Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Farm System Ranking: #9 Los Angeles Dodgers

From 2001 until 2011, the Los Angeles Dodgers had 69 of the 149 players examined (46.31%) play at least one game at the Major League level. The Dodgers saw 51 players (73.91%) play for them while the other 18 spent time with one of the other thirty MLB clubs.
2001-2011 Dodgers Farm System Rank
At The Helm
General Manager Ned Colletti
The Dodgers had four General Managers (Kevin Malone 2001, Dan Evans 2002-2004, Paul DePodesta 2005, Ned Colletti 2006-2011), four Farm Directors (Jerry Weinstein 2001, Bill Bavasi 2002-2003, Kim Ng 2004, Terry Collins 2005-2006, DeJon Watson 2007-2011), and three Scouting Director (Matt Slater 2001, Logan White 2002-2006, 2008,2011, Tim Hallgren 2007, 2009-2010) over the eleven year time period examined.
Five Hits
1.      Matt Kemp, OF: The 27 year old has spent six seasons in the majors as a member of the Dodgers. A member of the 2011 National League All-Star team. His career batting average is .294 with 128 HR and 457 RBI. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 6th round of the 2003 amateur draft.
2.      Clayton Kershaw, LHP: The 23 year old has spent four seasons in the majors with the Dodgers. A member of the 2011 National League All-Star team. His career record is 47-28 with a 2.88 ERA. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 1st round (7th overall) of the 2006 amateur draft.
3.      James Loney, 1B: The 27 year old has spent six seasons in the majors as a member of the Dodgers. His career batting average is .288 with 67 HR and 418 RBI. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 1st round (19th overall) of the 2002 amateur draft.
4.      Chad Billingsley, RHP: The 27 year old has spent six seasons in the majors with the Dodgers. A member of the 2009 National League All-Star team. His career record is 70-52 with a 3.68 ERA. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 1st round (24th overall) of the 2003 amateur draft.
5.      Jonathan Broxton, RHP: The 27 year old has spent seven seasons in the majors as a member of the Dodgers. His career record is 25-20 with a 3.19 ERA and 84 saves. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 2nd round of the 2002 amateur.  
Five Misses
1.      Ben Diggins, RHP: The 32 year old played in 5 games for the Milwaukee Brewers in 2002, posting a record of 0-4 with an 8.63 ERA. Last pitched in 2005 with Hi-A Brevard County (Florida State League) in Brewers organization. Traded by the Dodgers to the Brewers along with Shane Nance (LHP) in exchange for Tyler Houston (3B) and Brian Mallette (RHP) in July 2002. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 1st round (17th overall) of the 2000 amateur draft.  
2.      Chin-Feng Chen, OF: The 34 year old played in 19 games with the Dodgers over parts of four seasons. His career batting average is .091 with 2 RBI. He currently plays for the La New Bears in the Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPFL) in Taiwan and has represented Chinese Taipei internationally on numerous occasions. Signed by the Dodgers as an amateur free agent out of Taiwan in January 1999.
3.      Greg Miller, LHP: The 27 year old has spent seven seasons pitching in the minor leagues where he has a career record of 24-14 with a 3.86 ERA. He lasted pitched in 2009 at Hi-A Inland Empire (Californian League) in the Dodgers organization. Had a serious shoulder injury that lead to the end of his career. Drafted by the Dodgers in the supplemental 1st round (31st overall) of the 2002 amateur draft.
4.      James Adkins, LHP: The 25 year old has spent five seasons in the minor leagues where he has posted a career record of 15-25 with a 4.85 ERA. In 2011 he pitched at Double-A Carolina (Southern League) in the Cincinnati Reds organization. He was released by the Dodgers on April 5th, 2011. Drafted by the Dodgers in the supplemental 1st round (39th overall) of the 2007 amateur draft.
5.      Chuck Tiffany, LHP: The 26 year old has spent seven seasons in the minor leagues where he has a career record of 23-19 with a 4.45 ERA. He lasted pitched in 2011 in Independent Ball for Maui Na Noa Ikaika (North American League). Traded by the Dodgers to the Tampa Bay Rays along with Edwin Jackson (RHP) in exchange for Danny Baez (RHP) and Lance Carter (RHP) in January 2006. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 2nd round of the 2003 amateur draft.

