That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: A’s considering modeling Vegas park after Globe Life in Arlington

Talk of the Oakland A’s modeling their new Las Vegas ballpark after Globe Life Field in Arlington complete with retractable roof. The Las Vegas A’s park is expected to be completed by 2028. (photo from Ballparks of Baseball)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Amaury, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal the Oakland A’s are looking at Globe Life Field in Arlington as a blue print for their Tropicana Ball Park. Globe Life was built in 2020 has a full retractable roof and seats 40,000. The A’s last proposal said they would seat 30,000 fans at the Tropicana in Vegas.

#2 A retractable roof at the A’s Vegas ball park most likely will only be opened maybe 10-11 times a season as it gets up to 102-1110 during the summer month of June, July and August. If the A’s have a retractable roof it will be at the cost of $100 million.

#3 Amaury, the A’s if they have the retractable roof will be using the park not only for baseball but for multi purpose events like concerts and public events. The question is can the A’s sell out every event like they say they can for the next 30 years some would say it’s doubtful.

#4 According to Dave Sampson the former Miami Marlins team president who podcasts on the show “Nothing Personal” said that the A’s deal to Vegas is not done yet despite the owners voting 30-0. There are two things that could hold things up John Fisher the team owner still needs to come up with his share of the construction money for the Vegas ballpark. Fisher is hedging his hopes that financing will be from tourism. The Vegas fan base will be too small to support the A’s but visitors from out of town are who the A’s are hanging their hats on.

#5 The question as to where the A’s play after 2024 is still up in the air as the Oakland Coliseum is the best location for the A’s to play 2025-27 in. The A’s have explored minor league parks and Oracle Park in San Francisco as places to go to but still don’t have an answer yet.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: The Legacy of the Cuban Giants

Original Cuban Giants 1886-1990 who played in St Augustin Fla and Trenton NJ (photo provided by Amaury Pi Gonzalez)

The Legacy of the Cuban Giants

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Sixty-two years before Jackie Robinson became the first black player in the major leagues, with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, the Cuban Giants were the first salaried African-American professional baseball club in the United States.

The team got its name because they played in Cuba during the winter of 1885-1886. There are 21 countries in Latin America, including Cuba, the largest island in the Caribbean. All the players with the Cuban Giants were born in Cuba.

Throughout history, Cuba has been the first Latin American country with proven baseball talent. Not only the Cuban Giants ball club, but many US-born black players (who could not play in the US because of segregation) went to Cuba and played there and were welcome there.

Cuba, the country, has always been linked with the origins of American baseball. Anybody who researches baseball history will find that the Cuban League was one of the oldest baseball leagues in the world.

For decades, American major leagues kept black players off their roster. They were integrated into Cuba after the Spanish-American War in 1900. This increased after Cuba won its independence from Spain in 1902.

Esteban Bellán, a Cuban-born player of white skin, was the first Latino to play in a US-organized professional baseball league in 1871 with the Troy Haymakers; Bellán later served as player-manager in 1878 for the home Havana side and led his team to three championships in 1878-1879, 1879-80 and 1882-83. As a winter league in Cuba, the season begins in late winter one year and ends during early winter of the next.

As a young kid in Cuba, I remember going with my father to the Cuban Winter League games and watching such stars as Cuban-born Orestes “Minnie” Miñoso, the first black Latino player in MLB with the Cleveland Indians as a rookie in 1949, who later found his stardom with the Chicago White Sox. Miñoso played with the Marianao Tigers.

Many US born black players went to Cuba to play in this popular league. With the Cienfuegos Elephants, I remember outfielders Lou Jackson and Jim Williams, both African-American players. Cienfuegos had such established Cuban major league stars as Camilo Pascual and Pedro Ramos.

At the end of the 2023 season, there were dozens of Cuban players in the major leagues; many established stars and among the best, like Yordán Alvarez, José Abreu, Adolis García, Randy Arozarena, Yandi Díaz, Aroldis Chapman, Luis Robert Jr., Lourdes Gurriel Jr.

The great Willie Mays signed with the Almendares Alacranes, (one of the most popular teams in Cuba) in the winter of 1950, but he would never go to play in Cuba (then as a top prospect) because the United States Army drafted him to serve in the Korean War.

