Vegas market, which has long been considered perfect for an expansion team?
“The most important thing is for us to work closely with the commissioner, with the relocation committee and then with my fellow owners,” Fisher says. “We’ve been doing this for the last six years, so they’re quite aware of what we’ve been going through.”
Asked if he expects pushback from the owners on the relocation fee, Fisher says, “That’s something that the commissioner and the owners” — here he stops to gather himself — “it’s out of my hands. It’s something for them to work out.”
Manfred, through a spokesman, declined to be interviewed by ESPN for this story, citing the relocation committee’s ongoing work. However, an industry source with knowledge of the situation says that the relocation fee was waived because the stadium project in Las Vegas would not have been economically feasible for Fisher if he had been forced to pay “an appropriately valued relocation fee.”
When I asked Fisher if waiving the relocation fee was something he specifically requested from Manfred, he paused for a moment before saying, “Like I said, I’ve had lots of conversations with the commissioner and fellow owners about a lot of different subjects related to our stadium.”
Fisher says the team lost $40 million last season and will lose another $40 million this season. He says the team lost $175 million in the five years ending in 2022, not counting the $100 million he says the team spent on stadium efforts. Sports economists dispute this figure, citing the revenue MLB teams get from media rights and revenue-sharing, but Fisher says, “I should know. I write the checks. It costs a lot of money to run a baseball club besides just the money that you’re paying for players.” Oakland’s 2023 payroll, roughly $59 million, is the lowest in baseball, less than 40 percent of the league average. But among the costs Fisher repeatedly raised was the amount the team had to pay out for draft picks in July, a figure directly attributable to slashing payroll and talent after 2021 and fielding a team of young, cheap players, many of whom would be better served by more time in the minor leagues.
“We ended up with a much higher draft pick,” Fisher says. “And, you know, it’s an opportunity, but it’s an expensive opportunity to sign high draft picks.”
The A’s chose shortstop Jacob Wilson from Grand Canyon University in the first round of this year’s draft and signed him to a $5.5 million bonus, more than $1 million below slot for the sixth overall pick. The most expensive contract the A’s have offered under Fisher’s ownership was four years and $36 million for Yoenis Cespedes before the 2012 season. Following the COVID-shortened 2020 season, they offered Marcus Semien, a local star who wanted to stay with the team, a bizarre one year, $12.5 million contract that called for $2.5 million the first year and payouts of $1 million each over the next 10. After the 2021 season, the team traded away three young and marketable stars: Matt Olson, Matt Chapman and Sean Murphy. While knowingly fielding a depleted, non-competitive roster, the team doubled season-ticket prices before this season while doing nothing to improve the fan experience, once Kaval’s priority.
“By the time we reopened [from COVID] in 2021, we were on parallel paths with Nevada,” Kaval admits. “That colored our thinking.”
The shift in strategy became a self-fulfilling prophecy: raising prices, gutting the team and keeping attendance down as a means of proving the need for a new stadium.
They will spend in Las Vegas, though. Fisher and Kaval are in lockstep on that point. The revenue streams unavailable to them in Oakland will bloom in Las Vegas. The team will retire its “Moneyball” ways and pour the money from the new stadium into a roster that will sustain excellence.
“We are spending over a billion dollars to bring a winner to Las Vegas,” Fisher says. “And as I have said, I wouldn’t be in this if my goal wasn’t to go out and win a World Series.”
Fisher also owns the San Jose Earthquakes of Major League Soccer. Kaval served as president of the team from 2010 to 2017, with a similar mission as the one in Oakland: build a stadium. Kaval made it happen in San Jose; PayPal Stadium, a $100 million facility, opened in 2015. There, the promise was the same: A new stadium will provide the team with the revenue stream to bolster the roster and compete for championships. That promise has not been kept. In a league where 18 of the 29 teams make the playoffs, the Earthquakes have not won a postseason game since 2012 and have qualified for the playoffs just twice since the stadium opened, losing in the first round both times. This season, the Earthquakes’ payroll ranks 21st of 29 MLS teams.
