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Should Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban be allowed to purchase the Chicago Cubs?

Results so far:

Yes
82% 149 votes Total: 181 votes
No
18% 32 votes
Yes

Chicago Cubs fans are among the most passionate fans in all of sports, and they deserve an equally passionate owner.

Based on his track record, Mark Cuban certainly qualifies.

And actually, the more you think about it, the more baseball needs a character like Mark Cuban around. Baseball's upper echelon is dominated by faceless corporations and boring old men.

Remember when Ted Turner owned the Atlanta Braves back in the 1970s? He was young, brash and confident, full of fire and bravado. He raised the team's profile immensely - even going so far as to dub it "America's Team," thanks to its national exposure on Superstation WTBS.

Remember Charlie Finley of the Oakland A's? As an owner, he was flamboyant, hands-on, and more than a little crazy. Yet he also put together a team that was one of the most dominant the American League had ever seen.

And what about Bill Veeck? Yes, he was eccentric, but he was one of the most masterful showmen that baseball has ever seen, and one of its true pioneers.

With the notable exception of George Steinbrenner (who's now removed himself from much of the day-to-day operations of the New York Yankees), how many of today's owners can you name? How many of today's owners inspire passion in their teams and their fans?

Baseball needs Mark Cuban to challenge the status quo. Baseball needs Mark Cuban to light a fire beneath a sport whose image has stagnated.

Let's face it: Baseball fans wildly cheer managers who kick dirt, toss bases, and throw tantrums when they believe the umpires have blown a call. Baseball fans love showmanship, and they love somebody who will stand up for their team. And that's exactly what Mark Cuban has a history of doing.

Mark Cuban also has a strong commitment to fielding winning teams. Ever since he took over the Dallas Mavericks, the team has never had a winning percentage of less than .622, and the team has gone to the playoffs every year.

(For those who suggest that having an owner like Mark Cuban does not mesh well with the Cubs' "Lovable Losers" image, you might want to check baseball's current standings - as of August 15, no team in baseball has more wins than the Cubs.)

Mark Cuban is loud, passionate, and loves baseball. And if he just happens to have enough money to buy the team, I can't think of any better qualifications - because they match the traits of the typical Cubs fan.

Learn more about this author, Jeff Axelrod.
Contact this writer Click here to send Author comments or questions.

No

Various forms of the word institution can be applied to this situation.

Cubs fans will tell you the organization is an institution, in the way the Smithsonian is an institution. They would make it clear the Cubs are not to be messed with. Just provide hope and despair, and the lure of being a Cubs fan will remain.

Some NBA owners would say an institution, the kind for the mentally ill, is where Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban belongs. Move him out of their behind-the-scenes rich guy fraternity. Wall in his histrionics. God knows he shouldn't be allowed to purchase another professional team, which is what he is trying to do with the Cubs.

In 2004 this is what Cuban told USA Today about the prospect of owning another pro franchise:
"I've considered (buying NFL and NHL franchises) momentarily, but sanity sets in."

It seems, as many have contended, Cuban's sanity has left him.

Despite the sink-shipping lips, it's difficult to fault how Cuban has run the Mavericks. He's turned the once moribund franchise into a business model for others in the NBA to emulate.

Unlike many owners, Cuban proved out his desire to win with his financial backing. He dropped $46 million to customize a Boeing 757 which transports the team. In each home locker he installed a bunch of stuff your wife would rather see down stairs. Flat-screen TV, Playstation, DVD player.

The pampering has brought results, though not achieved the goal.

The Mavericks have been in the playoffs each season since Cuban purchased the team in February of 2000. They've been to the Western Conference Finals twice, the NBA Finals once. Last season they were ousted in the first round by ferocious Golden State.

But the Dallas Mavericks, a 27-year-old franchise, is not the Cubs.

This year is a big anniversary for the Cubs. It will be 100 years since they won the World Series. One hundred years. The calendar turn to 2008 will also mark the 100-year anniversary of Henry Ford selling the first Model T for $850.

Cuban is self-made and always portrayed as blue collar as opposed to white collar, a label that seems contrary when juxtaposed with his enormous personal wealth. Simply put, he busted his butt to get where he is. That would ring true with Cubs fans.

The business sector that provided his wealth may not. The construction crew that splits season tickets may not want a front-and-center owner who became rich with Internet ingenuity. Just boost payroll, then get out of the way.

You also have the Dancing with the Stars thing.

Though, Cuban says, true to his t-shirt and jeans style, he would be a bleacher creature.

"Everybody thinks I'm going to be on the sidelines, in the dugout, jumping up and down. That's not where I'll be," he said on the Mike North Morning Show on Chicago radio station WSCR at the end of last season.

"When I went to the Cubs game a couple weeks ago, I sat in the bleachers, and I'll have a seat marked out for me and my friends. We'll be out in the right-field bleachers - that's the best place to watch a game.

This is not the approach Cuban has used with the Mavericks. The most fined owner in NBA history is a television camera favorite, even for the networks he doesn't own. He's often quoted because he is so quotable (as opposed to Bill Belichick, often quoted but not quotable).

The Cubs don't need Cuban's marketing savvy.

The Cubs owner needs to be a maintainer. Or at least a caretaker who treads lightly around the history before him.

Can Cuban do that? Would Cubs fans give him the chance?

It seems unlikely and, subsequently, a bad fit.

Learn more about this author, Todd Dybas.
Contact this writer Click here to send Author comments or questions.

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