Quote: “I played in Cuba; it was the best winter league back then, not only because of talent, but they paid the best” -Bill Werle, told me personally. He pitched in the majors with the Pirates, Cardinals, and Red Sox. Born in Oakland, he lived in the Bay Area and worked as a major league scout for various organizations after he retired. Bill pitched in Cuba for the Marianao Tigers and won a championship in 1957-58 season.

Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum: Commissioner says there wasn’t a viable path to stay in Oakland

In what should have been a happy moment for Oakland A’s owner John Fisher (pictured) and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred in announcing unanimous vote to relocate the A’s to Vegas during the whole press conference from Thu Nov 16, 2023 they both looked uncomfortable and were apologetic about to Oakland fans at at times looking guilty (AP News photo)

On the Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel:

#1 Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said there was not a viable path to stay in Oakland even though it was Oakland A’s owner John Fisher and Manfred’s to remain in the Bay Area.

#2 Daniel, did you find it strange after all the criticism that the Tropicana ballpark got nationwide, that you didn’t hear anyone outside of MLB ownership or the Commissioner’s office say this was a great idea. You have to ask what was the motivating factor for the owners to vote 30-0 to approve the A’s relocation?

#3 A’s president David Kaval said after the vote last week when asked if Fisher is ready to pay his share of the new Las Vegas ballpark. Kaval said that debt and equity would come from the stadium funding legislation.

#4 Kaval also said that the A’s could play their 2025-2027 seasons either at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Las Vegas Ballpark, or at the Oakland Coliseum. Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao the A’s could finish at the Coliseum but they would have to give up their team name and colors and the city would be promised a MLB expansion team.

#5 One motivating factor is Nevada Governor Joe Lombardo saying that Las Vegas is a sports town and having the A’s are an added addition for the Vegas sports scene.

Join Daniel Dullum for the Oakland A’s relocation podcasts each Friday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast: How serious is a deal for A’s playing last 3 years in San Francisco?; Dodgers top pick so far for Ohtani

Former Los Angeles Angels two way player Shohei Ohtani won the 2023 AL MVP and is an odds on favorite to join the Los Angeles Dodgers for the 2024 season. It’s yet to be determined. (AP News file photo)

On That’s Amaury News and Commentary podcast:

#1 Insiders have said that Oakland A’s president David Kaval after the MLB owners vote to move to Las Vegas that Oracle Park home of the San Francisco Giants could be the home of the A’s for the remaining three years 2025-27 while they wait for the Tropicana ballpark to be completed by 2028. How strong do you see that possibility.

#2 It’s ironic if the Giants were to allow the A’s to play at Oracle Park for the 2025-27 season in San Francisco after not allowing the A’s to have territorial rights to move to San Jose and now will allow them to come to Oracle and play their final three years in the San Francisco.

#3 No surprises here as former Los Angeles Angel Shohei Ohtani was named the AL MVP, Ohtani the two way player was 10-5 with an ERA of 3.14 pitching and hit .305 with 151 hits, 44 home runs, 102 runs, and 95 RBIs.

#4 Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuna Jr won the NL MVP hitting .337, 149 runs, 41 home runs, and 106 RBIs. Both Acuna and Ohtani won by unanimous decisions which is a first in the 92 years of the award.

#5 Ohtani is up for free agency is still waiting through the bidding and what team he would like to go and play for. The Los Angeles Dodgers are the odds on favorites in the Ohtani sweepstakes followed by the Chicago Cubs and San Francisco Giants.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez does News and Commentary podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Headline Sports with Charlie O: Will A’s finish up their Bay Area days at Oracle Park in San Francisco?

Will Oracle Park be a landing place for the Oakland A’s after the 2024 season?, the A’s would not lose a share of Bay Area TV revenue between 2025-27 while the Tropicana Park is being built in Las Vegas (SF Travel file photo)

On Headline Sports with Charlie O:

#1 How crazy will it be to have the San Francisco Giants host the Oakland A’s at Oracle Park in the 2025 through the 2027 seasons while the Tropicana is being built after the Giants would not cede South Bay territorial rights to the A’s.

#2 The A’s know they will not get the cut of Bay Area TV money if they were to play in Nevada or Sacramento and just to go ahead and finish they’re last three season in the Bay Area in San Francisco.

#3 The relationship between the City of Oakland and A’s owner John Fisher and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred is so toxic because of how they got to this place it’s very unlikely the A’s will finish their last three seasons at the Oakland Coliseum.

#4 A’s fans led by the Oakland 68’s have called for a boycott, not a reverse boycott but a full on boycott for no one to show up at the A’s opening day game on Thu Mar 29th at the Coliseum against Cleveland.