The comparison between the A’s and the Earthquakes is “apples to oranges,” Fisher says, and Kaval sidestepped the question, saying, “I’m a big believer in the revenue opportunity in Las Vegas.” And, according to Fisher, the eight-year-old PayPal Stadium in San Jose is already outdated compared to newer MLS stadiums — he mentions LAFC, St. Louis and Austin — and lacks the capacity and premium seating that drives the kind of revenue needed to compete for championships.
SOMETIMES HISTORY RHYMES, and sometimes it claps back. In 1992, San Francisco Giants owner Bob Lurie reached an agreement to sell the franchise to a group that would move it to Tampa-St. Petersburg. The decision came after a protracted fight to replace Candlestick Park — one not unlike the years-long fight to replace the Coliseum.
John Fisher likes to tell the story of his family’s connection to the Giants. His grandfather was a rabid fan, and his oldest brother, Robert, attended the seventh game of the 1962 World Series, which the Yankees won, 1-0, when second baseman Bobby Richardson famously caught a Willie McCovey line drive to end the game with two runners on base. “I got into this because I’m a fan,” John Fisher says. “I know what it’s like; it’s agonizing when your team loses and incredibly uplifting when it wins.”
The Giants, of course, didn’t leave, and the Fishers — and their money — were among the reasons. In the Sept. 26, 1993 edition of the San Francisco Examiner, Donald Fisher was quoted as saying he and his son John joined the Giants’ ownership group to help keep the team from moving to Tampa-St. Petersburg. John is quoted as saying, “It’s definitely a civic-minded thing for us. My grandfather (Sydney) was a lifelong Giants fan.”
John, according to his father, was the driving force behind the family’s decision. In Donald Fisher’s autobiography, a self-published, 724-page tome distributed to friends, family and business associates, he writes that John came to him and said, “I think we ought to try to put a deal together to keep the Giants here.” The San Francisco Chronicle, which acquired a copy of the book, reports that Donald replied, “I’m not interested in it. If you’re interested, you take care of it. I’m not going to pay any attention to it.”
The group of prominent local investors, led by Peter Magowan and consisting of an A list of old San Francisco money, managed to purchase the team and build Oracle Park, a privately financed ballpark on the waterfront. When I asked Fisher if any local groups, driven by similar civic pride, have approached him with an offer to purchase the team and keep it in Oakland, he shook his head and seemed to dismiss the question. “I’m not going to comment on whether I’ve received inquiries into the team or anything like that,” he says. “Like I said, I’m a local, right? Bay Area native. And so I think if there was anyone who was going to give it their all to try and make it work, it was going to be me.”
Since the A’s announced their deal in Las Vegas, Thao says her office has heard from “multiple buyers who are very viable. I’m not going to bring up their names, but there are people willing to come together to figure out how we keep the A’s here.”
The problem they face, she says, is simple:
“You can’t buy something that’s not for sale.”
And that is unlikely to change. No matter how loud the chants get, no matter how personal the billboards become, no matter how far and wide the “SELL” shirts spread, Fisher has given no indication he plans to accede to the wishes of the Oakland fans. At least not yet. There is a widespread belief around City Hall and in the Coliseum stands that Fisher will sell after the relocation is approved and the team’s valuation skyrockets.
Asked directly, Fisher elided, saying, “I got into baseball because I was a fan, and I loved the game. And I always thought the A’s had this incredible history to them. … As I told somebody the other day, I don’t really feel like I’m an owner. Because I think, with baseball teams and other sports teams, you’re really a kind of a caretaker for creating a legacy of additional history for your club. And that’s what I hope to create for us in Las Vegas.”
In a twist, Fisher might leave a legacy in Oakland, after all. It won’t include sculptures from his personal collection or Ingels’ cool ballpark design, but Fisher’s investments in the Howard Terminal site will make it easier for the city to lure a new developer to create a new vision. The grant money the city procured awaits the next visionary. The cranes loom, the views are great, the possibilities remain limitless.
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Sports
MLB re-creates Aaron’s record 715th HR at ASG
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2 hours agoon
July 16, 2025By
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Associated Press
Jul 15, 2025, 11:30 PM ET
ATLANTA — Major League Baseball honored late Hall of Famer Hank Aaron by re-creating his record-breaking 715th home run through the use of projection mapping and pyrotechnics during Tuesday night’s All-Star Game.
