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Major League Baseball Strike

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This study will examine the 1994 strike in major league baseball in 1994 and the long-term results of that strike. The argument of the study is that while the strike was devastating to baseball in 1994, shortening two seasons in 1994 and 1995, by 1998 the long-term damage done to the game had been almost entirely eliminated.

The basic issue of the salary cap was one which in the first place was not of great interest to fans, and whatever damage was done by the strike was undone in large part because of the excitement generated in 1998 by the home-run race between Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwire, but also because. for better or worse, baseball remains the national pastime and fans of the sport eventually forget, or at least forgive, and return to the game with as much fervor as ever.

Nevertheless, when the strike took place in 1994, and when it continued to reverberate through the next season, there was no doubt that the game was being hurt in the eyes of the fans. When one speaks of baseball, one is speaking of an enormous corporate business enterprise. The product is entertainment, and as long as consumers are paying money to watch that entertainment, and television is paying money to broadcast it, then the business is doing well.

The owners of baseball teams and the players of baseball are all relatively wealthy individuals who are not profoundly affected by strikes. The only question from their point of view is the degree of wealth they will enjoy as a result of the bu

. . .
Sunday night when owners accepted the union's offer to play without an agreement. The season, which had been scheduled to start Sunday night, will begin April 26 and each team will play 144 games, 18 fewer than the usual. Replacement players were sent packing. "I don't regard it as a surrender," acting commissioner Bud Selig said following a 4 1/2hour owners meeting. "The players were on strike, they made an unconditional offer to come back, and we accepted that offer." However, the owners did not obtain a nostrike promise from the union, leaving open the possibility that players could walk out again late this season if owners again threaten to impose a salary cap. Of course, the strike was not resumed and the sport of baseball began its long road back into the hearts and minds of the American people, the fans, who are the ones who ultimately provide the wealth over which the players and owners battled: "Far more difficult than getting players back on the field may be the job baseball faces of restoring the country's faith in the game." Clinton proved unable to end the strike, but he did voice the views of most fans when he called the owners and players "just a few hundred folks trying to figure out how to divide nearly $
. . .

Some common words found in the essay are:
Cleveland Indians, I've I'm, Mark McGwire, Bud Selig, World Series, , Hatch RUtah, Selig CEO, Sonia Sotomayor, Mark Rosentraub, owners players, salary cap, 1994 strike, strike fans, major league, fans resigned season, world series, resigned season, strike short-term, wealthy individuals, baseball played, major league baseball,
Approximate Word count = 2042
Approximate Pages = 8 (250 words per page)

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