Texas Rangers Fans Can Again Dream Of A Merry Baseball, With The Departure Of Owner Tom Hicks

Let's see, in the last week we've been blessed with a Dallas Mavericks victory sans Dirk Nowitzki over an elite NBA team (Cleveland Cavaliers), a passionate, purposeful Dallas Cowboys win over an elite NFL team (New Orleans Saints)—in December, no less—and a record snowstorm veering out of our way.

Tom Hicks has made some strategic blunders during the years he has owned the Texas Rangers, but selling the team to Pittsburgh sports attorney Chuck Greenberg was not one of them.
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Tom Hicks has made some strategic blunders during the years he has owned the Texas Rangers, but selling the team to Pittsburgh sports attorney Chuck Greenberg was not one of them.

Even for Texas Rangers fans, who have for years felt neglected and isolated on the Island of Misfit Toys, Santa Claus just arrived in town from, of all places, Pittsburgh. His Christmas gift to the metroplex?

Tom Hicks, gone.

But Chuck Greenberg isn't a hit man or the Grinch That Stole the Texas Rangers' Owner. He is hope.

After a decade of futility and embarrassment littered with outrageous contracts, spendthrift drawbacks, alienating fans and—most of all—mediocre-to-horrible baseball, Hicks finally, officially relinquished his grim grip on the Rangers last week. Motivated by drowning debt, he has agreed to sell the team to Greenberg in a deal that should be finalized by Opening Day in April.

Here, Rangers fans, is your merry Christmas.

"We will have money in the budget," Greenberg said on a conference call with reporters last week. "Money will not stop us."

It's not that Hicks is a bad guy, just not a good sports owner.

We long ago ran out of patience with him running out of money. But his legacy—in retrospect—won't be as hideous as you suspect. Sure, he fired Doug Melvin and signed Chan Ho Park and broke the bank for Alex Rodriguez and flip-flopped between developing a farm system and renting veterans like Ken Caminiti and Andres Galarraga, and sat idly last summer without adding a player or even continuing to water the grass at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. But Thomas O. Hicks also oversaw two of the Rangers' three playoff seasons, hired general manager Jon Daniels, brought back Nolan Ryan and signed off on the rebuilding plan that has the team stockpiled with young talent and perched for unprecedented success come 2010.

And before you shed a holiday tear for him and his family, know that this transaction will considerably alleviate some of the debt carried by his Hicks Sports Group. He bought the team in 1998 for $250 million and is selling it to Greenberg for more than $500 million.

It's not like Hicks will vanish, only to appear at Dallas Stars hockey and Liverpool soccer games. He'll still be a minority investor in the Rangers, just one without the power or authority to sign, trade, hire or fire players, coaches or employees. That's not coal in your stocking; it's the best possible resolution to a turbulent summer of wobbly Rangers ownership.

Give Hicks one last shred of credit: He picked the right guy. He could've sold to former sports agent Dennis Gilbert or Houston businessman Jim Crane, neither of whom would've maintained Ryan as the face of the franchise. It was past time for Hicks to get out of the driver's seat, but at least he pitched the keys to a competent replacement.

I don't know Greenberg, but I like what I hear from him. No, I love what I hear from him.

So will you.

Hearken to Hicks blasting his baseball fans for not being as passionate as his soccer fans or for wagging a finger and telling Rangers fans to attend games and spend money or else he won't recycle more money on the baseball product, then listen to the Rangers' new owner.

"Our job is to make Texas Rangers baseball a compelling, memorable experience," he said. "It starts with having a great team on the field that relates to the community off the field. We want an organization that is connected to the fans and that is completely obsessed to do everything possible to service our fans' needs and do everything they want."

Greenberg's baseball roots go back to childhood idol Pittsburgh Pirates' outfielder Roberto Clemente (his son Walker was named after Clemente's middle name) and the late '70s "We Are Fam-uh-lee!" Pirates World Series champs. His management style will be similarly recognizable, with 12 families and/or individuals (80 percent from Dallas-Fort Worth) as investors but Ryan as his ultimate baseball decision-maker.

What credibility, goodwill and optimism the Rangers have accrued the past two seasons would instantly dissolve had Ryan left. It would have been a public relations nightmare. If nothing else, Greenberg is sharp enough to recognize that.

"If they had a Mount Rushmore of baseball in Texas, Nolan would be the first face chiseled out," Greenberg said. "If he had affiliated with any other group, I would have dropped out immediately. There are 29 other teams out there. But the Rangers and Ryan belong together."

While Ryan remains team president and minority owner, Daniels will continue as the GM that has built the strongest farm system in baseball, Ron Washington will be back as manager and players such as Michael Young, Elvis Andrus, Ian Kinsler, Josh Hamilton, Justin Smoak, Derek Holland, Neftali Feliz and Nelson Cruz continue to form one of baseball's best young nuclei. For the first time in a long time, the Rangers won't head into spring training reliant upon the tired old arms and worn-out storylines of front-end pitchers Kevin Millwood and Vicente Padilla.

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  • John 01/13/2010 12:48:00 PM

    Well done Rangers fans at last you are free from shackles of Hicks. Spare a thought for us Liverpool supporters, Hicks has destroyed the experience of supporting Liverpool for our fans and is not wanted at the club. I just hope like you we will be able to rid him from the club before he damages its history heritage any further and god forbid makes us even less competitive than we already are

  • Kergo 12/30/2009 7:51:00 PM

    I got one my X-mas gifts.....Tom Hicks is gone! Now if they would just move the team to Dallas, people would show up and be interested. And who cares about the Stars? I'd rather watch the street dry in front of my house.

  • Rooster 12/26/2009 8:20:00 PM

    If Santa was truly benevolent, he would have made Hicks sell the Stars, too.

  • Mike Rhyner 12/25/2009 11:00:00 PM

    I Love The Rangers

  • PRBoy 12/24/2009 4:49:00 PM

    I grew up in Arlington and have been there, done that, seen that in regards to pretty much everything the Rangers have done over the past 2+ decades. Every few years a new owner rolls into town and makes a lot of gradiose promises and nothing really ever comes of it; don't forget that Greenberg is a lawyer, which means the only time he's not lying is when when his mouth isn't moving. Don't call me a pessimist...call me a realist. The Rangers will have to prove that they're a winner before I'll call them one.

 

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