After the sixth inning, the lights went down at Truist Park and fans stood holding their cellphone lights. The scene from April 8, 1974, at the old Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium was projected on the infield and shown on the video board.
The high-tech images of Aaron and other players were seen before a blaze of a fireball launched from home plate to signify the homer that pushed Aaron past Babe Ruth’s then-record of 714 homers.
Aaron’s widow, Billye Aaron, stood and waved as the cheers from the sellout crowd of 41,702 grew louder.
National League players warmed up for the game in batting practice jerseys with Aaron’s No. 44 on the back
One year ago, MLB celebrated the 50th anniversary of Aaron’s homer with announcements for a new statue at Baseball’s Hall of Fame and a commemorative stamp from the U.S. Postal Service.
Commissioner Rob Manfred also helped honor Aaron in Atlanta last year by joining the Braves in announcing the $100,000 endowment of a scholarship at Tuskegee University, a historically Black university in Aaron’s home state of Alabama.
Manfred noted the Henry Louis Aaron Fund, launched by the Braves following Aaron’s death in 2021, and the Chasing the Dream Foundation, created by Aaron and his wife, were designed to clear paths for minorities in baseball and to encourage educational opportunities.
Aaron hit 755 home runs from 1954 to 1976, a mark that stood until Barry Bonds reached 762 in 2007 during baseball’s steroid era.
Aaron was elected to the Hall in 1982. A 25-time All-Star, he set a record with 2,297 RBIs. He continues to hold the records of 1,477 extra-base hits and 6,856 total bases.
Sports
Schwarber lifts NL in 1st ASG home run swing-off
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2 hours agoon
July 16, 2025By
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Jorge CastilloJul 16, 2025, 12:08 AM ET
Close- ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
ATLANTA — The 2025 MLB All-Star Game featured the two best pitchers in the world on the mound to start for their respective leagues and the two best position players in the opposing lineups. It included the first automatic ball-strike system challenges in All-Star Game history, a rousing six-run comeback, a memorable appearance for a future first-ballot Hall of Famer and a beautiful tribute to the late Hank Aaron just miles from where he surpassed Babe Ruth on the career home run list.
But the exhibition, a remarkable show played at Truist Park on a muggy Tuesday night, will be remembered for how it ended.
When it was over, nearly four hours after the first pitch, the National League outlasted the American League behind Philadelphia Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber in an unprecedented Home Run Derby-style swing-off, with a 4-3 homer edge after the score was tied at 6-6 through nine innings.
Schwarber pulverized three home runs on three swings in the swing-off after going 0-for-2 with a walk during the nine innings, becoming the first position player to win All-Star Game MVP without recording a hit in the game.
The American League leads the National League in the All-Star Game, with a record of 48 wins, 44 losses and 2 ties.
Officially, the result, just the Senior Circuit’s second victory in the past 12 matchups, didn’t have a winning or losing pitcher of record. Unofficially, it was one of the most enthralling endings to any marquee baseball game, exhibition or not.
“It’s like wiffle ball in the backyard,” AL manager Aaron Boone said.
The tiebreaker, a baseball version of a hockey shootout, was established in 2022. On Monday, both managers — Boone and the NL’s Dave Roberts — were required to submit their list of participants and alternates to MLB should the game need the swing-off after nine innings. Knowing starters usually shower and leave the ballpark well before the end of the game, the managers opted for reserves.
The exercise again appeared to be unnecessary once the NL took a 6-0 lead — fueled by New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso‘s three-run homer — into the seventh inning. But the AL scored four runs in the seventh and tied the game when down to its last out in the ninth to send the 95th All-Star Game to the swing-off.
“Dave asked yesterday, ‘If there’s a tie, would you do it?'” said Schwarber, the only member of the Phillies who participated in this year’s All-Star festivities. “I said, ‘Absolutely,’ not thinking that we were going to end up in a tie when you say yes. And then as the game’s going, you’re looking at the score, you’re not really thinking the game’s going to end in a tie.”
But even that process prompted brief confusion. Roberts originally selected Schwarber, Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez and Alonso, a two-time Home Run Derby champion. But Suarez, who was hit on his left hand by a pitch in the eighth inning, was scratched after being announced and replaced by Miami Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers.
