The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - How to Fight the Cheapest Owner in American Sports
Episode Date: June 6, 2024The Oakland A's are leaving Oakland, but not before a rebel force of die-hards can remind billionaire nepo-baby John Fisher — the Kendall Roy of Major League Baseball — what it really means to be ...a fan. Slate's Joel Anderson embeds with the boycott movement and stops at nothing to unravel the conspiracy known as WristbandGate… even when it takes him to the depths of a notoriously sewage-infested stadium. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Torre Finds Out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Why would they want to give their hard-earned money to John Fisher, Netbo Baby?
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
So, one of the great pleasures I have hosting this show is that I get to assign absurdly accomplished people to do my bidding.
And so, Joel Anderson, one of the, truly one of the greatest podcasters in America, a real
superlative that is backed up by awards, Joel.
That's right.
Don't sarcastically nod.
It's real.
It's true.
I mean, you know, I don't like to talk about it often, but I did have the best podcast
in America last year.
Yes.
Okay.
So Joel Anderson, if you did not know, is a writer for Slate.com and the host of the
trophy winning podcast series, Slow Burn,
Becoming Justice Thomas.
But the other thing to know about Joel is that he lives in the Bay Area, meaning that
a big story that I've been monitoring from across the country is, for him, decidedly
local.
27,759.
That's how many fans packed to the Coliseum on a regular Tuesday night to show their support
for keeping the A's in Oakland.
Instead of a boycott, they called it a reverse boycott.
And if their goal was to get attention head around the concept of these reverse boycotts here,
because typically, when you want to protest something, you refuse to give it money or
pay for tickets.
But in Oakland, with the A's, what fans have been protesting is the team's billionaire
owner John Fischer, who has been threatening to move the team to Sacramento and eventually Las Vegas because
the money Oakland has been spending apparently isn't enough.
And when John Fischer was asked, directly, to address these locals, these customers,
who have recently also seen their Raiders move to Vegas and their Warriors move to San Francisco, John Fischer's bedside manner, let's say, wasn't great. grew up in the Bay Area. I started out as a Giants fan before we bought the A's. There's
no words that I can say that are going to make people at home who are really upset about
the team leaving feel better about the team or about me."
But the city of Oakland has not yet given up. This season, the reverse boycotters have only continued to organize,
and most stunningly here,
they have convinced some actual A's players
to support what amounts to a land war
against both MLB commissioner Rob Manfred,
who also wants the A's in Vegas,
and the player's actual boss, John Fischer,
one wrist at a time.
The issue is that if John Fischer, one wrist at a time. The issue is that if John Fischer has to pay a little bit more than he wants,
then it's not going to work for him.
So they want to embarrass him.
They want to let people know that John Fischer is abandoning and abusing a fan
base that has been really, really loyal.
I haven't come across a franchise or a fan base that is more connected than this one,
even though things are pretty damn terrible right now.
Right. And the connectivity, I mean, it's not just a battle between a billionaire owner
and this diehard downtrodden fan base.
The reason that my curiosity got piqued in the first place, the reason I said,
let's get Joel Anderson on the story, is because of something called wristband gate, Joel. And
so what the fuck is wristband gate? So a lot of these old diehard fans, they've
posited this theory that there's this group of four A's players, a couple of
them pretty good, who were photographed wearing these wristbands. What do the
wristbands say?
Some say, I stand with Oakland.
Some say the last dive bar,
which we'll talk about a little bit later.
You can imagine that if you work for an employer
and he says, we're moving,
we're pulling up stakes, leaving town,
and you say, hey, I like this place better,
and you say so publicly,
it might cause a little bit of friction, sure.
So the theory is that the four players
that have all worn this official merch,
part of the reverse boycott resistance,
that all four of them were secretly punished.
People are beginning to speculate
that this was actually under the instruction
of A's owner, John Fischer,
and had nothing to do with baseball.
And you won't believe the actual reason why.
There's an online shop called Last Dive Bar.
Their homepage features apparel encouraging fans to boycott the Aves and for Fischer to sell the team. The website tweeted
pictures of four players wearing their wristbands. James Kaprillion who's since been released,
Christian Pache who's now been traded, the A's 2023 all-star Brent Rooker who's suddenly been benched,
and of course Ruiz. Among the four released, traded, one player was demoted even though he's probably the
best thing on the roster, right?
In terms of future hope.
And the team's only all-star benched.
And I want to point out that I spoke to a guy who was a former executive at a major
league baseball team.
And what he said was, quote, cutting those players is exactly what I would have done.
Was it John Fisher?
The idea is like, we cannot tolerate this kind of rebellion among our employees.
Like it's not heard of and it should be punished.
Even though, of course, to me, that feels like totalitarian government.
Like now you're punishing players for sympathizing with the revolution.
