It is entirely possible that the Ricketts haven't found enough ways to monetize the team at this point, and they are in fact running a deficit. They then decided that the best way to spend money most efficiently was to allocate the money to the place where it could turn the most immediate profit-in facilities (hence the Mesa facility, as well as the purchase of the McDonald's location and a a push to improve Wrigley) and the front office (where a mind like Epstein can be had for roughly the same cost as a middle reliever). If/when those investments pay off (which may not be for several years), the Cubs become the big market team everyone thinks they are. Until then, It is possible they may be operating in the red. Then it's back to the good ol' days of suck for a while. Yeah, I know, building for the future is fine and I want them to do that, but I'm not going to lie and act like I give a [expletive] about the minors until any of those players are actually producing for the Cubs. I'm a fan of the major league team, and spending years waiting for the farm system to develop while our offense is for the foreseeable future is a pretty barren wasteland of mediocrity outside of Castro is depressing as hell. If it all starts paying off years down the line, hey, great; it's just going to REALLY suck getting there in the meantime if the Ricketts are going cheap.