Five Current Major Leaguers on Other Teams
1.      Shane Victorino, OF, Philadelphia Phillies: The 30 year old has spent eight seasons in the majors as a member of the Padres and Phillies. The two-time All-Star and three-time Gold Glove Award winner has a career batting average of .279 with 79 HR, 354 RBI, and 162 stolen bases. Selected by the Padres from the Dodgers in the 2002 Rule 5 draft before being returned to the Dodgers in May 2003. Selected by the Phillies from the Dodgers in the 2004 Rule 5 Draft. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 6th round of the 1999 amateur draft.
2.      Edwin Jackson, RHP, St. Louis Cardinals: The 28 year old has spent nine seasons in the majors as a member of the Dodgers, Rays, Tigers, Diamondbacks, White Sox, and Cardinals. A member of the 2009 American League All-Star team. His career record is 60-60 with a 4.46 ERA. Traded by the Dodgers to the Tampa Bay Rays along with Chuck Tiffany (LHP) in exchange for Danny Baez (RHP) and Lance Carter (RHP) in January 2006. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 6th round of the 2001 amateur draft.
3.      Franklin Gutierrez, OF, Seattle Mariners: The 28 year old has spent seven seasons in the majors as a member of the Indians and Mariners. He has a career batting average of .256 with 53 HR and 238 RBI. Traded by the Dodgers to the Indians along with Andrew Brown (RHP) in exchange for Milton Bradley (OF) in April 2004. Signed by the Dodgers as an amateur free agent in November 2000 out of Venezuela.
4.      Russell Martin, C, New York Yankees: The 28 year old has spent six seasons in the majors as a member of the Dodgers and Yankees. The three-time All-Star has a career batting average of .267 with 72 HR and 365 RBI. Drafted by the Dodgers in the 17th round of the 2002 amateur draft.
5.      Carlos Santana, C, Cleveland Indians: The 25 year old has spent two seasons in the majors as a member of the Indians. His career batting average is .244 with 33 HR and 201 RBI. Traded by the Dodgers to the Indians along with Jon Meloan (RHP) in exchange for Casey Blake (3B). Signed by the Dodgers as an amateur free agent in August 2004 out of the Dominican Republic.

More Notable Major Leaguers
Blake DeWitt, 2B, Chicago Cubs
Wesley Wright, LHP, Houston Astros
Cory Wade, RHP, New York Yankees
Fun Fact
The Dodgers last won the World Series in 1988 under the guidance of Manager Tony Lasorda and General Manager Fred Claire. The 1988 team was led by Orel Hershiser (RHP) who won the National League Cy Young Award and was named World Series MVP. Hershiser is the only players to win the Cy Young, Championship Series MVP and World Series MVP in the same season. The 1988 World Series also featured the memorable home run from Kirk Gibson (OF) as he came off the bench with two outs in the ninth inning as a pinch hitter in his only appearance of the series. 
Legendary broadcaster Vin Scully has worked for the Dodgers for 62 seasons which is the longest of any broadcaster with any single team in professional sport history. Scully  began with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1950.   

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Farm System Ranking: #10 Colorado Rockies

From 2001 until 2011, the Colorado Rockies had 85 of the 156 players examined (54.49%) play at least one game at the Major League level. The Rockies saw 71 players (83.53%) play for them while the other 14 spent time with one of the other thirty MLB clubs.
2001-2011 Rockies Farm System Rank
At The Helm
General Manager Dan O'Dowd
The Rockies had one General Manager (Dan O’Dowd 2001-2011), three Farm Directors (Mike Hill 2001-2002, Bill Geivett 2003-2006, Marc Gustafson 2007-2011), and one Scouting Director (Bill Schmidt 2001-2011) over the eleven year time period examined.