And so what we did here was assign you as our Bay Area correspondent, newly titled,
to find out exactly what is going on with this story in Oakland,
with the cheapest, saddest franchise in American professional sports,
that is up to something that I just have not seen before.
And so, did you enjoy the luxurious locale that we dispatched you to?
I've been to a lot of bad stadiums this is the only one that has ever literally So Joel Anderson, before you got to Oakland Coliseum, as someone who lives out in the
Bay, when you think of the Oakland days and what they used to be, what comes to mind?
Oh man, it was just so great.
I mean, certainly as a kid and during the heyday, those loud colors, the green and the
gold and how good it looked in the summer sun.
Think about Ricky Henderson, you know, back in the late 80s, early 90s.
Ricky goes, the pitch ticket, he's going to have it.
He does.
Ricky Henderson
no contest steals third base jerks the bag from its moorings and holds it aloft representing number
939. You know back when the A's spent money and you know made all those trips to the
World Series those were some great teams.
World Series. Those were some great teams.
Then it gets to Mark McGuire, Jose Kinseko, like the Bash Brothers stuff. Back low, Shelby to the wall. It is gone. Grand slam home run for Jose Canseco.
That was the height of fame in baseball, I would say, during my childhood.
I mean, Jose Canseco used to date Madonna.
Truly the boldest-faced names at the time, Madonna, Jose Canseco.
All which is to say that even before Moneyball, right?
And Moneyball to me, look, as sports analytics nerd guy,
moneyball of course is what I also think of.
Billy Beane, the GM, starting the Saber Metric
analytic revolution, all that stuff.
But I feel like the entire time with the A's,
underrated in the concept of moneyball was the word money.
Yeah.
Like it was math, but it was also born out of what?
It was born out of a fundamental cheapness that the A's had in terms of how they operate.
Yeah, I mean they were fielding a team on discount.
So back in 2002 when Michael Lewis was following the Moneyball A's, their payroll was $39.7
million, which was third-last in the league. Fast forward the last season, almost a generation later, now the A's had the lowest payroll
in the league at $43 million.
And this season, dead last again at $47 million.
So that's 35% less than the second-lowest payroll in Major League Baseball, which belongs
to the Pirates.
How can you make the Pirates look like they're balling and you're not?
I mean, that's just how bad things are right?
It's a very anti can say go anti Ricky Henderson sort of energy right? It's like we are rock-bottom
Cheap and so the guy in charge right now Joel what makes him remarkable given the arc of how this franchise has has been
Well, I mean, you know that there are a lot of bad owners in baseball, but this dude probably
takes the cake.
He's, I'd say, the most f***ed up aloof and careless owner in the sport.
If you showed me John Fisher in a lineup, I could not pick him out.
Why is it that he's managed to be this anonymous while also this flagrant?
Well, it helps that he basically doesn't do on-camera interviews
Avoiding the media since buying the A's in 2005 such a public-facing business to own
Such a community gem is he cut out to be a sports owner?
I know you reached out to me in hopes that my reporting chops would really help out with the story here
But yes, sadly you dangle a podcast award in front of this reclusive billionaire and he'd be like, yeah finally I know you reached out to me in hopes that my reporting chops would really help out with the story here, but sadly...
You'd dangle a podcast award in front of this reclusive billionaire and he'd be like,
finally it's time to go on the record.
Come on out and talk. Yeah, right. But no, that did not work.
Clarence Thomas didn't talk to me and neither will John Fisher.
And both of them seem to have a lifetime appointment to the jobs they have.
It's true. I mean, it would be very hard for them to lose those positions absent them croaking
in the job.
John Fisher's origin story, his deal, where does that begin?
You know, there's just a lot of talk about Nepo babies now.
So John Fisher is one of those dudes.
He failed up.
He grew up a Giants fan here in the Bay.
He's the son of, you know, Gap
Clothing. He's the son of the founder, Donald Fisher. And the way they got involved in pro
sports is when John convinced his dad to buy an interest in the Giants.
So just to be clear, so an empire built upon khakis was immediately interested in owning
a baseball team.
Yeah, man.
And so Fisher also went to this exclusive boarding school in New Hampshire, Phillips Exeter Academy.
And then to Princeton.
And Pablo, I know you're a Harvard guy, I don't know how Ivy League beef goes, but I don't know.
I don't know what they rank like. Is Yale, and Penn, I don't know.
You know how it's ranked. There's only one slot that's important, and it's the first one, but yeah.
And so John Fisher's looking for for a job and his family said, hey, why don't you come and
run our multi-billion dollar investment portfolio?
They got into a few different ventures, but one of the funnier ones is that he bought
into 235,000 acres of timberland in Northern California, right?
So they have a timber company.
And that deal actually spurred massive protest.