#5 There has been some hope that Schools over Stadiums will get it together and get the court to approve their petition to get signed by some 102,000 Nevada residents, put the no public funding for the ballpark on the Nevada ballot for vote in Nov 2024 also Rep Barbara Lee (D-Oakland) and Rep Mark DeSaulnier will introduce the “Moneyball act” a measure that would require Oakland A’s owner John Fisher or any Major League Baseball owner who relocates it’s team 25 miles from it’s former location to compensate their former community or MLB would lose it’s anti trust exemption.

Charlie O does Headline Sports podcasts Sundays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB Brings Back 2025 All-Star Game in Atlanta “Eating Crow, Manfred Style”

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred seen here at an MLB owners meeting in Arlington on Thu Nov 16, 2023 has awarded Atlanta the All Star Game in 2025 after the City of Atlanta sued MLB for taking the 2021 All Star Game away from Atlanta and moving it to Denver over what Manfred said was Georgia’s voter suppression laws. (AP News photo)

MLB Bring All-Star Game to Atlanta “Eating Crow Manfred Style”

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi Goznalez

Four years after Commissioner Rob Manfred moved the All-Star Star Game in Atlanta to Denver’s Coors Field, Manfred is reconsidering as many believed “he owed one to Atlanta”. Four years ago, he moved the game over objections to Georgia voting rights laws changes.

Atlanta blasted the Commissioner of Baseball for his political decision, something he did not know much about. It is now apparent that Manfred made a mistake when he moved the game from Atlanta to Denver without first learning the substance of the law.

According to economists, the City of Atlanta lost $100 million in economic impact losses, especially those businesses near Truist Park, home of the Braves. At the same time, some say it was more than $100 million in lost revenue to the City of Atlanta.. . “I made the decision in 2021 to move the event, and I understand, believe me, that people had then and probably still have different views as to the merits of that decision,” baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said Thursday.

During an announcement that followed an owners’ meeting. Straightforward interpretation “Sorry I screwed up, so I am awarding Atlanta the All-Star Game in 2025 because I owe them one.” The City of Atlanta filed a 1 Billion dollar lawsuit against Major League Baseball.

The voting rights litigation is ongoing. Last month, a federal judge declined to block several contested portions of the law while legal challenges play out. There is a chance Commissioner of Major League Baseball, Rob Manfred, might lose this one.

Quote. “The economics of baseball is the big problem. The big clubs make a lot of money, and the little clubs don’t” -Fay Vicent, Baseball Commissioner from 1989 to 1992.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary podcasts Tuesdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum: Kaval mentions A’s will play in San Francisco after 2024

Oakland A’s team president said at the MLB owners vote in Arlington that the A’s will play at Oracle Park in San Francisco for the remaining three years 2025-27 until the Tropicana ballpark in ready in 2028 in Las Vegas. The A’s will finish their final year at the Oakland Coliseum in 2024. The A’s said they will not rebrand their name and remain the Oakland A’s during the construction period. (photo by the Oakland Athletics file)

On the Oakland A’s relocation podcast with Daniel Dullum:

#1 Daniel, the results of the MLB owners vote certainly didn’t come as a surprise to anyone?

#2 Schools over Stadiums the Nevada education group trying to stop the public financing of the Tropicana ballpark said that their fight is long from over saying, “@EduOverStadiums has a lawsuit and ballot initiative, but needs funding. Give today if you’re not ready to throw in the rosin bag.”

#3 The A’s will not get local TV money if they play in either Sacramento or Nevada. A’s president David Kaval talked on Thursday that the A’s will play their games on an interim basis at Oracle Park in San Francisco from 2025-27 three season after the conclusion of the 2024 season at the Coliseum.

#4 The Oakland 68’s the A’s largest fan group who last year organized the reverse boycott is calling for an all out boycott for opening day at the Oakland Coliseum when the A’s host the Cleveland Guardians on Thu Mar 28, 2024. The Oakland 68s said for no one show up for the home opener in 2024 after A’s ownership has abandon Oakland. If you thought last season’s crowds were bad 2024’s crowds might draw crowds of 1,000 or less per game.

#5 In essence Daniel, in your opinion is this pretty much a done deal and there is nothing stopping the A’s from leaving Oakland now not even a last ditch effort by Schools over Stadiums?

