Today brought about a couple of interested tidbits regarding the Dodgers. First,
Bloomberg announced that Time Warner has made a deal with the Dodgers for cable television rights.
An announcement of the agreement is imminent, although no
deal has been signed yet, said the people, who asked not to be
named because the decision isn’t yet public. The games will be
carried on a new regional sports network developed by Guggenheim
Partners, which bought the Dodgers for $2.15 billion last year.
Time Warner Cable will be a partner in the project and won’t own
the television rights outright, the people said.
Then, we hear from
Ken Gurnick at MLB.com that Sandy Koufax has officially rejoined the Dodger ranks as a Special Advisor to Dodgers Chairman Mark Walter.
Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax has returned to the club as special advisor
to chairman Mark Walter. Koufax will spend a portion of Spring Training
working with the club's pitchers at Camelback Ranch-Glendale and consult
during the season.
"I'm delighted to be back with the Dodgers," Koufax said. "I'm looking
forward to spending time with the team during Spring Training and to
contributing in any way I can to help make the team a success for the
fans of Los Angeles. Some of my most cherished memories came at Dodger
Stadium."
At first glance, it doesn't appear that the two reports could have any relation to the other. But, upon further reflection, I wouldn't be surprised if they were connected.
Think back to the days of the Fox ownership of the team. There was an incident surrounding Sandy Koufax and News Corp. (parent company of Fox and the Dodgers at the time) that caused a significant rift between the two. As I remember it, an official biography was being put out on Sandy Koufax that would be published by a News Corp. company. This in itself was rare since Koufax was known as a intensely private individual, so knowing the he endorsed this project was exciting news for fans. Unfortunately, those good feelings would dissipate fast.
As a marketing tool, the News Corp. publisher, or some other related entity felt is necessary to spread a baseless rumor about the upcoming biography as a way of generating more interest and potentially higher sales. Like the whisper campaign that sank John McCain's Carolina election chances, rumors spread that Sandy Koufax was a closeted homosexual.
That's right folks, those idiots from News Corp. knowingly spread a false rumor about Sandy Koufax to generate higher sales, and Sandy Koufax was not happy about it. In fact, he was so unhappy and disgusted by the tactic that he formally cut all ties to anything owned by News Corp. This even included the Dodgers.
For the first time, Sandy Koufax would not visit his old friends during Spring Training. He would not provide advice, or do anything for the team. Frankly, I felt that this was one of the darkest moments in Dodgers history.
When Fox eventually sold the team to the McCourts, Koufax slowly came back into the fold. His boycott was over. Now, we hear that Sandy is a Special Advisor to the Dodgers Chairman as the team negotiates a new cable television contract, and I have to wonder if he relayed his experience dealing with a News Corp. entity (Fox Sports) directly into his ear.
Could this possibly be Sandy's greatest act of revenge against Fox?
Frankly, this kind of orchestration is too devious for a single man to put together. So, I doubt he was the mastermind that steered the Dodgers away from Fox. Still, you have to figure that Sandy would have spoken highly of Time Warner over Fox if he was asked. And, you've got to believe nobody is more happy about this recent development than him.