And one demonstration that ended up outside the gap
in Midtown Manhattan, at that protest,
the environmentalists chained themselves to the store.
So it was very early people figured out
that they were not very happy with the Fisher family.
Right, very early on, people realized that
they wanted to fight John Fisher by refusing
to leave somewhere.
This is a through line in John Fisher's arc.
By the way, an arc that so far is essentially just to summarize all of this, a story of
a guy failing upwards because he had inherited wealth and connections and power.
And so John Fisher ends up buying the Oakland Athletics how?
So the A's are actually supposed to be owned right now by Joe Lakub, the owner of the Golden
State Warriors, who as we know, spent a lot on those championships. I mean, nobody would
ever call them cheap, right?
Correct.
Except that the commissioner of Major League Baseball back in the early 2000s, Bud Seeley,
had been fraternity brothers with a guy who was taking a minority stake as part of John
Fischer's bigger bid.
So I just laugh at how I know a guy.
I know it's always a guy who knows a guy who knows my dad.
This is how business is done among billionaires clearly.
And so at this point, now that they're struggling to win games and now that the fan base in the present is largely refusing to come to these games to the point where reverse boycotts
are a form of revolution, I do want to know who is going?
Who is actually attending?
Not very many.
I mean, it's very bleak out there.
I mean, consider first, I mean, the A's lost 112 games last year, right? So that's not much of a draw.
Allegedly,
6,000
faithful souls are showing up a night, but the next worst attendance is the Marlins, and I know you guys, this is better,
like, I know that it's always terrible there.
Yeah.
More than twice as many people are allegedly showing up in Marlins games than at Oakland A's games.
That's how bad things are.
And so John Fisher, he is mounting an argument that I think must be on some level correct,
which is the team isn't making enough money in Oakland right now and that he needs some
sort of a change, right?
This is the whole argument about a new stadium.
He needs a new stadium to convince people to come to these baseball games so that this
business that he's running is actually something that feels coherent. As Kendrick Lamar said to
Drake, why would we believe you? You never gave us nothing to believe in. So basically what the
Oakland fans are saying, hey, of course we're not showing up. What the hell have you given us to
show up for? You've neglected and abused us for decades. And yeah, I mean, that is a fair point.
There is a real chicken or the egg dynamic here.
The A's have basically been threatening to leave Oakland
for more than two decades.
Actually, you can go back and look this up.
These fans know at this point when they are not wanted.
And the larger argument behind the aforementioned wristbands,
the ones the fans gave to those four players, is that John Fischer is not just the worst owner in Major League Baseball,
like if, you know, Kendall Roy owned a baseball team.
They are also arguing that John Fischer and his willful tanking of not only a team, but
a building and a fan base is actually the worst owner in major American sports.
You might say, well, what are you talking about, Ken?
They draw 5,000.
Yeah, they draw 5,000, and you know why?
Because the owner, John Fisher, has wrecked the club.
John Fisher, again, since 2005,
has been part of this ownership group.
Who have they signed?
Nobody!
They have not made an impact signing at all.
Let someone who actually takes pride
in the things they own, own something.
There's actually people give a about the game.
Let them do it.
Take mommy and daddy's money somewhere else, dork.
Fischer refuses to spend on players
perpetually sitting out free agency.
He refuses to spend on toy players
getting rid of bobblehead giveaways.
He refuses to upgrade the stadium, perhaps obviously,
and he even got rid of free parking on Tuesdays.
In so many words, John Fisher can't really read the room.
And then he blames the room for being empty.
But none of what I just mentioned is even John Fisher's most egregious self-own. It's worth noting that in the earliest days of the pandemic, in May 2020, John Fisher was the only
Major League owner to cut the $400 weekly stipend for minor league players. And so there was a
little bit of a hubbub because people in Oakland, they don't take things, you know, lying down,
right? And so he reversed course a week later.
And this is all to save $1 million.
So just as a PR concern, the guy is not good at it.
Like minor leaguers making nothing during the pandemic, a billionaire saving $1 million.
It's the equivalent of like, yeah, here's a sack of puppies.
Watch me roll my car over it.
It'd be harder to be more heartless to a group of professional athletes than cutting their
very meager salaries during one of the more difficult and scary times in American history.
And so in terms of the sports perspective here, Joel, who did you go to to get an unvarnished
view amid all of this, like, again, management versus labor versus fan tension,
to get a view on what's actually happening in Oakland.
Who is the person who embodies the history of this city that you wanted to talk to?
Well, yeah, I mean, so Oakland is a city that has a great protest culture, right?
You've got Marshawn Lynch, you've got, you know, the Black Panthers.
So many people that have, you know, found themselves
outside of the system and become themselves sort of heroes
in a way.