Five Hits
1.      Troy Tulowitzki, SS: The 27 year old has spent six seasons in the majors with the Rockies. The two-time All-Star has a career batting average of .293 with 122 HR and 443 RBI. He won the 2010 Silver Slugger award and 2010 Gold Glove award among National League shortstops. Drafted by the Rockies in the 1st round (7th overall) of the 2005 amateur draft.
2.      Aaron Cook, RHP: The 32 year old has spent ten seasons in the majors with the Rockies. A member of the 2008 National League All-Star team. His career record is 72-68 with a 4.53 ERA. Drafted by the Rockies in the 2nd round of the 1997 amateur draft.
3.      Ryan Spilborghs, OF: The 32 year old has spent six seasons in the majors with the Rockies. His career batting average is .272 with 42 HR and 218 RBI. Drafted by the Rockies in the 7th round of the 2002 amateur draft.
4.      Dexter Fowler, OF: The 25 year has spent four seasons in the majors with the Rockies. His career batting average is .262 with 15 HR and 115 RBI. Drafted by the Rockies in the 14th round of the 2004 amateur draft.
5.      Chris Iannetta, C: The 28 year old has spent six seasons in the majors with the Rockies. His career batting average is .235 with 63 HR and 236 RBI. Drafted by the Rockies in the 4th round of the 2004 amateur draft.
Five Misses
1.      Chin-hui Tsao, RHP: The 30 year old pitched in 50 games over four seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies and Dodgers. Considered the Rockies top prospect prior to the 2001, 2002, and 2004 seasons by Baseball America. His career record is 4-4 with a 5.40 ERA. He lasted pitched in 2008 with Triple-A Omaha (Pacific Coast League) in the Royals organization. Signed by the Rockies as an amateur free agent out of Taiwan in October 1999.
2.      Jason Young, RHP: The 32 year old pitched in 10 games over two seasons in the majors with the Rockies. His career record is 0-3 with a 9.71 ERA. He lasted pitched in 2005 with Triple-A Buffalo (International League) in the Cleveland Indians organization. Drafted by the Rockies in the 2nd round of the 2000 amateur draft.
3.      Chaz Roe, RHP: The 25 year old has spent seven seasons in the minors where he has compiled a career record of 42-45 with a 4.73 ERA. Traded by the Rockies to the Mariners in exchange for Jose Lopez (2B) in December 2010. Spent the 2011 season with Triple-A Tacoma (Pacific Coast League) in the Mariners organization. Drafted by the Rockies in the supplemental 1st round (32nd overall) of the 2005 amateur draft.
4.      Ryan Kibler, RHP: The 31 year old has spent four seasons in the minors where he compiled a career record of 37-30 with a 3.64 ERA. Lasted pitched in 2002 with Double-A Carolina (Southern League) in the Rockies organization. Drafted by the Rockies in the 2nd round of the 1999 amateur draft.
5.      Oscar Materano, SS: The 29 year old has spent five seasons in the minors where he has a career batting average of .244 with 19 HR and 135 RBI. He last played in 2005 in Independent ball with Schaumburg (Northern League). Signed by the Rockies as an amateur free agent out of Venezuela in July 1998.
Five Current Major Leaguers on Other Teams
1.      Matt Holliday, OF, St. Louis Cardinals: The 31 year old has spent eight seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies, Athletics, and Cardinals. The five-time All-Star has a career batting average of .315 with 202 HR and 770 RBI. Traded by the Rockies to the Athletics in exchange for Carlos Gonzalez (OF), Greg Smith (LHP), and Huston Street (RHP) in November 2008. Drafted by the Rockies in the 7th round of the 1998 amateur draft.
2.      Ubaldo Jimenez, RHP, Cleveland Indians: The 27 year old has spent six seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies and Indians. A member of the 2010 National League All-Star team. He has a career record of 60-49 with a 3.76 ERA. Traded by the Rockies to the Indians in exchange for Joseph Gardner (RHP), Matt McBride (OF), Alex White (RHP), and Drew Pomeranz (LHP). Signed by the Rockies as an amateur free agent out of the Dominican Republic in April 2001.
