While Major League Baseball won't be getting a salary cap for payrolls anytime soon, they've managed to implement ceilings in other key areas, with slot values for the amateur draft, and hard, punitive limits for the international market.
Now Evan Drellich says the league is looking at leveling the playing field in front offices by seeing if they can crack down on how much teams spend on technology, player development, scouting and health.
A league spokesperson said MLB’s focus has been on technology vendors, rather than staffing.
“There is nothing happening on that front,” the spokesperson said. “What we are focused on is gathering information on vendor costs to find potential cost savings through efficiencies and to ensure equal access to all technology.”
But multiple officials who have been briefed on or participated in some of these conversations said the thinking extends to personnel, as well. At least some clubs would enjoy seeing caps on spending in any area that can influence on-field success, player salaries or otherwise. Executives with smaller-market teams have long lamented the task of keeping up with the spending capabilities of larger market teams.
It was helpful to see Driveline's Kyle Boddy agree with the league's stated rationale, as he said the league has successfully achieved data standardization with PITCHf/x and Trackman data, making it easier for teams to get involved, and for systems to talk to each other.
And as somebody who celebrates the adoption of USB-C as the default method for charging devices, I get that part. But when it comes to limiting the amount of personnel teams can carry, you're probably free to maintain your skepticism and expect MLB to govern down to the level of its cheapest teams.
This news broke as the White Sox prepared to open a series against the Dodgers, and the two teams provide a study in contrast both on and off the field. Their front office directories provide evidence of the sizable investment gap in non-playing personnel and tech, which you'll see below.
I had to exercise some editorial discretion in the following tale of the tape because the White Sox and Dodgers format their front office pages differently. The White Sox divided theirs into a few departments, and they also listed multiple people under the same job title. The Dodgers did the opposite: no subcategories, but every employee got his own listing. I started with everybody underneath the chief baseball officer -- Ken Williams for the White Sox, Andrew Friedman for the Dodgers -- and tried to filter out some inconsistencies toward the end (the Dodgers incorporated their clubhouse attendants, the White Sox did not).
Just about all of these changes favored the White Sox in terms of reducing the gap, so I suppose you can credit them for some level of honesty. They did not try to change the font size or expand the margins to meet the page count quota. But even after making these changes, the Dodgers' list just keeps going.
Dodgers
Executive Vice President & General Manager: Brandon Gomes
Sr. Vice President, Baseball Operations: Josh Byrnes
Vice President & Assistant General Manager: Jeffrey Kingston
Vice President & Assistant General Manager: Alex Slater
Vice President, Assistant General Manager & Baseball Legal Counsel: Damon Jones
Vice President, Scouting: David Finley
Vice President, International Scouting: Ismael Cruz
Vice President, Amateur Scouting: Billy Gasparino
Vice President, Player Personnel: Galen Carr
Vice President, Player Performance: Brandon McDaniel
Sr. Director, Baseball Administration: Ellen Harrigan
Sr. Director, Team Travel: Scott Akasaki
Sr. Director, Baseball Resources: Duncan Webb
Director, Player Development: William Rhymes
Director, Minor League Player Performance: Brian Stoneberg
Director, Baseball Strategy and Information: Michael Voltmer
Director, Baseball Systems Applications: Brian McBurney
Director, Baseball Systems Platform: John Focht
Director, Performance Science: Megan Schroeder
Director, Specialized Performance Programs: Eric Potterat
Director, Clubhouse Operations: Alex Torres
Director, Strong Mind Cultural Development: Leo Ruiz
Director, Quantitative Analysis: Richard Anderson
Director, Baseball Product Development: Yuji Akimoto
Assistant Director, Player Development: Matt McGrath
Assistant Director, Amateur Scouting: Zachary Fitzpatrick
Assistant Director, International Scouting: Matthew Doppelt
Assistant Director, Baseball Strategy and
Information: Ethan Levitt
Assistant Director, Baseball Systems Applications: Jonathan Funkhouser
Assistant Director, Baseball Systems Platform: Drew Troxell
Assistant Director, Professional Scouting: Lucas Geoghegan
Special Assistant to the President: Chase Utley
Special Assistant: Adrian Gonzalez
Special Assistant to the GM: Pat Corrales
Special Assistant, Scouting: Thomas Allison
Special Assistant to the GM: Ron Roenicke
Senior Advisor: John Sears
Special Assistant, Baseball Operations: Joel Peralta
Special Instructor, Infield: Jose Vizcaino
Principal Research Scientist, Performance Science: David Hill
Senior Analyst, Baseball Strategy and Information: Craig Weinhaus