And so I decided Bruce Maxwell would be a real good person
to talk to.
New tonight in A's catcher becomes the first player
in Major League Baseball now to kneel during the National Anthem.
This evening, Bruce Maxwell took a knee, placed his cap
over his heart and faced the flag.
A teammate put a hand on Maxwell's shoulder.
He was doing something that pretty much everybody else in baseball was afraid to do, which was what as of 2017?
Yeah, so he was kneeling in support of racial injustice and in support of Colin Kaepernick.
And he was the only one doing it. I'd never heard of him before then.
And as it turned out, I'd never heard much about him afterward either.
Right. Where is Bruce Maxwell now?
Where did you find him?
So now he's playing and coaching in the Mexican league.
He's 33 years old.
And he hasn't been back in the major since 2018.
Thanks, Bruce. Pretty interested.
It's good to see you, bro, by the way.
It was good to catch up with you yesterday too. So yeah man, it's a
pleasure man. When Ziren reached out to me about this, I was like, oh this is
exciting actually. I love this. So when Bruce Maxwell gets a call from you Joel
Anderson, and the call is about the Oakland A's, my instinct is not to presume
that he has warm and glowing memories of what
he went through. What was his reaction when you reached him? Oh man, he couldn't
wait to talk about Oakland and the A's and how much he loved playing here. The
most special part of being in that organization, it was the people,
the coaches, and just the overall, like even in the city, like it was the it was the people the coaches and just the overall
like even in the city like it was just a camaraderie and people are diehard and
like they don't let anything waver their faith in their team no matter how bad
it's been going no matter how bad we were playing you know we very rarely got
booed they've always been through and through fighting for the team I think
right now they're just they're just tired of what's going on.
There was one other thing that I may have made reference to earlier.
He told me about the stink, especially in the bullpen.
The quality just wasn't there, especially for a big league ball club.
It's probably really good for a double-A, triple-A locker room,
but for the big leagues it's not even comparable.
And to hear guys complain about the bullpens, about the dugouts,
about the septic issues that we still have in the Oakland Coliseum.
The septic issue is probably the most notable thing about being on the field as a player.
When they have backups,
or if it rains a lot or whatever,
you can smell the sewage through the vents in the dugout.
And it's there for days on end.
It's not just some slight smell, like no, no, it's heavy.
Wow.
It's kind of degrading, honestly.
Oh, what?
It's kind of degrading, honestly.
You just can't really think of another professional sports organization that would even tolerate
something like that.
Like, maybe you do that for gamesmanship
to the visitors dug out a locker room, right?
Right, the piping in the crowd noise
of defecation, right?
Right, or maybe their hot water doesn't work
in the in the showers that day right but like when we all have to smell the
then it's clear that the problem is gone beyond mere gamesmanship right even
though it's melted even though no one was there to watch this dump Bruce feels
how about the A's leaving it oh Oh, he's pissed. What's happening with the franchise of the Oakland A's
is disturbing.
It's worrisome.
It's upsetting.
To see the game of baseball and the history
of that organization be able to be ripped apart
from that community and those fans and those workers just because we have
some greedy people that don't want to do what's best for the community.
It's very upsetting and it's heartbreaking when you think about it personally.
So the thing that Bruce is waxing poetic about, the thing that Bruce Maxwell misses, the community,
I am confused here.
Is that community the 6,000 people allegedly who are showing up to sit in that stink to show up and watch these games?
Yeah, yeah, pretty much. And of that group, he misses this specific group of super fans he got to know.
And so when he was up and down into minor leagues, and there's a minor league team in Stockton, which isn't too far from here,
he would go watch A's day Games with this group and that group
of folks they go by a name, The Last Dive Bar.
And so he went to a bar you're saying, he went to a bar called The Last Dive Bar.
No, no. It's a group of fans that are called The Last Dive Bar.
So you did not go to a bar on assignment for us.
I did hang out at a bar, but not the last dive bar.
Very good.
Okay, so if the last dive bar, Joel, is not in fact an actual bar, what is the last dive
bar?
So, the last dive bar is actually a reference to the Oakland Coliseum.
And in 2019, the New York Times used the term as a sort of backhanded tribute to the stadium.
The headline for it was, The Beauty of America's Ugliest Ball Park. And here's how the writer put it in the story, quote,
if Marlins Park is the flashy new nightclub
and Fenway Park and Wrigley Field are the historic pubs,
the Coliseum is baseball's last off bar.
So the idea that it's the opposite
of like a velvet rope ringing this place,
it's like, please anybody, you're welcome here.
We need customers actually to support ourselves. That's like, please, anybody, you're welcome here. We need customers, actually, to support ourselves.
That idea, that nickname, how did it then spawn
what feels like this organized rebellion now
of reverse boycotters, the guys who are allegedly
too dangerous to associate with
if you're a player on the Oakland A's?
