A great scene acted and written beautifully. Great timing. And the only person in the organization who will never get traded or fired is Suzanne. And every club has a Suzanne in the front office.
what does he mean by "I'll pay for him myself"? and why would saying "when I sell him for twice as much next year I keep the profit" be part of a negotiation? if a baseball team sells a player wouldn't they always get the total amount that's paid to them for a player?
The manager will pay for the player’s trade himself but when he later makes a deal with another team the next year after the season he’d be able to keep the money if they make a deal to trade the player in exchange for money, and if it’s more than what he originally paid for the trade he’s keeping that profit. What’s not to get?
@jamesduffy7079 the team pays for the player but Billy offered to put up his own money because the owner of the team didn't want to spend the money. So technically the team paid but Billy gave the owner the same amount and if the player later got traded for cash considerations Billy would get back what he paid plus whatever extra on top. Except Ricardo Rincón never was traded from the A's. He re-signed with them a year and a half later.
@@jamesduffy7079 the manager pays for the transaction of the trade. The money they’re exchanging is for the transaction of the trade. The players have signed a contract that the new team takes on. The player they traded also has a contract that goes with them. The team is paying the salary. The money they’re talking about here is part of the deal they’re making to trade players.
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A great scene acted and written beautifully. Great timing. And the only person in the organization who will never get traded or fired is Suzanne. And every club has a Suzanne in the front office.
this is me in fantasy league
He hung up on the first call before he said call you back
what does he mean by "I'll pay for him myself"? and why would saying "when I sell him for twice as much next year I keep the profit" be part of a negotiation? if a baseball team sells a player wouldn't they always get the total amount that's paid to them for a player?
The manager will pay for the player’s trade himself but when he later makes a deal with another team the next year after the season he’d be able to keep the money if they make a deal to trade the player in exchange for money, and if it’s more than what he originally paid for the trade he’s keeping that profit. What’s not to get?
@@Ligierthegreensun So does the manager pay for the player or does the team pay for the player?
@jamesduffy7079 the team pays for the player but Billy offered to put up his own money because the owner of the team didn't want to spend the money. So technically the team paid but Billy gave the owner the same amount and if the player later got traded for cash considerations Billy would get back what he paid plus whatever extra on top. Except Ricardo Rincón never was traded from the A's. He re-signed with them a year and a half later.
@@jamesduffy7079 the manager pays for the transaction of the trade. The money they’re exchanging is for the transaction of the trade. The players have signed a contract that the new team takes on. The player they traded also has a contract that goes with them. The team is paying the salary. The money they’re talking about here is part of the deal they’re making to trade players.
I'm sure when he's cutting the guy, in his mind is how he felt when his own career came to an end
What a movie this is!!!
Moneyball
@@asmarine2327 read that comment again
He said 'call you back' after hanging up
Audio is too low, what is up with that? Man, if you're going to rip off video clips to make the internet monies, at least get the volume set right.
Ricardo Rincon was no big deal. Cheap ass Oakland lol.