Daniel Dullum is a MLB beat writer and does the A’s relocation podcasts for http://www.sportsradioservice.com

A’s relocation fall out: MLB Owners Vote Unanimously To Approve A’s Move To Vegas

Oakland A’s owner John Fisher addresses the news media at a press conference on Thu Nov 16, 2023 in Arlington concluding the MLB owners vote to relocate the A’s to Las Vegas in 2028 at the new Tropicana ballpark. (AP News photo)

By Mauricio Sugura

MLB Owners Vote Unanimously To Approve A’s Move To Vegas

With sports writers, analysts, and insiders predicting it, Major League Baseball owners voted unanimously this morning to allow the Oakland Athletics to relocate to Las Vegas as soon as the 2028 season. “Today marks a significant moment for our franchise, and it’s met with mixed emotions, sadness for this change and excitement for our future. I know this is a hard day for our fans in Oakland,” A’s managing owner John Fisher said in a statement.

Despite knowing this would most likely happen, it was still a blow to A’s fans everywhere, especially to die-hard fan groups like the Oakland 68s and others, along with city government officials. For the past few months, they have been in high gear, pushing MLB and Fisher to take another route and reconsider the move or sell the team entirely to someone like Warriors owner Joe Lacob, who has stated his interest in purchasing the team and keeping it in Oakland.

There were rallies, writing campaigns, a successful “reverse boycott” that even had the Hall of Fame asking for a “SELL” t-shirt to display at the museum, and many more efforts both in Oakland and in most other ballparks around the country.

However, it’s apparent that none of their efforts made an impact on the team, league, or other owners who have now willingly opened the door for a Sin City move. But is this really it? Are the A’s really leaving? Most things point to yes, but there are still too many factors lingering that have a lot of insiders questioning if the A’s will truly finalize their effort.

Further saying that they won’t believe the outcome until there are shovels on the ground at the Las Vegas Tropicana site. And even then, the word “iffy” has been tossed around more than a pickup game of “pepper.”

The truth of the matter is that John Fisher has been trying to get the A’s out of Oakland since he bought the team in 2005. First to the Warm Springs district of Fremont, which fell through due to opposition from local groups and residents.

San Jose was also in play at one point, but that was squashed by the San Francisco Giants who refused to give up their territorial rights to the South Bay. Several locations in Oakland were then considered, including Laney College and even an entire revamp of the current Coliseum grounds.

Eventually, however, Howard Terminal became the top site, and the A’s worked with the city to make it happen. This is where the Soap Opera of “As the Athletics Turn” hit prime time.

There were lawsuits, negotiations, promises from both sides, letdowns, uplifting news, beautiful renderings, even talks of a gondola which would give fans a ride high above the city streets from downtown all the way to the ballpark.

It was a roller coaster of information that eventually settled to point to a promising possibility. Then came COVID, and everything stalled. A new Mayor was elected, and at first, things seemed bleak as the word was she wasn’t as enthusiastic about the project as the previous mayor, Libby Schaaf, had been.

At this point, depending on who you ask, the entire process has been a he-said, she-said drama. The Oakland mayor’s camp says they have gone above and beyond in trying to get funding and legislation passed that the team has asked for, actually accruing more than was expected.

According to Mayor Sheng Thao, the city and the A’s are 90% on their negotiations to finalize the Howard Terminal deal. If Fisher comes back to the table, they can finalize everything and have shovels in the ground by the summer of 2024.

Now, if you ask MLB and the A’s, they’ll say that Oakland has dropped out of negotiations, the deal was nowhere close, and they had no option but to seek moving the team to Nevada. So who’s telling the truth?

Well, Mayor Thao has presented novel-sized binders of paperwork detailing every aspect of negotiations, while the MLB and Fisher’s camp have only made comments to the press with zero substance to back up their statements.

When Fisher bought the Athletics, they were still on the “Moneyball” high of the 2002 season. It was a perfect time to capitalize and bring in another championship World Series trophy to Oakland. But almost immediately, it became apparent that Fisher wasn’t into fielding a winning team.

In the almost 20 years that he’s been at the helm, he’s gained the reputation of taking players with the greatest potential and squandering them off to the highest bidder instead of keeping them and winning a championship. Names like Kurt Suzuki, Yoenis Cespedes, Sean Manea, Josh Donaldson, Matt Chapman, and Marcus Semien, just to name a handful.

