More money doesn’t always pay off….


Are we going to be replaced by a computer or what?” one veteran baseball scout told The Los Angeles Times last week.
Selena Roberts has a timely look at Billy Beane, General Manager of the Oakland A’s. Beane has made the Oakland A’s winners, despite a very low payroll and competitors with piles of cash (money is not the secret to success).

But what the swipes reveal is how threatening an alternate view is to baseball’s theology.
It’s a threat to inept owners ? and/or a certain baseball commissioner ? who have used their small-market woes as habitual excuses for futility. It’s a threat to Yankeesque teams who spend millions to assemble constellations only to be increasingly grounded by teams of cohesive humans. It’s a threat to romanticized scouts whose legends are built on a 5 percent success rate.
“Everyone thought they had it figured out a long time ago,” said Scott Hatteberg, the A’s first baseman. “Now you have these young guys coming in to mess with it.”

San Francisco’s Commonwealth Club has an interesting interview with Beane and writer Michael Lewis regarding last year’s excellent book, Moneyball.