3.      Jeff Francis, LHP, Kansas City Royals: The 30 year old has spent seven seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies and Royals. His career record is 61-66 with a 4.78 ERA. Drafted by the Rockies in the 1st round (9th overall) of the 2002 amateur draft.
4.      Brad Hawpe, OF, San Diego Padres: The 32 year old has spent eight seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies, Rays, and Padres. A member of the 2009 National League All-Star team. His career batting average is .276 with 124 HR and 490 RBI. Drafted by the Rockies in the 11th round of the 2000 amateur draft.
5.      Jeff Baker, 2B, Chicago Cubs: The 30 year old has spent seven seasons in the majors as a member of the Rockies and Cubs. His career batting average is .270 with 33 HR and 153 RBI. Traded by the Rockies to the Cubs in exchange for Al Alburquerque (RHP) in July 2009. Drafted by the Rockies in the 4th round of the 2002 amateur draft.
More Notable Major Leaguers
Juan Uribe, SS, Los Angeles Dodgers
Franklin Morales, LHP, Boston Red Sox
Josh Bard, C, Seattle Mariners
Jayson Nix, 3B, Toronto Blue Jays
Fun Fact
First baseman Todd Helton has spent his entire fifteen year career as a member of the Rockies. His career batting average is .323 with 347 HR and 1308 RBI. The five-time All-Star is the franchise leader in a number of categories such as games (2054), hits (2363), home runs (325), RBI (1308), among others. He was the starting quarterback at the University of Tennessee before getting injured in 1994 and being replaced by current NFL quarterback Payton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts. Drafted by the Rockies in the 1st round (8th overall) of the 1995 amateur draft.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Economic Indicators of Major League Baseball

           Here is an economics paper that Ian Phillips (a colleague of mine)  and I wrote about the business of Major League Baseball. 

Introduction
 The Major League Baseball (MLB) industry dates back 142 years to 1869 when it was first founded. The MLB has had a blanket exemption from United States antitrust laws since 1922 (Zimbalist, 2004), creating barriers to entry for anyone looking to start their own franchise. Being exempt from antitrust laws means that the MLB can operate under a monopoly market structure as the only provider of professional baseball in North America. MLB is composed of 30 different teams (29 in the United States, 1 in Canada). There are some unique aspects of the MLB industry compared to other industries that make it different, as consumers have an emotional connection with the game itself and their favorite team or player. MLB teams have large followings of fans that want to see their team win, as such MLB teams do not always make purely economic decisions. Supply is unique because it cannot easily fluctuate to meet varying consumer demands. There are a specific number of games played each year in stadiums with distinct seating capacities. The supply of MLB products has grown, as cable packages and an Internet streaming have become revenue-generating opportunities.
The labour market of MLB is another unique aspect of the industry. MLB operates with characteristics of a monopsony, as they are the only buyer and employer of professional baseball players (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007). Teams are looking for highly specialized employees that have the skills only the MLB seek. Furthermore, the labour market is unique because it is fixed. MLB is not expanding, and thus there are only a fixed number of players to hire.
Each season millions of fans attend MLB games. The 2011 regular season saw a 0.5 percent increase over the 2010 season as 73,425,568 people attended a game, making it the fifth highest attendance level ever (MLB, 2011). The league as a whole is relatively stable as the member teams have stayed in their respective cities and avoided relocation (with the exception of the Montreal Expos who moved to Washington prior to the 2005 season making it the only relocation to occur in the last 39 years). Evidently the demand for goods and services in the MLB industry are strong, even taking into account that attending MLB games is not a necessity and only a form of entertainment.
Clearly MLB games draw a huge number of patrons over the course of a season. With over 70 million people attending games, that means over 70 million people must travel to the stadiums. Having an MLB team in a city is a big draw for tourism. Shonk and Chelladurai (2008) attribute sport facilities and their affect on downtown development as one of two major reasons sport tourism is growing. With increasing tourism more money is spent within a region, benefiting the community as new money is added and spread to residents while also creating new jobs.