Not only that, but he’s put in little money back into the Coliseum itself regarding maintenance. The place has pipe and sewage issues, you can see rust in the stands, and we even have a resident possum living it up in the press box rent-free! It’s in complete disarray.

However, in all fairness, it doesn’t seem like the city, who own 50% of the ballpark, has done much in that respect either. All this and more is why A’s fans have become increasingly frustrated every year and have decided to stay home to the point where if there are 8,000 fans at a Friday night game, it’s celebrated like a “sell-out.”

In April 2023, pretty much out of nowhere, A’s president, Dave Kaval, announced that they had purchased a 49-acre lot in Las Vegas and were now turning their attention away from Oakland. The site would include a luxurious new 30,000-seat retractable roof stadium, with the rest of the area set aside for restaurants, apartments, and even an amphitheater venue which was apparently one of the most important aspects of this and the Oakland Howard Terminal site.

They wanted extra room for real estate ventures. Yet, no more than three weeks later, the gears were changed, and they then announced a new agreement at the current Tropicana Casino location where they would now settle for a 9-acre corner with no additional land for their real estate ventures. What? Additionally, they wanted the city to fund $400 million of the stadium build.

The money ($380 Million) was awarded in June during a special session approved by both the Nevada Senate and Assembly, with the help of Nevada’s governor, Joe Lomdardo. The funding will mainly be derived from transferable tax credits and county bonds.

Fisher has vowed that once the ballpark is built and the team begins play, he will put in the money to field a championship-winning team. This is highly reminiscent of what he promised when negotiations for a new soccer stadium in San Jose (Fisher is also the owner of the Earthquakes) were happening.

Well, he got the San Jose stadium. Still, in the eight years since, the Earthquakes remain low in salary compared to the rest of the league, and Fisher is already claiming that he won’t put up money because the stadium is already outdated.

Despite this, Las Vegas gave him the money. Lastly, in order to pay back the money to the city, the A’s will have to fill up the new stadium to about 80% capacity night after night for 30 years. Some things just defy logic!

And speaking of logic. Today’s approval by the owners was given without the team letting anyone know very crucial elements. There are no known renderings of the ballpark, no one knows which architectural firm will be chosen, or a direct timeline of things to come.

Also, where will they play between 2025 and 2027, after their lease with the Coliseum ends in 2024? Mayor Thao has stated that she’d be willing to extend the lease only if Major League Baseball awards Oakland an expansion team and the A’s leave their name and likeness in Oakland.

Many other important issues are unknown, yet the owners still voted it through. There is a chance that the A’s have opted to remain hush-hush about the details, only sharing it with the other owners, but why? Again, there is just no logical explanation for any of this. What John Fisher and the A’s are doing is unknown to most.

As stated before, today’s vote opens the door wider for the A’s to walk through, but there will be opposition and lawsuits both in Oakland and Las Vegas, and possibly on a national level. The A’s are indeed almost on the verge of moving to Las Vegas, but only time will tell if they roll a 7 or a 3.

Mauricio Segura has been a Bay Area sportswriter & photographer for the past 20 years, covering baseball, soccer, football, and basketball. He’s contributed articles for Area Chica Magazine, The Baseball Analyst Quarterly, and various newspapers. He currently publishes an online sports and entertainment website called Golden Bay Times and is the graphics and art Director for the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame.

Mauricio Segura The Golden Bay Times Owner / Writer / Photographer

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Oakland has been a Successful Sports town; Fisher sends Dear John letter to fans

The A’s have not determined where they’ll play for the 2025-27 seasons but it has been suggested they could play in Mexico City’s ballpark for the interim until their permanent home in Las Vegas is completed in 2028. (photo from CBS Sports)

Oakland has been a Successful Sports town

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

OAKLAND–Today, the MLB owners unanimously approved Oakland A’s move to Las Vegas. One of the most popular used quotes in the world, not only in baseball but in every walk of life, engraved into our culture, is New York Yankee legend Yogi Berra’s famous, “It ain’t over ’till is over”.

With all respect to “Schools not Stadiums” the teacher’s Union in Nevada, who are still trying to derail the move, let’s face it… it is over. It did not surprise me that all MLB owners voted the same; the Yes vote for the Athletics to move to their fourth city in their storied franchise was expected. The A’s, from Philadelphia, with stops in Kansas City in 1954 and Oakland since 1968, are moving again in 2024.

