- The Nats always drew well when they fielded a team that could win half its games.
- Washington became a Redskins-only town the day that Bob <unmentionable> announced he was moving the team to Dallas, and George Allen countered that MLB had insulted the Nation's Capital and that the Redskins would give the town something to be proud of. They did: went to the playoffs for the first time in about 25 years.
- Washington has had baseball for six seasons, and the Lerners have owned the franchise for for more than four seasons. If a team plays dead every year, fans lose interest. That's why I maintain that the Lerners are foolish...foolish to squander a large and wealthy market.
- Some have insisted that the Nats make a steady profit. If so, then
(a) the team is a cash-cow. Owners treat a business as a cash-cow only when they know the business cannot grow. They move the profits into new business, until the cash-cow dies. This would be foolish of the Lerners because
(b) Owners buy a franchise for the ego-boost. The power to get on TV. The chance to stand with Joe Gibbs and hold a Super Bowl trophy. (Cooke made his money owning department stores in Canada, but he had his thrills when the TV cameras would pan to the owners box, and announcers would goggle on about which Supreme Court Justice etc had been invited to sit with JKC). People ridicule the Nats; where's the ego puffing quality in that?