Demand and Forecasting
            The demand for MLB varies for each of the 30 teams in the industry. Eschenfelder and Li (2007) refer to demand as “the willingness and ability of consumers to purchase goods and services” (p. 38). For the MLB industry, goods and services vary from tickets to memorabilia, to foot long hot dogs and MLB television packages. Goods and services can be classified simply as necessities or wants in the eyes of consumers. Products of the MLB industry are considered ‘wants’ because they are things “that are desirable but not required for existence” (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007, p. 37). Considering MLB products are wants, they are deemed to be elastic, because the percentage change in the quantity demanded exceeds the percentage change in price (Parkin & Bade, 2008). This means that a change to the price of products will cause a greater change to the demand for those goods. Consumers are sensitive to the price of goods and services in the MLB industry.
            The demand for MLB products are affected by six main factors: the price of related goods, expected future prices, income, expected future incomes, population and preferences (Parkin & Bade, 2008). Most important to the MLB industry are the price of related goods, income and preferences. Prices of related goods refers to substitute and complement products. If the price of MLB products rises too greatly, consumers may look to spend their money on substitute forms of entertainment. Oppositely, the law of demand states, “when the price of an item goes down, the demand for it goes up” (Sawyer et al., 2004, p. 7). If prices are low it allows for MLB products to be accessible to more consumers.
Income is important to demand because as it rises, people want to buy more goods (Parkin & Bade, 2008). MLB products are classified as normal goods, because as consumer purchasing power (income) rises they will buy more products (Parkhouse, 2005). Considering the United States economy is still facing hard times (Mutikani, 2011), and that the national unemployment rate is currently at 9.1% (Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2011), income is not rising for many Americans. Lower income has a negative effect on the demand for MLB products.
 Finally, consumer preferences affect demand. Parkin and Bade (2008) explain preferences as “an individual’s attitudes towards goods and services” (p. 64). The MLB is the highest level of baseball in the world, and therefore is the preference of Americans. Americans may substitute other entertainment options rather than attend baseball games, but they will not substitute other forms of baseball instead of MLB.
When forecasting demand, there are six factors to consider: general economic conditions, industry conditions, income levels of the population, consumer habits and tastes, market potential for various groups and government regulations and laws (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007). With poor economic conditions and low income levels of the American population, those are two discouraging factors. Industry conditions are tumultuous but dependable. Encouragingly for the MLB, they have had a blanket exemption from the nation’s antitrust laws since 1922 (Zimbalist, 2004). Additionally, analysis of past demand data is strong, as the MLB has had only 1 team relocate since 1972.
Consumer habits and tastes are not a threat to the future of the MLB. Passan (2011) wrote that through the first 320 games of the 2011 season (April 25, 2011), attendance was down 506 tickets per game compared to 2010. However, by September 28, 2011, attendance was up 186 tickets per game (Baseball-Reference, 2011). Only 12 out of 30 teams saw a decrease in average attendance. Even through difficult economic times, Americans are still attending MLB games on a regular basis.
The market potential of various groups would be a possible way for the MLB to grow. This could be in the form of expanding the league to new cities or marketing the MLB to new user groups. Attracting new fans to the game will increase revenue across the industry. Lastly, Government regulations and laws are not a threat to MLB. The MLB has strength in that the antitrust exemption allows the 30 teams of the MLB to “join together as a television cartel to sell not only national broadcasting rights but also national cable and satellite rights” (Zimbalist, 2004, p. 3). As the only entity of professional baseball, the MLB will survive in the future.
Supply and Pricing
            The supply and pricing of goods and services for the MLB industry vary according to each team. Supply is defined as the “quantity of a good that firms willingly produce and sell” (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007, p. 44). Supply in the MLB industry is unique because the quantity of goods produced is fixed. Each team will have 81 home games (excluding playoffs) in stadiums with a fixed number of seats. Certain teams have the luxury of offering high prices for their tickets because the demand is so high, whereas others do not. The range between the highest and lowest average single game tickets proves that there are variations in demand. For example, in 2011 the Boston Red Sox had the most expensive average ticket price at $53.38, whereas the Pittsburg Pirates average ticket price was $15.30 (Associated Press, 2011). With a range of $38.08 ($53.38 - $15.30) it proves different markets have varying demand for tickets. Due to the fact that the product that MLB supplies is fixed, MLB teams must be creative in how they supply and price their product. Teams frequently use different promotional events in order to slightly change the product they supply. A free bobblehead doll or 90’s night are ways teams try to increase demand for their product.
