Did Wilder’s eviction stunt influence R-Braves decision?

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Blame for losing the Richmond Braves has been slung in every direction since the bad news broke on Jan. 14, when the Atlanta Braves franchise announced it had decided to take its players, bats and balls to a new home to be constructed in the Atlanta suburbs.

Outrage erupted! Angry baseball fans felt cheated. Whose fault was it?

The finger-pointing was directed first at Mayor L. Douglas Wilder. After all, he had campaigned for mayor promising to fix the problem of where the R-Braves should play baseball.

Then the list of the perhaps blameworthy grew to include the R-Braves general manager Bruce Baldwin, the Richmond Metropolitan Authority (which owns The Diamond), City Council, the Atlanta Braves, officials of the surrounding counties, the Richmond Baseball Initiative’s ballpark-in-the-Bottom guys (remember them?), and so on. Bloggers and letter-to-the-editor-writers guilt-tripped local baseball fans for not going to enough games.

No doubt, some being suggested for inclusion on the list of culprits to blame actually deserve it more than others.

Depressing time-lines showing significant dates in the saga of losing the R-Braves have been published. However, those speaking for the Atlanta Braves front office have said that talks with Gwinnett County’s officials moved to the front burner in early October of last year. Not before.

Not surprisingly, Mayor Wilder has implied that he thinks the Atlanta Braves actually made their decision earlier than that. Still, if culpability is the issue, let’s do look at the context of time by asking one key question: What else was going on during that crucial period leading up to early October?

The answer could easily be what was dominating the news coming out of Richmond in the days leading up to the fateful decision made by the owners of the Atlanta Braves to end a 42-year relationship. Specifically, on Saturday morning, Sept. 22, Richmonders began absorbing the perplexing news about the Friday Night Fiasco their mayor had engineered.

The front page news told of Wilder’s botched effort to forcibly evict Richmond’s public school administration/school board from their offices in City Hall. Wilder’s unprecedented ploy was stopped cold when Circuit Judge Margaret P. Spencer issued a restraining order at 1:15 a.m. on Saturday.

Other than an absolute yes-man, it’s difficult to imagine any sane person would have advised Hizzoner to do such a thing. Put another way, who would have told the mayor to grab money from funds to help Battery Park recover from flooding (that was The City of Richmond’s fault) and spend it on a moving van sneak-attack on the School Board?

Since then Judge Spencer has made the restraining order permanent and Wilder’s behavior in this matter has been seen in an increasingly bad light. Moreover, as a lawyer, Wilder had to know in advance there was a good chance a judge would put the kibosh on his eviction plot before the night was over. So, if he knew it was likely the eviction would be halted, what was he thinking?

What was going on in the then-76-year-old Mayor Wilder’s head still seems a mystery. He blew half a million bucks out of disaster-relief monies to create a disaster out of thin air at City Hall. Then nothing was accomplished for the money. Since then more money has been spent on lawyers attempting to defend Wilder’s indefensible move.

Well, there’s no chance the top management people of the Atlanta Braves franchise (owned by Liberty Media since February, 2007) didn’t read all about Mayor Wilder’s bizarre stunt. After all, the story stayed at the top of the news for a solid week. Moreover, there’s no chance at all those decision-makers saw Wilder’s headline-making behavior as a good sign.

Let’s face it, to a guy reading about it sitting in an office in Atlanta, it had to look like Richmond’s government had come unhinged. Hence, it may well have been the last straw.

Beyond whatever decisions were made in Atlanta in early October, 2007, who knows how many people in what positions of power decided to give up on investing in Richmond, based on what they were reading about Richmond’s mayor and his wall-to-wall battles with everyone around him?

Now some see Wilder’s fingerprints on the Rodney Monroe degree controversy that VCU is still trying to straighten out. Wilder’s most recent perplexing stunt — shunning the July 21 unveiling of the Virginia Civil Rights Memorial — is yet another indication of bad judgment from a man who was once thought to be the craftiest politician in town.

Over the last couple of years, it has been painful for many of Doug Wilder’s longtime admirers to watch the man they have looked up to for decades — the first black governor of a state — transmogrify into the most squirrelly politician in town.

– Words and art by F.T. Rea

Posted in Features, Sports/Outdoors, RVANews-politics

4 Comments.

  1. There’s no question that losing the R-Braves to the buzzing metropolis of Gwinnett County, GA and loading the school board onto Starving Students moving trucks, have to be two of the most boneheaded moves ever perpetrated on Monument City.

    But linking the two events seems to be a real stretch.

    Keep those conspiracies coming!

    Dan @ August 6th, 2008 at 4:15 pm

  2. Dan,

    After years of back and forth between the Braves and The City of Richmond, a fateful change occurred just after a week of very bad publicity for Richmond’s mayor. And, some might have drawn from that publicity that the mayor had lost his marbles.

    That’s not to suggest a conspiracy. It’s a matter of deduction.

    FTRea @ August 7th, 2008 at 9:34 am

  3. I stand corrected: Keep those deductions coming!

    Dan @ August 7th, 2008 at 1:43 pm

  4. Dan,

    OK, maybe some deduction … with a little imagination (inductive reasoning?) thrown in.

    Thanks for your comments.

    FTRea @ August 7th, 2008 at 8:35 pm

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