However, Oakland’s professional sports history is still a very good one. Teams in Oakland won ten championships; the Oakland A’s won four World Series, the Golden State Warriors also won four NBA titles, and the Oakland Raiders won two Super Bowls. The only cities in the country with more combined championships in MLB/NBA/NFL are Los Angeles, Boston, and New York.

A’s owner, John Fisher, sent a letter today to Oakland A’s fans, thanking them for their support.

The Dear John letter’s first paragraph reads: I know that today is a challenging day with the vote by MLB owners allowing for the A’s relocation from Oakland to Las Vegas. I share many of those emotions – sadness that our team will be leaving its home since 1968, pride in what we have accomplished together on and off the field in Oakland, and hope and optimism about the future of the A’s in Las Vegas.

What else can I say that hasn’t been said yet? To be said, for like ten years now, we have heard all the opinions regarding the situation, and there are still other stories (I am sure) to be written.

Yes, it is sad for everybody here in Oakland and the A’s Bay Area fans, especially those who are very good A’s fans; it is terrible for the economy of Oakland, an economy in a situation today that many political commentators and experts in financial matters are comparing to the year 1979 with high gasoline and food prices, high living expenses, homeless all over the place.

By the way, two crazy wars are going on, and yes, the unemployment probably will get a little higher in Oaktown. A good friend of mine told me today, “BART is going to lose riders to the game and more money”, but it is more than BART. When a city loses a team, they’re losing a part of its identity, part of the fabric of the community, the total name recognition, and especially Oakland, as previously mentioned, has been a very prosperous city in Sports.

Except for one key, keeping them in Oakland. The A’s will play in Oakland in 2024, and my educated guess is that they might still work a deal with the City of Oakland to play in 2025, 2026, and maybe 2027 at the Coliseum until they inaugurate their stadium in Las Vegas.

However, that makes a lot of sense, and common sense is not abundant nowadays. So, who knows where the Athletics will play for the next four to five years since they built in Las Vegas. I even heard the suggestion of Mexico City.

Have a great weekend, and get ready for Thanksgiving!

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network at 1010 KIQI San Francisco and 990 KATD Pittsburg and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

Oakland A’s podcast: Done Deal A’s leaving Oakland; MLB owners vote 30-0 to move A’s to Vegas

Oakland A’s owner John Fisher got the support of all 30 owners to move the Oakland A’s to Las Vegas during a MLB owners relocation vote on Thu Nov 16, 2023 in Arlington Texas (San Francisco Chronicle file photo)

MLB owners voted unanimously 30-0 to move the Oakland A’s out of Oakland to Las Vegas to the Tropicana Hotel and Casino location. The A’s had played in Oakland since 1968 and are expected to leave as early as 2025 to a location to be determined while their Las Vegas ballpark is under construction. The A’s will play their final season in Oakland in 2024 and are currently trying to figure out where they’ll play in the interim between 2025-2027 when their new park in Las Vegas will be ready by 2028.

During the process the opposition Oakland A’s fans and one group called the Oakland 68s pushed for a sell the team campaign during the 2023 season which fell on deaf ears at Major League Baseball and with Oakland owner John Fisher.

The A’s have a rich history they won three consecutive World Series from 1972-1974 and another one in 1989. They started to fall off as a competitive team after the Walter Haas Sr family sold the team in 1995 to Ken Hoffman and Steve Schott who later sold the team to Lew Wolf in 2005. John Fisher bought the A’s from Wolf in 2015 and has owned it ever since.

There is only one hope left to prevent the Oakland A’s from leaving Oakland and that is the group Schools over Stadiums. Schools over Stadiums lost a court hearing on Nov 6th in Nevada District Court to circulate a petition to be signed by Las Vegas residents that would prevent public money being used to build the A’s park in on the Las Vegas strip and that money should go to schools and education.

The judge in the Nevada District court case advised Schools over Stadiums to revise the language in the petition that A’s advocates say were misleading and misstatements. Mark Alexander a spokesman for Schools over Stadiums said he would appeal the ruling and redo the petition language for the petition tho meet the District court’s standards to get an acceptable petition.

If Schools over Stadiums succeeds in getting some 102,000 Nevada residents signatures they would be able to put the referendum on the ballot and put it up to vote in November 2024 if the voters vote no for public funds for the A’s stadium then the public money for the Las Vegas site is dead.

Jerry Feitelberg is an Oakland A’s beat writer for http://www.sportsradioservice.com