            There are many factors that affect the price of MLB products. Two common practices used in professional sports are time and place “smoothing” and variable pricing. Smoothing is used to vary prices based on seat locations in stadiums and arenas (Mullin et al., 2007). Variable pricing is used when teams change prices based on opponent and by day of the week. The demand for those games are greater, therefore teams can charge a higher price for admission. Furthermore, teams offer different prices based on the amount of tickets being purchased. Groups often receive discounts, as do people who buy season tickets rather than single game tickets (Mullin et al., 2007). Teams are willing to lower prices for the chance to receive guaranteed money.
            Another element that affects price for MLB teams is the labour market. Team salaries varied from US$36 million to US$203 million for the 2011 season (USA Today, 2011). In order to cover the immense cost of players, teams must raise ticket prices, as they are “one way teams can generate revenue to cover costs” (Alexander, 2001, p. 342). Alexander (2001) later explains that the average MLB ticket price has increased by 92.7% since 1991, compared to a 20% increase to the Consumer Price Index. He attributes the rising price of tickets to their status as a monopoly. With no competitors, consumers are forced to pay increasing prices if they wish to watch professional baseball.
            As a monopoly, when pricing their tickets the MLB ideally prefer a shortage of supply. Bearing in mind there is a limited number of games and seats, supply cannot change. In a shortage, there is excess quantity demanded over quantity supplied (Parkin & Bade, 2008). This means that prices will rise as tickets become difficult to buy, increasing overall profits.
Economic Contributions and Impacts
Sports tourism is defined as “leisure-based travel that takes individuals temporarily outside of their home communities to participate in physical activities, or to venerate attractions associated with physical activities” (Shonk & Chelladurai, 2008). An MLB team has an economic impact on its host city, as it is a catalyst for sports tourism in the local region. Fans will come from other cities or countries to watch professional sports and in doing so are going to spend a certain amount of money in the local economy by purchasing goods and services at local restaurants, shopping centers, hotels, etc.
The economic multiplier comes into effect as more money is being circulated in the community. The economic multiplier helps “to trace the flows of respending of the money initially injected into the economy until its complete leakage out of the economy” (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007, p. 130). Moreover, there will be more jobs for local residence as a greater number of employees will be needed to work in the businesses and industries that will benefit from the increased demand for their services. This leads to an overall higher standard of living throughout the community as people have more disposable income that they are spending on other local services such as restaurants, movie theatres, and other local attractions. This is referred to as the ripple effect because of the amount of money transferring hands in the local economy.
            In recent years, a number of MLB teams have received money from local governments in order to build new facilities. This is the case in both Arizona and Florida where spring training is held during the months of February and March – a boost to both local economies. The Chicago Cubs recently reached a 30-year lease agreement with the City of Mesa (Arizona) to build a new US$99 million complex (Groff, 2011). The City of Mesa will pay US$84 million towards the new facility, as they understand it will help the local economy over the long-term (Groff, 2011).
A distinct aspect of the MLB industry is economies of scale. Economies of scale means simply that it is cheaper to buy hats for all the teams in the league from one company rather than have each team make their own individual deals. An example of this is the official licensing deal that MLB has with New Era Caps, who are the official hat provider of the league (Lefton, 2009). Another example was in 2006, when MLB signed a new 7-year national television deal worth an estimated US$3 billion with ESPN, Fox, and TBS that bring the league US$670 million annually (Bloom, 2006). The money from the TV deal is then divided equally among all 30 teams meaning that each team will receive $US22.3 million each season (Bloom, 2006).
