Curse, schmurse: New Cubs owner vows to win series
Posted Oct 30, 2009 7:10 PM
 By RICK GANO
(AP)
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CHICAGO -Tom Ricketts and his family took ownership of the Chicago Cubs and wasted no time making a promise to the team's long-suffering fans: They will bring a World Series title to a team that has gone 101 years without one.
"I'll be honest. I think we have a team that can do it next year," Tom Ricketts said without hesitation Friday at a Wrigley Field news conference. "The fact is, there is enough talent coming back to this team next season."
Cubs fan have heard that before, of course. For the record, Ricketts doesn't buy the talk of a curse that was put on the team at the 1945 World Series — the Cubs' last appearance — by a man who was ejected from a game with his pet goat.
"There is no curse. There is no curse," Ricketts said. "If anybody on our team thinks he's cursed, we will move him to a lesser-cursed team."
There were plenty of smiles and a few jokes from the new owners on a rainy day in Chicago, and Ricketts said no shakeups were planned for a team that failed to make the playoffs for the first time in three years.
General manager Jim Hendry, whoise contract runs through 2012, has earned the chance to lead the team into next season, Ricketts said. Crane Kenney, who was the team's chairman, will stay on as team president and be responsible for the business of the team.
And the new owner said he wants manager Lou Piniella to return next season, the final year of his four-year deal.
"Everyone was disappointed with the performance of the team in 2009. Expectations were very high and they weren't met," Ricketts said. "In the big picture, Jim has taken us to the playoffs three times in the past seven years after a team that only went three times in the previous 57 years. So I think he has a track record that affords giving him the chance to take us into next season."
Ricketts wouldn't comment on the future of outfielder Milton Bradley, who was suspended for the final two weeks of the season for criticizing the atmosphere surrounding the Cubs. Bradley, who struggled mightily in his first season in Chicago, has two years left on his contract for $21 million.
"It's Jim's decision, it's his responsibility to put the best team on the field next year and that will be his decision on what to do with all the players," Ricketts said.
The family of billionaire Joe Ricketts, the founder of Omaha, Neb.-based TD Ameritrade, this week closed the $845 million deal to buy a 95 percent controlling interest in the Cubs, Wrigley Field and 25 percent of Comcast Sportsnet, which broadcasts a number of Cubs game. The Tribune Co. retains a 5 percent stake.
"It is a dream situation, a dream job. It's the best franchise in sports," Tom Ricketts said an interview with The Associated Press. "And I don't know any fans who wouldn't want to end up in the situation we're in today. The good news is that even though it's a dream job, it's still a business."
Ricketts and his siblings Laura, Todd and Pete — all Cubs fans who have spent plenty of weekends in the Wrigley Field bleachers — will be on the board of directors that Tom will head as chairman.
Tom Ricketts, who met his wife in those bleachers and once lived across the street from the venerable ballpark, now runs the team he has cheered for since the 1980s.
"Everyone needs to know we are here for the long term and we are here to win," Ricketts said.
A long-term plan will be devised to make improvements to Wrigley Field, the second-oldest ballpark in the majors that was built in 1914. Smaller upgrades will be implemented by next season.
Ricketts said there would be a small bump in the team's payroll — one that was around $135 million last season — and a slight increase in ticket prices. There has been no discussion of a naming rights deal for Wrigley. And the Cubs are exploring new spring training options after years in Mesa, Ariz.
"You got to watch your expenses, you got to be careful with your payroll, you've got to look for ways to improve, improve your relationship with the fans and to keep growing the business," he said.
He said his management style will be to hire qualified people, let them do their jobs and yet hold them accountable.
"You're not going to see me or anyone else in this family calling the dugout during the game," he said, though you will probably will the owners at games. "We're going to walk around and see folks and be in the stands."
Tribune announced on Opening Day in 2007 that the Cubs and Wrigley Field would be sold at the end of that season. But the process took much longer, slowed by the recession and Tribune's 2008 bankruptcy filing.
Ricketts, a market maker at the Chicago Board Options Exchange and a finance executive before starting investment bank Incapital LLC in 1999, said he never negotiated directly with Tribune CEO Sam Zell.
"Just with people from his organization and they were fine. They are hard bargainers, I suppose, but it was just a complicated negotiation," he said.
Did Ricketts ever have second thoughts?
"I would say it was a little more difficult than we imagined and certainly the environment that existed when the transaction began was not the environment that we had when the transaction closed," he said.
Ricketts called the work ahead "daunting," particularly the work on Wrigley. Any changes, Ricketts said, will not tread on the atmosphere that makes Wrigley Field unique.
"We can't mess with that special feeling," Ricketts said.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-10-30 19:31:46

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Wavechaser2003
4:44PM Nov 4 2009 
?? .. kicked out of the game just for bringing his goat....what the hay ? And I thought Chi-town was a classy city....how did he sneak the horned , furry, four legged critter past the gate keeper anyway ?.....so ..on the way out he mutters...The Cubs will never win a World Series !...You`ve been cursed by the goat man.....come on ...Billy...we`re ouutta here.
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htc6600
9:17AM Nov 2 2009 
Did Brewster move from the University of Minnesota to Chicago? He and Ricketts sound like exactly the same snake oil salesman-maybe they're using the same manual.
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GDC9DREAM
10:29AM Nov 1 2009 
I am a devoted Cubs fan and I know here is NOT enough talent on the club right now to get to a World Series, so if the new owner believes that, perhaps the first order of business is to get a baseball man in to evaluate the talent. But now you have a poor fielding, underachieving Alfonso Soriano in left field, no closer, an inferior second baseman, a cathcer who smoked pot last year and batter .223 and, the last time I checked, the Cubs still had the biggest cancer cell ever in Milton Bradley. The Cubs need two good pitchers in the bullpen (and one of them better not be Billy Wagner or I may throw myself off the famous center field scoreboard) at least one outfielder. Right now they don't compare to Saint Louis, are light years from the grit and talent of the Phillies and, believe me, I have been at this stuff since 1966, have been through the Jimmy Lee McMath's, Gary Scott's, Kevin Orie's, Mark Prior's, Kerry Wood's and, in my lifetime, I have never seen the Cubs in a World Series and wonder if I ever will...
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DSJR
1:33PM Oct 31 2009 
Ralphgmiami - You are an idiot....then A-Roid should give back every dollar he's made. Moron.
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Berniematherson
9:07AM Oct 31 2009 
dream on...............
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Ralphgmiami
8:44AM Oct 31 2009 
Ricketts if you want the Cubs to win make sure you get Matt Kemp, Andres Either and Chad Billingsley from the Dodgers right after the world series. The Dodgers owners who are a couple are getting divorced. You can get this fire sale right away. If you do, you'll probably win the world series. I'm a Yankee fan but admire Cubs fans because they have a lot of character. I'm a former New Yorker living in Miami. Marlins fans have no character at all. They hide when their team loses and they don't go to games. When they win they say they're Marlins fans. Even if my Yankees lose this world series to the Phils, I'm still a Yankees fan. GO YANKEES!!!GO CUBBIES and get yourself finally a world championship! By the way, the 2003 Marlins cheated as in the Mitchell Report former Marlins catcher Luis Perez admitted he supplied every Marlins on the 1998 to 2001 team with steroids. The Marlins deserve to have their world championship trophy taken away.
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