I get why you say that.Back2Lawrence wrote: ↑Mon Jun 17, 2024 11:11 am The disparity in payrolls is laughable. Especially in a closed-system.
But statistically, there is significantly more parity in baseball than you might expect given those disparities. The Yankees won their last World Series when you could count our Big 12 streak with rings on one hand, and the Dodgers have been spending like drunken sailors for 10+ years now and have as many trophies as the Royals in that time.
Capped leagues have their own massive parity hurdles (in the NBA, the cap system gives "lifestyle" markets an enormous leg up; in the NFL, the cap system more or less means that only a small handful of teams are realistically competitive in any given year, because you EITHER need an all-world QB you're paying like one, or you need a rookie deal guy).
I would say where baseball fails from a competitive standpoint isn't at the top of the game, but at the bottom. And I think blaming the Yankees and Dodgers for, like, the cheapness of the Pirates and Rockies and Reds and so on, is misplaced.