Many teams either have corporate ownership or have their own television networks. There are many examples in the MLB where this is the case. One example is the Toronto Blue Jays who are owned by Media conglomerate Rogers Communications who also own their own sports channel (Sportsnet) on which all of the Jays games are broadcast. Another examples is how the Boston Red Sox ownership group has a stake in the New England Sports Network (NESN), which has approximately 150 Red Sox games on a year (NESN, 2011). Lastly, the Yes Network (YES) is owned by the New York Yankees and has 127 regular season games on each year (YES, 2011).  The reasoning is that team owners want to have vertical integration of their products in order to promote them to a larger and more diverse group of consumers.
Labour Market
Due to the fact that MLB is a monopoly, labour is restricted as there are a limited number of jobs to be filled. The demand for players remains constant as the size of each team’s roster and number of teams in the league both remain fixed. These limits are negotiated between the leagues owners and the players association through the collective bargaining process (CBA, 2007). The supply for players is scarce, as a high level of physical skill is required to be an MLB player. Players that are eligible for “the first-year player draft” are restricted as to which team they can play for and are not given a choice as a free market does not exist, thus there is control over entry-level salaries (CBA, 2007).
Once a player has gained six years of service time he qualifies for free agency, which gives him the right to negotiate with any of the thirty teams for his services. However this does not mean that all of the teams are interested in signing that player, as they might not have a job opening that the player can currently fill (i.e. they already have a quality player at one position) or simple do not have the necessary capital to pay the player his perceived market value (i.e. small market team vs. large market team).  Since there are a small number of teams trying to acquire the same player, it is likely that certain players will be paid more than what their overall economic contribution is to the team. 
Labour in the MLB industry comes from all over the globe, due to the highly competitive nature that exists. MLB is one of the highest levels of professional baseball in the world; therefore they attract the best talent. On the 2010 MLB opening day rosters, 27.7 percent of players where born outside of the United States (MLB, 2010). A total of 14 countries where represented from 4 different continents: Asia, Australia, North America and South America (MLB, 2010).  Not only is the cost of signing players high, but the cost of attracting and scouting foreign players is expensive, contributing to the overall cost of signing players from around the world.  
Nature of Competition
            As previously mentioned, MLB has an exemption for the antitrust law in the United States. As so, they are allowed to operate as a monopoly. A monopoly is defined as a market structure “in which there is one firm, which produces a good or service that has no close substitutes and in which the firm is protected from competition by a barrier preventing the entry of new firms” (Parkin & Bade, 2008, p. 207). MLB is the only firm supplying baseball due to its exemption from antitrust laws, which creates a very strong barrier to entry.
MLB may not have competitors for baseball, but Alexander (2001) explains that MLB does have to compete in some form, as they compete against other forms of entertainment for discretionary income of consumers. There is always a cost of using resources on a purchase, which can be measured by the benefit given up by not using them in their best alternative use (Ragan & Lipsey, 2011, p. 6). This is known as opportunity cost. Consumers will always weigh the alternatives before making a purchase. Eschenfelder and Li (2007) explain, “the more control a firm has over price, the less competitive the market” (p. 64). As a monopoly, the MLB and all 30 teams have complete control over price, yet because the demand for tickets is elastic the price must be reasonable so that people do not look for alternate entertainment options.
Another form of competition for the MLB is competition to sign players. This is considered producer-producer rivalry, as teams must persuade a free agent to sign with their club over another. MLB also operates as a monopsony, for the reason that players in their first six years are potentially bound to one team (Brown & Jepsen, 2009). Furthermore, MLB can be specified as a bilateral monopoly, wherein “a monopoly seller faces a monopsonistic buyer. The buyer is a firm that hires workers and the seller is a labour union representing the workers” (Eschenfelder & Li, 2007, p. 157). MLB would be the buyer of professional baseball players and the seller is the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA). This is not completely true as players have the right to negotiate with teams on their own, however the collective bargaining agreement between the MLB and MLBPA outline certain terms that must be met in each contract.
With its strong history across the United States as the oldest professional sports league (founded in 1869) and exemption from U.S. antitrust laws, the MLB has very little threat of competitors entering the industry. Nevertheless, because baseball is a non-necessity (want) demand is elastic. Consumers will spend their money on substitute entertainment options should prices of MLB products increase too drastically. This is the only form of competition that the MLB faces.



