Let me try by analogy or metaphor to show you and DJ (who shares the same misconceptions) the problem:
Let's say you wanted to cook a fabulous meal for FCM. Something delicious, but not too much food or too little. So you go out and spend $1000 dollars at the grocery store for just that one meal. You also go out and hire the three greatest chefs known to man. When the meal is ready, the feast is so overwhelming you feel it's a problem. You end up throwing out entrees, appetizers, and desserts because it's just way, way too much. You decide to solve this problem for the next day, that you'll just have your servers throw out the same number of things you did today at every meal.
My suggestion, is that if you stop spending $1000 every day and find a better amount (maybe 500, maybe 750) you may not have such an overabundance. It also might help if you don't have the three greatest chefs known to man, but maybe just an average one or two. From my perspective, the chefs are part of the problem, because if they were awful far less food would make it to the table or wouldn't be very good if it did. Likewise, even the three greatest chefs in the world can't feed 30 people with $1 worth of food.
Your plan, in some baffling way I can't comprehend, somehow feels the overabundant feast is a "separate" issue from the massive budget and super chefs you hire. I can't even fathom how you don't see the glaring problems at root in the start of your meal or connect the two.
To keep with the metaphor. I'll be happy to talk about the problems of the feast once we fix the obvious problems driving it in the first place. Until then, you'll create more problems then you solve by overlooking the real issues.
(Yes...I hate empty overalls, but they are a mogul reality. I'm ok culling these players too with a more surgical tact then the one you recommend. But you won't fix the problem (too much food) until you look long and hard at the real forces driving it (superhuman competence from your chefs and an overabundance of materials to work with). It's really that simple)
Let's say you wanted to cook a fabulous meal for FCM. Something delicious, but not too much food or too little. So you go out and spend $1000 dollars at the grocery store for just that one meal. You also go out and hire the three greatest chefs known to man. When the meal is ready, the feast is so overwhelming you feel it's a problem. You end up throwing out entrees, appetizers, and desserts because it's just way, way too much. You decide to solve this problem for the next day, that you'll just have your servers throw out the same number of things you did today at every meal.
My suggestion, is that if you stop spending $1000 every day and find a better amount (maybe 500, maybe 750) you may not have such an overabundance. It also might help if you don't have the three greatest chefs known to man, but maybe just an average one or two. From my perspective, the chefs are part of the problem, because if they were awful far less food would make it to the table or wouldn't be very good if it did. Likewise, even the three greatest chefs in the world can't feed 30 people with $1 worth of food.
Your plan, in some baffling way I can't comprehend, somehow feels the overabundant feast is a "separate" issue from the massive budget and super chefs you hire. I can't even fathom how you don't see the glaring problems at root in the start of your meal or connect the two.
To keep with the metaphor. I'll be happy to talk about the problems of the feast once we fix the obvious problems driving it in the first place. Until then, you'll create more problems then you solve by overlooking the real issues.
(Yes...I hate empty overalls, but they are a mogul reality. I'm ok culling these players too with a more surgical tact then the one you recommend. But you won't fix the problem (too much food) until you look long and hard at the real forces driving it (superhuman competence from your chefs and an overabundance of materials to work with). It's really that simple)
World Champion 2018, 2021, 2026, 2030, 2035, 2037, 2039
AL Champion 12 times
FCM Best Record-Holder - 121-41 2028
Overall Record: 3530-1978 .641%
AL Champion 12 times
FCM Best Record-Holder - 121-41 2028
Overall Record: 3530-1978 .641%