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Bill Madden: Time to sell! The 5 worst owners in baseball.
NY Daily News · Jared Wickerham/Getty Images North America/TNS

NEW YORK — Now that we don’t have the Wilpons to kick around anymore, for the first time in a long time New York baseball fans can be thankful for two of the most committed owners in the sport in Steve Cohen and Hal Steinbrenner. If only this was the case everywhere else in baseball.

Unfortunately, as evidenced by the preponderance of tanking in recent years and the continued reluctance of many of the revenue-sharing recipients to spend that money on players, there remains a bunch of distressed franchises in baseball in desperate need of ownership change. Here are our nominations for the five worst owners in baseball who all need to go:

Indifferent Angelos family in Baltimore

The family patriarch, 92-year-old Peter Angelos, who bought the team in 1993, has been incapacitated in recent years. But while he was in control he did everything he could to destroy one of the model franchises in baseball — alienating so many of the Orioles legends, Cal Ripken, Brooks Robinson, Mike Mussina, Jim Palmer, et al., running off Hall of Fame GM Pat Gillick, along with Orioles legend, manager Davey Johnson, refusing for years to invest in Latin America, overruling his economic adviser and signing Chris Davis to a ridiculous seven-year, $161 million extension, all in the name of just five postseason appearances (and no World Series) in 28 years.

The Orioles are now being run by Angelos’ sons John and Louis. In 2018, they fired GM Dan Duquette, along with Buck Showalter as manager, and turned over the baseball operations to analytics devotee Mike Elias, who had formerly worked under the king of tanking Jeff Luhnow in Houston. Under Elias’ leadership, the Orioles immediately embarked on tanking and have had two 100-plus loss seasons in the last three years and another likely last-place finish this year. Despite the much-anticipated recent arrival of 2019 overall No. 1 draft pick catcher Adley Rutschman, the Orioles have little to show for Elias’ first three drafts and the entire core of their present team — first baseman Ryan Mountcastle, center fielder Cedric Mullins, left fielder Austin Hays, DH Trey Mancini, right fielder Anthony Santander and No. 1 starter Bruce Zimmermann — were all signed/acquired by Duquette, as were their two top pitching prospects, Grayson Rodriguez and DL Hall. Their other top prospect, shortstop Gunnar Henderson, was signed by 20-year Orioles scout Dean Anthony, whose reward was to be among the 11 scouts and veteran organization baseball people fired by Elias and replaced by analytics nerds.

The Rockies’ bumbling Dick Monfort

We’re talking flat-out incompetence here. After he and his brother Charlie took over controlling interest from original Rockies owner Jerry McMorris in 2005, Monfort and his equally incompetent former GM Jeff Bridich made one disastrous decision after another — none worse than Bridich getting into a family feud with Nolan Arenado shortly after signing Colorado’s franchise player to an eight-year, $260 million extension. Instead of intervening and settling their differences, Monfort let the situation fester until finally trading Arenado to the Cardinals for a bunch of non prospects — and throwing in an extra $50 million to get the deal done.