Dave Stewart Blasts City of Oakland And A's Fans Who Don't Get Governent Or Development Go Nuts - Oaknews
Dave Stewart Blasts City of Oakland And A's Fans Who Don't Get Governent Or Development Go Nuts
Dave Stewart Blasts City of Oakland And A's Fans Who Don't Get Governent Or Development Lose Their Minds Oakland A's Legend Dave Stewart lowered the boom on the City of Oakland's current Government led by Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao. Here's what was said, according to John Shea of The San Francisco Chronicle: Aās legends Dave Stewart, Rickey Henderson point fingers at Oakland for Coliseum chaos By John Shea March 16, 2024 Former A's pitcher Dave Stewart, now a special assistant to the general manager, said the city of Oakland should be happy to extend the team's lease at the Coliseum beyond this season. SFChronicle: Theyāre the pride of Oakland, ballplayers who were raised in the city and later became teammates and dominant forces on their hometown teamās last World Series championship in 1989.Rickey Henderson and Dave Stewart grew up knowing Oakland as a title town ā from the 1972, 1973 and 1974 Oakland Athletics to the 1976 and 1980 Oakland Raiders to the 1974-1975 Golden State Warriors ā and then experienced a championship themselves in 1989 when Henderson was the ALCS MVP, Stewart the World Series MVP. Over time, one by one, all those Oakland teams decided to pack up and leave town ā the Raiders twice ā so itās almost as if locals such as Henderson and Stewart are numb to the fact the Aās are bolting to Las Vegas. āItās disappointing to see the Aās leaving,ā Henderson said. āBut weāve gone through so much with all the teams. The city, thereās something theyāre not seeing. When you have a city that had three big-name professional sports teams, and you canāt keep any of them, somethingās wrong. Itās sad for the city.ā Both Henderson and Stewart have suited up in Aās training camp this spring to guide and inspire young players. They see emerging talent ā Henderson admires Esteury Ruizās base-running skills, and Stewartās impressed with Zack Gelofās leadership skills ā but also see a team coming off consecutive 100-loss seasons that again will be challenged to compete in 2024. More than any of that, the Oakland mainstays -- Henderson is a special assistant to the president, and Stewart is a TV analyst on pregame and postgame shows -- see a team thatās getting pulled out of town by owner John Fisher, a move thatās supported by the other 29 teams, including the Giants, who stand to benefit from a one-team market. Though every relocation bid by Oakland teams has had its own set of reasons or excuses, the common denominator is the city itself, about to go 0-for-3. At this point, the best Oakland, Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County can do is negotiate a lease extension for the team and push the Aās to sell their half of the Coliseum property that theyāre purchasing from the county, an unfortunate 2019 transaction that has backfired. The Aās maintained at the time they needed to develop at the property to help fund their ballpark at Howard Terminal, but until further notice, theyāre ditching town and keeping the real estate. While Fisher works to build a stadium on the Strip thatāll supposedly open in 2028, he needs a place to play in 2025, 2026 and 2027. Both sides are playing hardball in negotiations for a Coliseum lease extension, Fisher not wanting to open his vault after previously paying just $1.25 million annually and Thao insisting Oakland would need to secure an expansion team as part of any arrangement. Thatās a non-starter for Major League Baseball, which eventually will expand from 30 to 32 teams but hasnāt yet started the process of identifying cities as final expansion candidates. Thao also has pushed to keep the teamās name and colors in Oakland, which also might be a stretch because theyāre the property of the team, not the city. āThe mayor can say whatever she wants to, but if what Iām reading is true, itās a wrong approach,ā Stewart said. āShe talked about the lack of jobs because theyāre leaving, but in the meantime, you have an opportunity to keep jobs and create jobs until ā28 when they do leave. Youāre going to try to force baseball to give you an expansion team? Itās not the way to go about it.āWhen you make that kind of thing public, I think youāre just trying to talk to your constituents in Oakland.āStewart is rooting for the Aās to stay in the interim years but isnāt confident itāll happen ā āEven for something as little as getting an extended lease for the stadium, I just donāt see there to be a possibility,ā said Stewart, who doesnāt have much faith in Oakland politicians after his groupās bid to buy the cityās half of the Coliseum was ignored. The city chose to enter an exclusive negotiating agreement with the African American Sports Entertainment Group even though Stewart said his groupās bid was higher. (More of the text in the news blog versions of this entry at Zennie62Blog.com and OaklandNewsOnline.com.). Now, I will share my thoughts on that, in this livestream, and read your comments. Let's go!
