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Some baseball fans favor a strike - if it helps the little guys

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Posted 7:43AM on Monday 26th August 2002 ( 22 years ago )
SAN DIEGO - Few San Diego Padres fans get to the ballpark earlier than Frank and Barbara Glenski, who pull into a prime parking spot and spend several hours waving to fans and players from lawnchairs near their &#34;Padres Baseball is Life&#34; sign.<br> <br> But as much as they&#39;d miss their beloved team, they favor the players going on strike if it makes baseball more competitive.<br> <br> &#34;Absolutely! &#34;It&#39;s not fun watching the same teams year after year, because they can buy all their players,&#34; said Barbara Glenski, 76, referring to the postseason that always seems to include big spenders like the New York Yankees and Atlanta Braves.<br> <br> Across the nation, many fans feel the same way, especially in cities where getting to the World Series seems like a pipe dream.<br> <br> Just four years ago, the Padres beat the Braves for the NL pennant. But it was quickly back to reality for the so-called small-market team without a huge local TV contract or other revenue to keep up with the richer teams.<br> <br> Within weeks of being swept by the dreaded Yankees in the 1998 World Series, the Padres began dumping their well-paid stars.<br> <br> San Diego has kept its payroll in the $40 million range and hasn&#39;t had a winning season since. Entering Sunday, they were 27 games behind the defending World Series champions, the Arizona Diamondbacks, who are outspending the Padres by $60 million on salaries.<br> <br> The story sounds familiar to fans in Milwaukee.<br> <br> &#34;You take the Brewers. They can&#39;t afford the expensive players that some of the other teams can,&#34; said Floyd Hunter, 69. &#34;If a strike helps them, that&#39;s great, but I don&#39;t see it happening.&#34;<br> <br> Not all small-market teams are hurting. The Minnesota Twins got a court order to stave off contraction and, with a modest opening-day payroll of $40 million, were leading the AL Central by 17 games entering Sunday.<br> <br> Still, Twins fan Tim Boelter, of Algonquin, Ill., is nervous.<br> <br> &#34;They&#39;re on the bubble right now,&#34; Boelter said before a recent Twins-White Sox game at Comiskey Park. &#34;I&#39;d be unhappy if they don&#39;t make it. And if it is because of big-money teams driving out small-market teams, I would hope that they come up with a way so small-market teams can compete, like it is in football.&#34;<br> <br> Boelter isn&#39;t optimistic that will happen.<br> <br> &#34;I think money will win. I think the big-money teams won&#39;t give up what they&#39;ve got.&#34;<br>

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