That's ridiculous. What is? The fact that Tribune & Co. would put the bottom line in front of its fanbase? Not Tribune, they never screw anyone over to squeeze out every last dime they can...Not by scalping tickets, relocating street vendors, increasing ticket prices exponentially, lying about injuries repeatedly...I'm sure I'm forgetting a few... 1) Squeeze the last dime buy Hendry giving Neifi $5 million or funding one of the largest payrolls in baseball? Or by funding a $40+ million Wrigley renovation project without it affecting payroll? 2) Forcing Prior to pitch when hurt could mean he'd be out for the season instead of a few weeks. That's not going to help the Tribune Co.'s bottom line. 3) WFPTS sells few tickets and brings in an insignificant amount of money, for the most part 4) I don't think they had anything to do with the street vendors and that's not going to impact the Cubs really at all 5) If the Cubs have blatantly lied about injuries. Despite popular belief, rehab isn't an exact science. And if they have lied, they're not exactly alone. And ticket sales weren't going to take a nose dive if Prior was injured. Not even close. They broke their own record because capacity increased, yes (although ticket popularity looks to have decreased a bit from last year). The Cubs are coming off a horribly disappointing season, yet the convention sold out faster than ever year except from last year. that includes 2004. The Cubs selling a lot of tickets is just a fact of life right now. It's not going to change because of one player, especially considering that most fans aren't terribly optimistic about the team right now anyways.