Here are what I see as the primary tasks for new Padres CEO Jeff Moorad, who took over for Sandy Alderson during spring training and eventually will become the majority owner.
1. Improving relations with fans. Since Petco Park opened in 2004, attendance at Padres games has dwindled. The first couple years after, it was by just a thousand or two per game. Last year, the drop from 2007 was 4,500 fans per game. A total reduction of around 7,500 fans from that inaugural season. More ominously, the Padres went from well above average National League attendance to well below.
The case should not be overstated. The 2.4 million total draw in 2008 was higher than all but two seasons at the various incarnations of Qualcomm Stadium. Still, the Friars had something going there for a few seasons and they're in the process of losing it.
An open and honest dialogue between Moorad and the fans, something that, fairly or unfairly, they didn't perceive they were getting from his predecessor, would be very helpful here.
2. Making baseball decisions based on baseball, not the bank account or over-reliance on computer analysis. No one is saying blow the checkbook or ignore the stats, but there's gotta be a happy medium. Our first hint of how this works out will likely come in the June amateur draft, unless a major early-season trade is made at the big-league level.
3. Lower the ticket and concession prices. I have no problem with field level seats being $30 a game and up to $57. What I have a problem with is upper reserved at $14. Those $9 bleacher seats they advertise are never actually available, in my experience. The cheap seats have got to be truly inexpensive and they're not. I have also lost my interest in the Park in the Park, where you just simply can't see the darn game. If you want to spend your evening in an interesting atmosphere, fine, but you're not going to watch a game. I do think they've made headway on concessions, in which there's a plan to get a hot dog, snacks and soft drink for $5.
If he does those things and re-establishes a solid working relationship with the players, in order to prevent future Trevor Hoffman fiascos, then he'll do well here.
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Here we are the Friday before the season and the starting pitching situation has not improved a bit. It shows how bad things are with the pitching staff that the powers-that-be thought the bullpen was an even bigger priority. Now even the Peavy-Young duo is uncertain because Peavy trade rumors have resurfaced -- though I doubt them -- and Young was lit up like a stogie in Arizona last month.
Opposed to last year, I like the Padres in the field and their lineup in 2009. They might turn out to have the worst sea-level pitching staff since the Astros posted a 5.42 team ERA in 2000. The Astros, of course, play in the hitter-friendly confines then known as Enron Field. The Padres, in hitter-adverse Petco Park, will have a similar ERA hearing into June and will be well under.500.
Perhaps that's when we'll see what we have in our new CEO/future owner.
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It was a shame that San Diego State's men's basketball team had to play Baylor in a semifinal of the NIT instead of the title game because the Bears, as expected, presented the sort of matchup that gave the Aztecs problems all season long. Still, it was an excellent season and you can't sneeze at a school-record for wins and a deep post-season tournament run.
As sad as it was for the season to conclude a game early, the arrival of the offseason is not the worst thing in the world, for the next seven basketball-free months should be very interesting.
First, there are a lot of key players leaving and a lot of top recruits taking over. Some services rate the class coming in this fall as the 15th best in the nation. I'm sure that's over-rating the case, but even if it is they're well-regarded. A good thing. How it all shakes out, who takes what role, who garners the playing time and who becomes the star, are all interesting questions.
Plus, Coach Steve Fisher and his staff will have two scholarships available for the next recruiting class, if my figuring is accurate, maybe three since kids on the lower rungs of the roster tend to transfer or quit to concentrate on academics. Can these coaches capitalize on success and the excitement of the Saint Mary's game to take their already very good recruiting even a notch higher? Some folks said that potential recruits were in Cox for the NIT quarterfinal. If those kids liked the atmosphere, maybe they come.
There's two clear areas of personnel improvement for SDSU that make the difference between the good program they are now and the very good or great teams from the BCS conferences. They don't have size at center. In the years they did have size, the players weren't terribly good. Can Fisher now bring in serious quality for the post? Size is also the issue at guard. The Aztecs are simply too short and skinny. Physical guards like Baylor's have been the primary reasons why SDSU struggles with power conference teams even as they beat nearly everyone else. The guards coming in this fall are only a little bigger than what they've had previously. If Fisher can just get someone with Richie Williams' talent in someone with Matt Thomas' body size, then the Aztecs program would be on the cusp of the Sweet 16.
Imagine that. Then people will hardly remember that quaint little run in the NIT.
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