Pitt fans chant ‘sell the team’ after Pittsburgh Pirates ‘College GameDay’ tribute

You never quite know what you’re going to get from Pat McAfee on College GameDay, and on Saturday that included a lengthy discussion about the Pittsburgh Pirates.

GameDay was in the Steel City for Saturday’s game between the Pitt Panthers and Notre Dame Fighting Irish. It was also an opportunity for McAfee to celebrate being back in his hometown and adored by his people—even though he actually attended college at their hated rivals, the West Virginia Mountaineers.

For his show-opening monologue that typically pays tribute to the host location, Pat McAfee began talking about what a great sports city Pittsburgh is, even including the moribund Pittsburgh Pirates. These days, at least the Pirates have reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes to be thankful for, even though fans are just counting down the days and years until he signs for the New York Yankees.

The reference to the Pirates led the Pitt fans in attendance to immediately voice their frustration with the team’s thrifty ownership, as a “sell the team” chant broke out. It may be the first time the Pirates have been mentioned on ESPN airwaves in November in decades, especially with the additional history lesson from Reds fan Kirk Herbstreit.

The Pirates’ lack of spending, led by owner Bob Nutting, like other MLB teams, has become a huge source of consternation within the sport. McAfee’s ESPN colleague Jeff Passan has continually talked about their refusal to spend any money to build a roster around Skenes and actually try to win.

Their $84 million payroll sits 27th in Major League Baseball and is multiple times behind the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers. They also have had only one winning season in the last 10 years and haven’t made it to the NLCS since Sid Bream broke their hearts in 1992.

But at least the Pittsburgh Pirates finally got some much-needed attention in the fall—it just took an episode of College GameDay in the city to do it.
https://awfulannouncing.com/mlb/sell-the-team-pittsburgh-pirates-college-gameday.html

Government will release September jobs report next week, ending data drought from federal shutdown

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Labor Department will release its numbers on September hiring and unemployment next Thursday, a month and a half late, marking the beginning of the end of a data drought caused by the 43-day federal government shutdown.

The statistical blackout meant that the Federal Reserve, businesses, policymakers, and investors have largely been in the dark about inflation, job creation, GDP growth, and other measures of the U.S. economic health since late summer.

Thomas Simons and Michael Bacolas at Jefferies, a financial firm, wrote in a commentary Friday that over 30 reports from the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis and Census Bureau were delayed by the political standoff.

The Labor Department did not release its weekly report on the number of Americans signing up for unemployment benefits for seven straight weeks. That jobless claims report is seen as a potential early indicator of where the labor market is headed.

The Labor Department did release its consumer price index for September—the most popular measurement of inflation—nine days late on Oct. 24. The government made an exception for that report because of its urgency: it is used to calculate the annual cost of living adjustment for tens of millions of Americans receiving Social Security and other federal benefits.

The interruption of federal economic statistics came at an awkward time. President Donald Trump’s policies—sweeping, ever-changing import taxes and massive deportations of people working in the United States illegally—are creating uncertainty about the economic outlook.

Meanwhile, the economy has sent conflicting signals. Economic growth looked solid at midyear and unemployment has been low. However, job growth has lost momentum, and inflation has remained stubbornly above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, partly because of the impact of Trump’s tariffs.

Jefferies’ Simons expects the September employment report to show that employers added 65,000 jobs that month—unimpressive, but up from a meager 22,000 in August. He figures that unemployment remained at a low 4.3%.

**Investors and policymakers hungry for data**

The data cutoff has caused consternation on Wall Street and deepened divisions among Fed officials over whether to cut interest rates for a third straight time at their next meeting in December.

This week, some Fed policymakers have suggested that a lack of data is one reason they may support holding off on another rate cut. As a result, fresh reports on jobs and inflation in the coming weeks and months will carry huge weight at the Fed because new numbers could help resolve disagreements between those who support another interest rate reduction and those who are opposed.

Even with the government reopened, however, it could take a few more weeks for the data to fully recover.

Earlier this week, Kevin Hassett, a top White House economist, said only a part of October’s jobs report originally scheduled to be released Nov. 7 will eventually be released.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics will likely have enough data from businesses to calculate how many jobs were gained or lost last month, as much of that information is submitted electronically. But a separate survey of households, which is used to calculate the unemployment rate, didn’t take place during the shutdown.

As a result, for the first time in 77 years, the BLS may not calculate an unemployment rate for the month of October.

Other White House officials have previously said there also won’t be an October inflation report, because the data couldn’t be gathered due to the government shutdown. That will pose a challenge for the Fed, which is seeking to determine whether inflation is headed back to 2%.

The data interruption occurred just a couple of months after Trump fired the director of the BLS, Erika McEntarfer, after it produced employment figures on Aug. 1 that he didn’t like. They showed only modest job gains in July and sharply smaller increases in May and June than previously estimated.

Still, economists said the upcoming reports should be free from bias. Currently, there are no political appointees at the agency after Trump withdrew his nominee to head the BLS on Sept. 30.

“The data are being produced by roughly the same set of people as in the past,” said Aaron Sojourner, senior economist at the W. E. Upjohn Institute.
https://ktar.com/national-news/government-will-release-september-jobs-report-next-week-ending-data-drought-from-federal-shutdown/5776441/