Well, if you met Brian Johansson, you might understand.
So I grew up in the shadow of the Billy Ball era,
you know, early 80s, but then that ushered in the
Bash Brothers era, Ricky Henderson, you know, Hendo.
His dad bought season tickets every year, so he's got a lot of...
He's a big Bash Brothers fan and all that other good stuff.
In Oakland, the East Bay, baseball
was everything to people growing up in the 80s.
Brian, as the picture, the portrait of leadership
for this organization, paint the picture of him for us.
How does he look?
How does he carry himself?
Big, ball-headed dude with glasses.
When you meet him, one of the first things you notice is that he has the athletics
logo.
Pretty sure you guys have seen it before, the one with the cursive scrip that spells
out athletics.
He's got that tattooed on his right forearm.
One of the things that he had started doing back in 2019 was wearing a gold vest covered
in pins.
In that year, he got caught on a game broadcast showing his, maybe displeasure is the best
way to say it, after a guy on the A's got hit by a pitch.
And so if you're not watching this GIF on YouTube or the DraftKings network, Joel, what
is happening here?
What is Brian saying, clearly?
This is a family network, correct?
This is the opposite of a network that any family should want to show their kids.
Brian was saying, what the f*** man.
When Brian heard the Times had called the Coliseum baseball's last dive bar,
a light bulb went off in his head and he knew exactly what he had to do.
I saw that line, I said that's the most beautiful, greatest line I've ever heard to talk about Oakland Coliseum. So I said we got to make a banner we got to
make a banner it was all about making banners. My buddy called me he goes I got
it I'm like what and it was basically it just says baseball's last dive bar Oakland
Coliseum it's an overhead camera shot of the stadium which we purchased that
Getty image and everything and the minute we dropped that it went nuts nuts. And so that's how baseball's last dive bar started.
And it feels like merch was a big part of his strategy.
Oh, yeah. I mean, they're a merch collective, basically.
I mean, he and his buddies started printing up shirts,
pens, mugs, calendars, all sorts of stuff.
So what's the appropriate venue for a summit with Brian?
Where do you guys meet up?
What is the bar that you alluded to before,
the actual dive bar, where you guys had the microphones rolling?
Yeah, so we met up last month at Jack London Square,
which was kind of embarrassing because it was only after ordering a drink
that I found out that Brian was been sober for about a year
Just pretend there's gin in here
Great reporting Joel. Yep. I ended up drinking by myself a week. We met at this cool little place called
Heinold's first and last chance saloon
All right, so just a quick geographical detail
about the saloon where Joel met Brian.
Because this saloon was near the site
of an alternate universe.
An alternate universe where John Fisher's Oakland A's
were supposed to break ground on not just the ballpark,
but a new waterfront stadium,
which even had renderings and everything.
But that proposed ballpark at the Waterfront Howard Terminal ultimately fell apart after
years of back and forth because that price tag did eventually come in.
And the difference between public money from taxpayers and private money, which is to say
John Fisher's, was allegedly too much for John Fisher.
There was a $97 million funding gap for Howard Terminal.
You're telling me a guy worth $3 billion can't sit there and just pay the $97 million, work
it into the deal and get paid back later or whatever?
I mean, these guys have shown that they do not want to spend their money and their billionaires
and the fans don't benefit.
It's not like Green Bay where the community owns the team.
Like we don't benefit.
In 2018, the franchise released a proposal to build a 34,000 seat ballpark as part of
this brand new waterfront district there in Oakland.
And it's a beautiful spot.
There's a lot of potential there.
A lot of people have wanted to do things with it.
This seemed like a really good fit.
And so the club spent, you club spent upwards of about $100 million
to clear land for development, getting ready for the day
that they could build this stadium there.
Last year, though, the A's walked away
from the stadium deal when they couldn't agree
on like a $100 million funding gap with the city.
And essentially, they were like, hey, Oakland,
are y'all gonna kick in on this or not?
And when they didn't, he decided to take the team to Vegas.
Tonight, the Oakland A's are a big step closer
to moving to Las Vegas.
The team with the smallest crowds
in Major League Baseball is purchasing 49 acres
in Las Vegas for a new ballpark.
Yeah, I remember this from afar,
the news breaking was April, 2023.
The A's announced they're no longer the Oakland A's,
they're gonna be the Las Vegas Athletics,
which obviously is devastating to Brian,
to the last dive bar, to all these people,
which explains why they're reverse boycotting
out of desperation last year.
And what we assigned you to go do, Joel,
was to also reverse boycott, AKA go to a baseball game,
with Brian.
That's like, that's the A's PR in a nutshell. They try to cover that up, like, they're like,
well, we didn't know he was getting scouted.