via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLPiMsGnYek
Dave Stewart Blasts City of Oakland And A's Fans Who Don't Get Governent Or Development Lose Their Minds Oakland A's Legend Dave Stewart lowered the boom on the City of Oakland's current Government led by Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao. Here's what was said, according to John Shea of The San Francisco Chronicle: Aās legends Dave Stewart, Rickey Henderson point fingers at Oakland for Coliseum chaos By John Shea March 16, 2024 Former A's pitcher Dave Stewart, now a special assistant to the general manager, said the city of Oakland should be happy to extend the team's lease at the Coliseum beyond this season. SFChronicle: Theyāre the pride of Oakland, ballplayers who were raised in the city and later became teammates and dominant forces on their hometown teamās last World Series championship in 1989.Rickey Henderson and Dave Stewart grew up knowing Oakland as a title town ā from the 1972, 1973 and 1974 Oakland Athletics to the 1976 and 1980 Oakland Raiders to the 1974-1975 Golden State Warriors ā and then experienced a championship themselves in 1989 when Henderson was the ALCS MVP, Stewart the World Series MVP. Over time, one by one, all those Oakland teams decided to pack up and leave town ā the Raiders twice ā so itās almost as if locals such as Henderson and Stewart are numb to the fact the Aās are bolting to Las Vegas. āItās disappointing to see the Aās leaving,ā Henderson said. āBut weāve gone through so much with all the teams. The city, thereās something theyāre not seeing. When you have a city that had three big-name professional sports teams, and you canāt keep any of them, somethingās wrong. Itās sad for the city.ā Both Henderson and Stewart have suited up in Aās training camp this spring to guide and inspire young players. They see emerging talent ā Henderson admires Esteury Ruizās base-running skills, and Stewartās impressed with Zack Gelofās leadership skills ā but also see a team coming off consecutive 100-loss seasons that again will be challenged to compete in 2024. More than any of that, the Oakland mainstays -- Henderson is a special assistant to the president, and Stewart is a TV analyst on pregame and postgame shows -- see a team thatās getting pulled out of town by owner John Fisher, a move thatās supported by the other 29 teams, including the Giants, who stand to benefit from a one-team market. Though every relocation bid by Oakland teams has had its own set of reasons or excuses, the common denominator is the city itself, about to go 0-for-3. At this point, the best Oakland, Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County can do is negotiate a lease extension for the team and push the Aās to sell their half of the Coliseum property that theyāre purchasing from the county, an unfortunate 2019 transaction that has backfired. The Aās maintained at the time they needed to develop at the property to help fund their ballpark at Howard Terminal, but until further notice, theyāre ditching town and keeping the real estate. While Fisher works to build a stadium on the Strip thatāll supposedly open in 2028, he needs a place to play in 2025, 2026 and 2027. Both sides are playing hardball in negotiations for a Coliseum lease extension, Fisher not wanting to open his vault after previously paying just $1.25 million annually and Thao insisting Oakland would need to secure an expansion team as part of any arrangement. Thatās a non-starter for Major League Baseball, which eventually will expand from 30 to 32 teams but hasnāt yet started the process of identifying cities as final expansion candidates. Thao also has pushed to keep the teamās name and colors in Oakland, which also might be a stretch because theyāre the property of the team, not the city. āThe mayor can say whatever she wants to, but if what Iām reading is true, itās a wrong approach,ā Stewart said. āShe talked about the lack of jobs because theyāre leaving, but in the meantime, you have an opportunity to keep jobs and create jobs until ā28 when they do leave. Youāre going to try to force baseball to give you an expansion team? Itās not the way to go about it.āWhen you make that kind of thing public, I think youāre just trying to talk to your constituents in Oakland.āStewart is rooting for the Aās to stay in the interim years but isnāt confident itāll happen ā āEven for something as little as getting an extended lease for the stadium, I just donāt see there to be a possibility,ā said Stewart, who doesnāt have much faith in Oakland politicians after his groupās bid to buy the cityās half of the Coliseum was ignored. The city chose to enter an exclusive negotiating agreement with the African American Sports Entertainment Group even though Stewart said his groupās bid was higher. (More of the text in the news blog versions of this entry at Zennie62Blog.com and OaklandNewsOnline.com.). Now, I will share my thoughts on that, in this livestream, and read your comments. Let's go!
via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLPiMsGnYek
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