Behee Joon,
I think you and I are in completely different wave length when it comes to
basic exchange of ideas. You read whatever you like, and respond to whatever
you wish. I specifically stated in my post "local government" yet in your
response you said "U.S government". Somehow, I don't think you are that
naive not to know the difference, so I believe Shoma Khodet Ro Beh OOn
Rah mizanee.
If the team in Florida owes taxes to Federal government, that means they
must have made money! *You can not owe taxes if you had net losses
unless you did some fishy stuff*. I know of a number of teams in Baseball,
Football and yes even ice hockey who have gotten very good deals to move
to a city, or start a franchise. Please review San Jose Shark and Oakland
Raiders deal before you make claim that government (Yes, CITY OF OAKLAND
IS PART OF GOVERNMENT and SO IS CITY OF SAN JOSE).
But we don't want to get side tracked or at least I don't.
How strong is IPL? How much of the potential we see in players that
Iran can produce been realized by IPL?
When people discuss IPL, we often start by saying we don't even have
the most basic things that muct of the rest of the world takes for granted
including a good lawn.
From the above, some (like yourself) will conclude: Improvement in lawn
is all that is missing! And then prescribe sending lawn police to kick out
all the teams who don't measure up to your lawning standards.
And another group (like myself) argue, bad lawn and inadaquate facilities is
part of a much bigger *managment* issue that can not be solved under
current way that clubs are run. A proposed solution is to use the model
set forth by rest of the world. Private clubs with cooperation with local
government.
Now I don't know why some would have to make contrast between now
(a bankrupt system) with Pahlavi time (yet another backrupt system) instead
of using working models around the globe to *change* our way of doing
things, to be a lot more efficient and responsive to demand of sports and
fans.
What I know for sure, is that with the attitiude like you propose, that is
basically saying this is all we can do or this is all we deserve or this is all
we are capable of, we will not make an inch of forward progress.
Now you can recite stories about Nasserdin Shah and how soccer clubs
did not work very well back then either, but that's not addressing the
real issues nor proposing a real solution.
I think you and I are in completely different wave length when it comes to
basic exchange of ideas. You read whatever you like, and respond to whatever
you wish. I specifically stated in my post "local government" yet in your
response you said "U.S government". Somehow, I don't think you are that
naive not to know the difference, so I believe Shoma Khodet Ro Beh OOn
Rah mizanee.
If the team in Florida owes taxes to Federal government, that means they
must have made money! *You can not owe taxes if you had net losses
unless you did some fishy stuff*. I know of a number of teams in Baseball,
Football and yes even ice hockey who have gotten very good deals to move
to a city, or start a franchise. Please review San Jose Shark and Oakland
Raiders deal before you make claim that government (Yes, CITY OF OAKLAND
IS PART OF GOVERNMENT and SO IS CITY OF SAN JOSE).
But we don't want to get side tracked or at least I don't.
How strong is IPL? How much of the potential we see in players that
Iran can produce been realized by IPL?
When people discuss IPL, we often start by saying we don't even have
the most basic things that muct of the rest of the world takes for granted
including a good lawn.
From the above, some (like yourself) will conclude: Improvement in lawn
is all that is missing! And then prescribe sending lawn police to kick out
all the teams who don't measure up to your lawning standards.
And another group (like myself) argue, bad lawn and inadaquate facilities is
part of a much bigger *managment* issue that can not be solved under
current way that clubs are run. A proposed solution is to use the model
set forth by rest of the world. Private clubs with cooperation with local
government.
Now I don't know why some would have to make contrast between now
(a bankrupt system) with Pahlavi time (yet another backrupt system) instead
of using working models around the globe to *change* our way of doing
things, to be a lot more efficient and responsive to demand of sports and
fans.
What I know for sure, is that with the attitiude like you propose, that is
basically saying this is all we can do or this is all we deserve or this is all
we are capable of, we will not make an inch of forward progress.
Now you can recite stories about Nasserdin Shah and how soccer clubs
did not work very well back then either, but that's not addressing the
real issues nor proposing a real solution.
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