And in all of his veteran savvy,
how does he go to a game?
What's that like?
He was smart enough to bring his own burrito from home.
Do you buy concessions and stuff when y'all go in there?
Do you...
I have food that I brought in right there.
Yeah.
So that I have a better... Oh, okay. Yeah, I have food that I brought in right there. Yeah.
OK. Yeah, I got a burrito.
Yeah. Well, I'm not a nice bottle of
coke.
I'm safe.
So look.
Yeah. A pro.
That's a pro.
I wish he had told me before, because I
didn't know. I thought we were going to
get food there and I didn't eat when we got drinks. And I'm like, oh, we a hot dog or something and he was like oh no we're bringing our own food but nobody told me so I had a key part of the reverse boycott is the BYO burrito policy clearly look these folks are not going to pay for any concessions because why would they want to give their hard-earned money to John Fisher nepo baby right which is Right, which is again, threading the needle of what it means to be reverse boycott is,
I'm going to give you my money, but not for a f***ing burrito.
That is where I draw the line in this protest.
I became an Asian.
I recognize you.
Yeah, I became an Asian.
How you doing man?
Yeah, how became an A-student. What's up, man? How you doing, man? Yeah, I'm good.
What's up?
When we were walking to our seats, like, Brian was stopped no fewer than, like, a dozen
times.
The only thing I could compare it to is, like, I've hung out with, like, mayors before.
You've been a mayor at a local event.
It was just like, hey, hey, and people hugging him and making promises to do things for him
later.
I would venture that more people in the stadium recognize him than maybe the fourth most popular A.
Sorry to J.D. Davis?
You know, look, I was there, I'm a journalist, right?
Sitting out there in the middle of this sprawling concrete monstrosity,
I wanted to try to see this from John Fisher's side if I could.
Yes, please. Yeah, so here's how I put it to Brian and his friends. sprawling concrete monstrosity. I wanted to try to see this from John Fisher's side if I could.
Yes, please.
Yeah, so here's how I put it to Brian and his friends.
Do you, okay, the very narrow empathy set of
this is a **** stadium,
everybody knows that this is unreasonable.
And like, he's looking around the country and he's like,
most other places will pay for my stadium.
Joel, let me ask you something.
Okay.
Let me ask you something.
Is Fenway Stadium
No, it's Wrigley Field Stadium, I mean I guess it what do we mean by but no it's still it's a beautiful historic park
Dodger Stadium
Beautiful historic stadium, but still kind of
So two of those two of those over 100 old. All three of them are revered.
I'd rather take a piss at that place and walk in it.
All three of them are revered as the most historic
like baseball landmarks in the history of the game.
Why?
Because it's viewed that way, it's marketed that way,
it's invested into that way.
So, I mean, Dodger Stadium,
before they did the Mount Davis,
looked exactly like the Coliseum.
The difference is they continually invest into their product, into their market, into their stadium.
Just like Wrigley and in Finland.
This place has been ignored by the very people that should be maintaining and putting money into it.
Coliseum plays, the area around it has never been developed because they've never had an ownership group to actually do it.
They also didn't have to share a stadium with a football team.
Right. Yeah, yeah. If honestly the Kiss of Death was saying the Raiders come back and let them go back.
Yeah, I mean the only excuse they have for this place not being better than it is now
is themselves.
At any point in time these billionaires could have invested into this facility, they could
have invested into the area around, they could have worked with the politicians earnestly
and in good faith, something they've never proven they can do. And they would have done that. You know what I mean?
And so they haven't. And that's why it's the last eyeball. Yeah. The sense I get Joel,
professional journalist, award-winning podcaster, is that they tried to radicalize you. I mean,
we embedded you with this resistance and the feeling that you get while you're
in the stands is what?
How would you describe honestly how you were feeling?
Pablo, I have to admit, they probably didn't have to try too hard to radicalize me.
I've got to say I've joined the resistance.
What does the resistance look like?
Well, one thing about it is that you get these cool little wristbands that say,
I stand with Oakland, right?
Not cool for me and cool for my two-year-old as well.
So you get to do that and then look, I'm fall victim to wanting to have a little fun
at some of these things sometimes.
And so I see Brian bring in one of those big ass cell flags,
you know, big green cell flag.
Wait, Joel, Joel, it is one thing,
it is one thing to even wear the radicalized wristband,
but this giant ass, you literally,
wait, did you wave the flag?
Have you ever waved a flag?
Fine.
Have you ever done? Because if you Have you ever waved a flag? Have you ever done it?
Because if you haven't, like I had not,
then you understand the allure of it, right?
Like even in sports, in football games,
where the guy runs out with the flag,
I never got to do that.
So, Pablo, yes, I have to admit it.
I waved that damn flag.
Oh, God.
