| Don't Let The Door
Hit You
By John Mehno
Kevin McClatchy kept the Pirates in Pittsburgh when doing that
probably didn't make much business sense.
When he was handed other peoples' money to build a new ballpark,
he signed off on the gem that is PNC Park.
Thus concludes this recap of all the good things McClatchy did
in his 11-plus years at the helm of the Pirates.
McClatchy's resignation as Pirates' CEO has to be considered
good news because of the franchise's consistent deterioration
under his leadership.
McClatchy's first team was 73-89; last year's record was 67-95.
There was no success in between.
While some reports praised him for getting Major League Baseball
to bring the All-Star game here last year, that was actually a
tacit acknowledgment of McClatchy's failure.
The Pirates needed the All-Star game to artificially prop up
ticket sales for two seasons. If they hadn't gotten it, the downturn
in attendance we're seeing this season might have started two
years earlier.
McClatchy was as earnest as he was inexperienced. He had never
run a business of any kind, much less one as complex and competitive
as an under-funded MLB franchise. Fantasy leagues don't prepare
you for the real thing.
His naivety was obvious early in his tenure when he promised
the Pirates had no intention of trading their good young players
like "Jason Kendall, Mark Johnson and Jermaine Allensworth."
Kendall was a valid major leaguer, but the other two were mediocre
players just passing through and hardly worthy of untouchable
status.
McClatchy transformed himself from savior to villain in short
order. After a 100-loss debut season at PNC Park, he authorized
an increase in ticket prices. Before that, he peevishly prolonged
an argument with customers about their right to carry food and
drinks into a park built mostly with public money.
"This is amazing. We're talking about bottled water," McClatchy
said.
But it was more than that. It was about understanding and respecting
customers. He couldn't grasp that.
He authorized a ridiculously-generous contract for Kendall that
is still haunting the Pirates' books.
Things got so bad that McClatchy made sure he was out of the
country one year when Pirates officials had their traditional
question-and-answer session at the team's fan fest.
McClatchy was always a conspicuous presence in that front row
seat, but it wasn't as though he was among the people. He was
sitting in a $210 seat to which most fans have no access.
In 11 full seasons under McClatchy leadership, the Pirates were
783-996, a whopping 213 games on the wrong side of .500. That's
a lot of losing.
It wasn't because he didn't care or didn't want to win. He did.
He just didn't know what he was doing.
It's difficult to believe the Pirates and their long-suffering
fans won't be better served by new leadership.
John Mehno's latest book, "The Best
Pittsburgh Sports Arguments" will be published by Sourcebooks
in October. He can be reached at: johnmehno (at) lycos (dot) com. |