References
Alexander, D. (2011). Major League Baseball: Monopoly Pricing and Profit-Maximizing Behavior. Journal of Sport Economics, 2(4), 341–355.
Associated Press (2011, April 1). MLB Ticket Prices Up 1.2 Percent. ESPN. Retrieved from http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=6281750.
Baseball-Reference (2011, September 28). 2010 vs. 2011 Attendance. Retrieved from http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/current_attendance.shtml.
Bloom, H. (2006, July 13). Going Inside MLB's Latest $3 billion TV agreement . Retrieved from Sport Business News: http://www.sportsbusinessnews.com/_news/news_347260.php
Brown, K., & Jepsen, L. (2009). The Impact of Team Revenues on MLB Salaries. Journal of Sport Economics, 10(2), 192-203.
Eschenfelder, M., & Li, M. (2007). Economics of Sport (2nd ed.). Morgantown, West Virginia: West Virginia University.
Groff, G. (2011). Mesa OKs 30-year stadium deal with Cubs. Retrieved Oct. 17, 2011, from East Valley Tribune: http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/local/mesa/article_4cefc77e-f942-11e0-86f9-001cc4c03286.html
Lefton, T. (2009, April 5). New Era makes a visit to the mound to begin baseball season. Retrieved from NewEracap.com: http://www.neweracap.com/en_US/press/news.aspx
MLB. (2007). MLB CBA. Retrieved Oct. 15, 2011, from MLB players: http://mlbplayers.mlb.com/pa/pdf/cba_english.pdf
MLB. (2010). Opening Day rosters feature 231 players born outside the U.S. Retrieved Oct. 15, 2011, from MLB.com: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20100407&content_id=9121458&vkey=pr_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb
MLB. (2011). MLB finishes 2011 with fifth highest attendance ever. Retrieved Oct. 15, 2011, from MLB.com: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/press_releases/press_release.jsp?ymd=20110929&content_id=25386600&vkey=pr_mlb&fext=.jsp&c_id=mlb
Mullin, B. J., Hardy, S., & Sutton, W. A. (2007). Sport Marketing (3rd ed.). Windsor: Human Kinetics.
Mutikani, L. (2011, October 14). U.S. Ducks Recession – For Now. Financial Post. Retrieved from http://business.financialpost.com/2011/10/14/u-s-ducks-recession-%E2%80%94-for-now/#more-101101.
NESN. (2011, Oct. 15). About NESN. Retrieved from NESN: http://www.nesn.com/about-nesn.html
Parkhouse, B. (2005). The Management of Sport: Its Foundation and Application (4th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Parkin M., & Bade, R. (2008). Microeconomics: Canada in the Global Environment. Toronto: Pearson Custom Publishing.
Passan, J. (2011, April 25). Teams Seek Solutions to Declining Crowds. Retrieved from http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news;_ylt=Avy8EJ6C6ffY4eoZdcYxE_kRvLYF?slug=jp-passan_10_degrees_attendance_042511.
Ragan, C., & Lipsey, R. (2011). Macroeconomics. Toronto, ON: Pearson Canada Inc.
Shonk, D. J., & Chelladurai, P. (2008). Service Quality, Satisfaction, and Intent to Return in Event Sport Tourism. Journal of Sport Mangement(22), 587-602.
Sawyer, T., Hypes, M., & Hypes, J. (2004). Financing the Sport Enterprise. Champaign, Illinois: Sagamore Publishing.
United States Department of Labor (2011). Bureau of Labor Statistics. Retrieved from http://www.bls.gov/.
USA Today (2011). 2011 MLB Salaries by Team. Retrieved from http://content.usatoday.com/ sportsdata/baseball/mlb/salaries/team.
YES. (2011, Oct. 15). About the YES Network/Contact Us. Retrieved from YES: http://web.yesnetwork.com/about/index.jsp
Zimbalist, A. (2004). Baseball’s Antitrust Exemption: Why It Still Matters. NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, 13(1), 1-9.