Look at the photo of Joel Anderson on YouTube
and DraftKings Network. I'm delighted, right? I'm like a Anderson and I'm delighted right?
I'm like a little I'm a kid you look like the happiest person in Oakland Coliseum
Okay, so I should probably remind you now that the object I actually assigned to Joel Anderson, the object I originally wanted him to scrutinize, was not Brian's flag.
Or even Brian's bring-your-own-burrito.
It was Brian's wristband.
It's a rebel wristband worn by four Oakland A's players,
which allegedly resulted in real punishment
from team management.
And I know that the wristbands read stuff
like I Stand with Oakland,
but this whole story, this popular online theory,
known as wristband gate, if true,
is also big enough to maybe make a dent in this whole saga.
And so I wanted to find out if this theory would stand up in court. I want to go through this investigation with you because player number one,
James Kaprillion, is a pitcher who got dropped allegedly by the team for the crime of supporting
Brian and the last dive bar.
Was he any good, first off?
He started 11 games last year for the A's, wore the wristband, and then, look, he had
major surgery on his shoulder and the alleged punishment was, according to fans, that he
got released.
But really, at the end of last season, he hit free agency and didn't get re-signed by anyone.
Right, right, right, right. And so we should say also, we reached out to James Caprellian, his agent, no response.
And so the investigation surges on, player number two, Christian Pache, who got banished allegedly to Philadelphia,
got traded away for wearing again this this wristband What really happened here Christian is a pretty good player. He played in two postseason with the Braves
He's talented Dominican outfielder the A's acquired him when they traded away one of their only two all-stars because that is what the A's
Obviously trade away their all-stars, right? He struggled off offensively when he came out here
He wore the wristband and then well it
starts to happen he gets banished to the Phillies last March for a relief pitcher and the A's explanation here was what?
They claimed he was out of Major League options, but they also released that relief pitcher a year later
Pache meanwhile has been starting a center field for Philadelphia ever since. Analysts say, just a bad trade.
And when the Phillies found out why we were asking, they declined to make him available
for an interview because, I mean, why would they do that?
Right.
Do you want to help us stir up some s*** over in Oakland?
And they're like, no, you guys over in Oakland are doing enough of that already.
So player number three is Estier Ruiz, who got demoted.
And this is a guy who was notable
because I have heard of him.
Yeah, one of the few.
He's a rising star and so how was he punished allegedly for the wristband?
The great looking athlete man and he was arguably the A's best player last season.
He led the AL and stolen bases for the crime of wearing a wristband.
This is what people think happened. So five games into the season,
he got sent down to AAA,
despite leading the team in batting average and OPS.
So why would Asturi Ruiz be sent down?
Well, according to athletics management,
they said he needs to get on base more,
which is comical because he was leading the team
with a 429 batting average,
and the guy they signed to replace him, Tyler Nevin,
had a worse on base percentage than him last year.
A's management claimed at the time that it was because he wasn't going to play every
day.
But I did get to go into the A's clubhouse at some point and talk to Ruiz and his translator
responded in this way after saying, I don't know what you're talking about.
What is this?
He have no idea.
So he first of all, he was that didn't know what that means. He have no idea. So he first of all he wear that.
Didn't know what that means.
He just got on his chair.
He like the color but he didn't know what that mean for him.
So he definitely nothing have to do with us and that.
No, no, no.
He just work and was in his locker room
and he just put on the color.
Put it on again?
Do you put it on again?
Yes, but if I ask him for it
and something doesn't suit me, I wouldn't do it.
But if something...
If it's something that's not going to hurt him, yeah, he definitely will.
But if it's not going to make it hurt him, we're definitely done.
So pleading ignorance is Estiary Ruiz.
Player number four though, Brent Rooker.
Again, this is, I believe, the only all-star on the A's last season.
I presume that he knew what this wristband represented.
Rooker wore the wristband last year after he got handed one by the group, which yes, he told me that he was aware of the last dog bar and what they stand for.
Did you know them? Do you know any of those folks over there? I mean, yeah, I think I generally know
most of the people that come to most of the games. So definitely understand where they're coming from.
It's an unfortunate situation.
And I think definitely they have every right to be upset
just because they do love this team so much.
They hate to see the team leave.
This season, he was literally
their opening day cleanup hitter.
He starts the season, 0411. Hey early in the year 0 4 11
That's not that horrible and boom the fans say he's benched
So I went and asked Rooker about this in the locker room, too
It is nonsense. It was the rumor
That I saw going around was that I had been benched because of it
I I missed one game because I had an injury.
And that was the extent of me not playing.
So I was never benched.
I was never taken out of the lineup.
There was never any kind of repercussions
for me wearing a bracelet.
And so I just need to be clear about this
in order to be fair to the Oakland Athletics, right?