Boone countered with Athletics designated hitter Brent Rooker, Seattle Mariners outfielder Randy Arozarena and Tampa Bay Rays first baseman Jonathan Aranda.
Los Angeles Dodgers third-base coach Dino Ebel threw for the NL. New York Yankees first-base coach Travis Chapman assumed the pressure-packed duty for the AL.
Finally, the rules: Each player was granted three swings and an unlimited number of pitches to take them.
Rooker, the only participant to also take part in Monday’s Home Run Derby, led off with two homers. Stowers followed with one. Arozarena then extended the AL’s lead to 3-1, setting the stage for Schwarber.
Schwarber, a man seemingly built to smash baseballs over the wall, has never won a Home Run Derby. He lost in the finals in 2018 and failed to advance out of the first round in 2022; he hasn’t entered another one since. On Tuesday, however, he did not falter.
The three-time All-Star, after building some drama with a delayed emergence from the NL dugout, crushed three home runs, drawing louder and louder reactions with each one. The first was a 428-foot laser that traveled 107 mph to straightaway center. Next, he cracked a 461-foot, 109 mph moon shot to right field. He finished the spree with a 382-foot dinger, dropping down to one knee as the ball soared into the right-field seats and eliciting a rambunctious reaction from his temporary teammates.
“I think the first swing was kind of the big one,” Schwarber said. “I was just really trying to hit a line drive versus trying to hit the home run. Usually, that tends to work out, especially in games.”
The pressure shifted to Aranda. Needing one homer to tie, Aranda lifted a fly ball to the warning track before clanking a ball off the top of the brick wall in right field. His last swing produced a weak fly ball to left field, giving the NL the win at eight minutes to midnight.
“First time in history we got to do this,” Roberts said, “and I think it played pretty well tonight.”
By then, the early talk of the night was old news.
This year’s exhibition was the first game at the major league level outside of spring training to feature the automated ball-strike system, an expected precursor to MLB implementing the arrangement for all games beginning next season.
The rules on Tuesday were the same as the ABS challenge rules introduced during spring training. Each team received two challenges for the game. Only the pitcher, catcher or batter could request a challenge, and the request needed to be immediate without help from the dugout or other players on the field.
Five pitches were challenged Tuesday. The first was an 0-2 changeup that AL starter Tarik Skubal threw to San Diego Padres third baseman Manny Machado that plate umpire Dan Iassogna called a ball in the first inning. Skubal and his catcher, Cal Raleigh of the Mariners, didn’t agree and challenged the pitch to make history. The call was overturned, ending Machado’s at-bat with a strikeout.
“I wasn’t even going to use them,” Skubal said. “But I felt like that was a strike, and you want that in an 0-2 count.”
Skubal became the first Detroit Tigers pitcher to start an All-Star Game since Max Scherzer in 2013. Opposite him was the other Cy Young favorite.
A year after starting the All-Star Game for the NL with 11 career outings on his résumé, Pittsburgh Pirates sensation Paul Skenes received the nod again to become the 10th pitcher to start consecutive All-Star Games and the first to accomplish the feat in his first two seasons. Last year, in Texas, Skenes walked one batter in his scoreless inning, a blip that he said “pissed me off” and pushed him to attack hitters for his All-Star Game encore.
“I was throwing every pitch as hard as I could,” Skenes said, “hoping that it landed in the strike zone.”
The result: two strikeouts on 100 mph fastballs to Tigers teammates Gleyber Torres and Riley Greene to open the contest. Skenes admittedly reached back seeking to strike out the side, but Yankees slugger Aaron Judge grounded out on another 100 mph pitch to conclude Skenes’ night.
“That’s what the All-Star Game’s for,” Skenes said. “Every hitter’s trying to hit a home run. We’re trying to strike everybody out.”
In a fitting transition, 11-time All-Star Clayton Kershaw relieved Skenes, 14 years his junior, in the second inning.
Raleigh, Tuesday’s Home Run Derby champion, welcomed the Dodgers’ Kershaw with a 101.9 mph line drive that Chicago Cubs left-fielder Kyle Tucker snagged with a sliding catch. Kershaw then struck out the Toronto Blue Jays‘ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. looking at an 87 mph slider on his sixth pitch, prompting Roberts to emerge from the NL dugout to take the ball from Kershaw and end what could have been the final All-Star Game appearance of his Hall of Fame career.