Senior Analyst, Baseball Strategy and Information: Sam Elias
Manager, Player Development: Andrea LaPointe
Manager, Minor League Administration: Juliana Ortega
Manager, International Scouting: Javier Camps
Manager, Amateur Scouting: Jalen Phillips
Manager, Integrative Baseball Performance: Emilee Fragapane
Manager, Baseball Product and Data Operations: Jason Gilberg
Manager, Performance Operations: Will Ireton
Assistant Manager, Clubhouse: Jose Castillo
Coordinator, Strong Mind Program: AJ LaLonde
Coordinator, Major League Video/Replay: Jonathan Rhymes
Major League Video Coordinator: Petie Montero
Integration Analyst, Performance Science: Tyler Duncan
Sr. Developer, Baseball Systems: Ryan Casey
Developer, Performance Science Applications: Timothy Reen
Developer, Performance Science Applications: Brennan Ojeda
Sr. Quantitative Analyst: Max Weinstein
Sr. Quantitative Analyst: Sam Fleischer
Quantitative Analyst: Justin Williams
Data Engineer: Clayton Green
Jr. Quantitative Analyst: Grace Peng
Jr. Quantitative Analyst: Jordan Rivera
Senior Research Scientist: Will Vandenberg
Senior Research Scientist: Theodore Williams
Jr. Developer Baseball Systems: Alex Arriola
Jr. Developer: Riley Wartenberg
Jr. Data Engineer: Sherman Lu
Jr. Analyst, Baseball Strategy & Information: Matt Popowitz
Jr. Analyst, Baseball Strategy & Information: Charlie Willingham
Jr. Analyst, Baseball Strategy & Information: Sean Young
Assistant, Player Development: James Weilbrenner
Assistant, Baseball Operations: Mark Kozhaya
White Sox
Senior Vice President/General Manager: Rick Hahn
Assistant General Manager: Jeremy Haber
Senior Director of Baseball Operations: Dan Fabian
Senior Director of Sports Performance: Geoff Head
Director of Baseball Analytics: Matt Koenig
Director of Baseball Operations: Daniel Zien
Director of Team Travel: Ed Cassin
Special Assistant to the Chairman: Dennis Gilbert
Special Assistants to the Senior VP/GM: Nick Hostetler
Special Assistants to the Senior VP/GM: Marco Paddy
Special Assistants to the Senior VP/GM: Bill Scherrer
Special Assistants to the Senior VP/GM: Jim Thome
Special Assistant to the Executive Vice President: Todd Steverson
Manager of Baseball Operations: Zach Jones
Manager of Sports Science: Todd Kubacki
Executive Assistant to the Senior VP/GM: Nancy Nesnidal
Major League Analytics Coordinator: Sam Mondry-Cohen
Biomechanist: Aaron Trunt
Developer, Baseball Operations: Daniel Seguin
Developer: Brett Phillips
Developer: Joseph Wilson
Senior Analyst: Wataru Ando
Baseball Operations Analyst: Peter L’Oiseau
Baseball Video Coordinator: Bryan Johnson
Technical Video Coordinator: Ross Mika
Baseball Operations Fellow: Ethan Bain
Baseball Operations Fellow: Zubin Srivastava
Assistant General Manager/Player Development: Chris Getz
Director of Minor League Administration: Kathy Potoski
Assistant Director, Player Development: Ken Williams Jr.
Special Assistant to Baseball Operations: José Contreras
Director of Arizona Facilities: Joe Lachcik
Assistant Director, Baseball Operations: Graham Harboe
Assistant Director, Baseball Operations: Rod Larson
Biomechanical Analyst: Christopher Gearhart
Minor League Clubhouse and Equipment Manager: Dan Flood
Minor League Assistant Clubhouse Manager: Bryant Biasotti
Manager, Player Development/International Operations: Grant Flick
Assistant, Player Development/Video: Jack Larimer
Manager, Player Development Latin American Operations: Louis Silverio
Manager, International Player Development/Education: Erin Santana
Director of Amateur Scouting: Mike Shirley
Assistant Director of Amateur Scouting: Garrett Guest
"Of course the Dodgers have a huge front office," you might say, "because they spend on everything." And you wouldn't be wrong, but one look at the Tampa Bay Rays' front office page shows it's not specifically a lifestyle of the rich and famous. I'd do the same exercise with a side-by-side comparison except they use completely different formatting that would take too long to amend, so just click on the link and put some miles on your mouse scroll wheel. Deep pockets help everything, of course, but it reflects priorities more than resources.
Jerry Reinsdorf's White Sox have tended to only invest in the things they can see. They were among the league's lowest spenders in the draft and international markets when both were unregulated, but the league bailed them out by instituting budgets with punitive overage penalties. It's likely that a cap on front office spending would be the only way to pull the White Sox up to league-average levels in this area. Rick Hahn has maintained that the White Sox's front office listing doesn't reflect everybody doing work for them, but their "quiet" approach has generated equally faint results, so there's no reason to give them the benefit of the doubt here.
Watching MLB continually implement rules that bend markets toward the White Sox's will brings to mind the old quote that Reinsdorf rehashed at the Milkin Institute conference last month, in which he said teams are "at the mercy of your dumbest competitors." It's hard to know if he realizes which side of that the equation the White Sox fall, or if he just doesn't care.