We've established that you have been radicalized.
You're literally a flag
waiver, and yet we don't have the evidence here, clearly. We have, in fact, the opposite. We have
counterclaims from some of the principals that actually this whole thing about our punishment
is not what the last I bar, what your new friend is claiming it to be. So we actually sent a list of detailed questions to the A's general manager, David Forrest,
and he gave us this fairly clear statement that I hadn't seen anywhere else, so maybe we're breaking some news here, right?
Quote, the suggestion that we would move players based on their opinions of a fan group is absurd.
Winning games at this level is hard enough without worrying about
who's wearing a wristband. You can just imagine he wanted to say damn, but it was a written
statement.
So I do want to express some empathy, I suppose, for the people who work for John Fisher, even
the GM of the team, right? It can't be the easiest thing to manage a team that's constantly
cutting payroll, playing in front of nobody in terrible facilities. But taking him at his word and taking your reporting now
at its word, Joel, what really happened here?
Like these people believe this,
what is actually the reality of this story?
Well, I mean, it's real easy to believe in the worst, right?
That the team would actually influence the outcomes of games
because they're, you know, they're
not willing to take on a little bit of criticism.
But it's easy to believe that if you've been mistreated as a fan base for so long, they've
done the worst.
And so you've gone through a decade or more of lies about this sort of stuff.
And so it becomes, oh, why wouldn't they demote, you know, an all star?
Why wouldn't they trade away somebody that has value?
Because they'll do anything, right?
Right.
The plausibility.
A plausibility that feels like familiar to anybody who's like argued with someone that
they used to love and now hate.
Yeah.
Oh, very much the like, I don't know.
It's like, you could be that way, right?
Like if we were former lovers and like you cheated on me or whatever, you left me for
somebody else,
then everything you've ever done is sort of in question
as a result.
And so I think that's sort of what's happening here.
You know, the A's, you know, they say, I'm not cheating.
I swear I'm staying with you.
I promise you, and all of a sudden
they're getting married in Vegas.
And you're like, well, what the hell?
Like, what was it all for?
You were lying.
What else did you lie about?
I feel for Brian and the last dive bar because it does not feel like what they have been
doing.
Waving flags, reverse boycotting games, protesting, organizing, building alliances with players.
It doesn't seem like any of it Joel is actually going to work.
It doesn't feel like it's going to get them what they want, what they love.
It doesn't feel like they're gonna keep that.
Well, Brian's gonna try to move on, man. You know, your love relieves them. You're never
gonna love anybody again, right? But in the interim, they're gonna do this thing. So,
you know, they try, we talked about the reverse boycott. They're gonna do an actual boycott
this time. So, the day after this episode airs,
Brian and his crew are going to show up
for a game against the Toronto Blue Jays,
and then in dramatic fashion, all at the same time,
they're going to bell.
They're going to leave and go to a stadium
about 10 miles up the road to watch
this new independent baseball team called the Oakland Ballers.
It'll be their first ever home game.
And so they're hoping maybe they can
fill this hole in their heart that the A's are gonna leave.
Right. Brian's gonna take his burrito money and hand it to somebody else.
What we found out here at the end Joel, right? Because this is a story ultimately about protests and it's a story about a protest that
fundamentally isn't going to work.
Yeah. And so,
what is this all really about then?
Well, yeah, I mean sometimes you just protest because you're mad, right? Sometimes it's just an expression
of unfavorable dynamics by a group that's marginalized or vulnerable and
they just say we're fed up, we're sick of this s***. Often I would say when you do go
out to protest you kind of accept the fact that you don't know if you're going
to win, right?
So that's exactly what's happening here.
Also, I think the other piece of this Pablo, to be honest, is that they're trying to let
sports fans all across this country know it could be you.
You could easily be Oakland.
If you're not LA, if you're not New York, if you're not Dallas or Chicago, one of the
really wealthy major cities in this country, you could easily lose your professional sports team.
I'm from Houston.
Houston's the fourth largest city in the country, one of the top 10 markets.
When I was a kid, my favorite team was the Houston Oylers.
Do you know who the Houston Oylers are today?
The Tennessee Titans.
So, you know what I'm saying?
So it really is important for people to know and I think that's what they want people to
know that like if Major League
Baseball would treat us like this in spite of our loyalty and the culture and the history of this
Franchise here in this town and they'll still move it on it could definitely be you. Yeah, Joel Anderson
it was really good to hear from you and
Also them. Yeah, man. No, thanks so much. It was a lot of fun. And hey, you should come out.
Me and Brian, we got some plans.
I'll let you know when they are and maybe you can make your way out here.
As long as I get to wave that f***ing flag.
This has been Pablo Torre Finds Out, a Meadowlark Media production.
And I'll talk to you next time.