A legend selection for the game by commissioner Rob Manfred, Kershaw delivered a pregame speech in the NL clubhouse.
“We have the best All-Star Game of any sport,” said Kershaw, who on July 2 became the 20th pitcher to record 3,000 career strikeouts. “We do have the best product. So to be here, to realize your responsibility in the sport, is important. And we have Shohei [Ohtani] here. We have Aaron Judge here. We have all these guys that represent the game really, really well, so we get to showcase that and be part of that is important. I just said I was super honored to be a part of it.”
In the end, Kershaw was part of something never seen before.
Sports
Passan: All-Star Game swing-off captures the beauty of baseball
Published
2 hours agoon
July 16, 2025By
admin
ATLANTA — Clutching the glass bat given to the All-Star Game MVP, Kyle Schwarber walked through the National League clubhouse and chuckled to himself: He had just won the award without registering a single hit in the game.
“One good BP wins you a trophy these days,” Schwarber said.
What happened Tuesday night at the All-Star Game was unlike anything in the 94 versions that preceded it. Thanks to a rule change three years ago, baseball unveiled its version of penalty kicks in soccer or a shootout in hockey: Break a tie after nine innings via a Home Run Derby-style swing-off. And there was perhaps no one on the planet better to meet the moment than Schwarber, the Philadelphia Phillies slugger, who homered on all three of his swings in the impromptu batting practice session to propel the NL to the win (6-6, with a 4-3 edge in homers) in the Midsummer Classic.
For an All-Star Game that has grown relatively stale in recent years, larded with pitching changes and substitutions, the swing-off lent it an air of freshness and excitement. Amid all of the oddities — Atlanta Braves fans at a sold-out Truist Park cheering on a star from their hated rival, New York Mets players urging on Schwarber, all of it against the backdrop of the NL blowing a 6-0 lead — the one constant was Schwarber playing hero at a time of import.
As the American League blitzed back from a half-dozen-run deficit, the possibility of the swing-off was tantalizingly close — not just for the wide swath of fans who hadn’t known that Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association had agreed to a sudden-death All-Star Game derby, but for the players who had stuck around until the end of the game to bear witness to a contest teeming with pressure — particularly for an exhibition.
The rules were simple: NL manager Dave Roberts and AL manager Aaron Boone selected three players and one alternate to take three swings. The team with the most home runs wins the game. As nice as it would have been for Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge to participate, when they made their choices in the days leading up to the game, both managers selected players they anticipated would be warm from finishing on the field: Schwarber, Mets first baseman Pete Alonso and Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez for the NL, countering Brent Rooker of the A’s, Mariners outfielder Randy Arozarena and Tampa Bay first baseman Jonathan Aranda.
Late in the game, with the possibility of a tie three outs away, Los Angeles Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann approached Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers and told him if the game did indeed go extra innings, he would need to hit for Suarez, who was removed from the game after being hit by a 100 mph pitch on his hand.
“You’re f—ing with me,” Stowers said.
“No, I’m seriously not,” Lehmann said. “This is real.”
“You’re kidding,” Stowers said.
“I’m serious,” Lehmann said.
“I thought I was the young guy getting teased,” Stowers later said. “Lo and behold, after the game ends, the managers meet up. And I think, ‘This might be for real.'”
Boone and Roberts had a finite group from which to choose. Around half the players were gone from the stadium, already headed home after a long, hot week here. Those who stuck around were rewarded with an urgent, entertaining gimmick that put players in a crucible, cranked the temperature and challenged them not to melt.
The format differed from the Home Run Derby the previous night, during which Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh won a contest that required stamina to make it through minuteslong rounds. The swing-off was different — reminiscent of the bonus rounds in the Derby during which fans get to admire home runs without the specter of another ball flying off the bat soon thereafter.
Ohtani wasn’t there. Neither was Judge. And it didn’t really matter, because the players were undeniably into the results, the sort of reaction that lent credibility to the format. After the AL tied the game on an infield hit from Steve Kwan with two outs and two strikes in the ninth, reigning AL Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal — already in the clubhouse and in his street clothes — and Kansas City left-hander Kris Bubic were happy to follow the lead of Minnesota right-hander Joe Ryan, who said: “We gotta go out and watch this.”
They saw a show. And showmanship. And a comeback from a 2-1 deficit after Rooker hit two of his three swings out and Stowers parked one home run. And of course it was delivered by the ultimate showman, Schwarber. The 32-year-old introduced himself a decade ago with five home runs in his first postseason and then equaled that number in the 2023 NL Championship Series. All told, he has 21 homers in 69 postseason games. This was nothing, Schwarber being Schwarber, launching titanic shots in the most opportune of scenarios.
Even though he never takes batting practice on the field, Schwarber was perfectly thrilled to break that habit for the sake of the NL. With Dodgers third-base coach Dino Ebel throwing, Schwarber used a brand-new bat — a 99 mph Aroldis Chapman sinker had broken his lumber in the ninth inning — and then lined his first swing over the fence to center field. He followed with a high parabola 461 feet into right-center. His final swing was classic Schwarber, taking him down to his back knee, as if he were proposing the swing-off end right there with his third home run, down the right-field line.
It didn’t, not officially: Aranda, one of the breakout hitters of the first half, stepped up and proceeded to hit one ball off Truist Park’s brick wall in the outfield. He didn’t come close to a home run with two others. NL players rejoiced around Schwarber, leaving Alonso with nothing to do but celebrate the win.
“I don’t think I’d like that in-season if we lost on it,” San Diego Padres reliever Jason Adam said. “But for this setting, it was awesome.”
Almost everyone in both clubhouses shared Adam’s sentiment. The exigency of a limited-swing Derby — and the difficulty in going from game to batting practice with essentially a moment’s notice — transfixed players. And the audience, though understandably lamenting the absenteeism of some of the game’s biggest stars, mostly embraced the idea as novelty done right.
“There’s probably a world where you could see that in the future, where maybe it’s in some regular-season mix,” Boone said. “I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if people start talking about it like that. Obviously, I don’t think that should happen, necessarily, or would at any time in the near future. But I’ve got to say, it was pretty exciting.”
Already Tuesday had offered an All-Star Game filled with firsts. The inclusion of the automated ball-strike challenge system saw borderline ball-strike calls overturned by a simple tap on the head. Amid an outing in which he threw nine of his 18 pitches at 100-plus mph, rookie sensation Jacob Misiorowski unleashed an ungodly 98.1 mph slider so nasty it awed players in both dugouts.
In the end, it was an electric night for baseball, with Schwarber serving as the conduit. And when Jon Shestakofsky of the National Baseball Hall of Fame went to collect the bat Schwarber used to go 3-for-3 — a decade after Schwarber gave the Hall his bat used to collect the MVP award of the Futures Game — he noticed not a single scratch or sign that the bat had even been used.
“No ball marks when you flush it,” Schwarber said.
He had indeed — and in the process lent validity to the idea that the swing-off could be an entertaining way to cap All-Star week. Players around both clubhouses said they would consider signing up for the swing-off next year — and Stowers said the swing-off made him want to participate in the Home Run Derby in the future. The champion of this year’s Derby was perfectly content to share the spotlight with Schwarber.
“It’s good for the game, it’s good for baseball, it’s good for the fans,” Raleigh said.
And that’s the point, right? All of the consternation over Misiorowski making the NL team after just 25⅔ major league innings ignored a fundamental element of All-Star week — as much as it’s to reward the players, it’s to grow the game’s fandom, too.
Tuesday’s swing-off was baseball balm, surprisingly comforting, and sent the game into its second half with momentum. The trade deadline will provide that tension for the next two weeks and pennant races thereafter. The game is in a good place because it is evermore the realm of the unforeseen and unknowable.
We might not get many of these — only 13 past Midsummer Classics have gone to extra innings — which will only increase its charm, allowing the swing-off to become the most pleasant of surprises. As we saw Tuesday, there is glory in the pressure, the stress, the thrill of knowing you’ve got only three swings. It’s a beautiful little distillation of baseball, exceptional in portioned doses.
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