Penticton Herald

League says let’s play ball

Major League Baseball plans 60-game slate, shortest since 1878, as union balks

- By RONALD BLUM

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball plans to unilateral­ly issue a 60-game schedule for its shortest season since 1878 after the players’ associatio­n rejected a negotiated deal of the same length, putting the sport on track for a combative return to the field amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Commission­er Rob Manfred and union head Tony Clark met last week and outlined plans that included expanding the playoffs from 10 teams to 16, widening use of the designated hitter to National League games and an experiment to start extra innings with a runner on second base. But the latest version of the deal proposed by MLB was rejected by the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n’s executive board in a 33-5 vote on Monday.

Those innovation­s now disappear. “Needless to say, we are disappoint­ed by this developmen­t,” MLB said in a statement. “The framework provided an opportunit­y for MLB and its players to work together to confront the difficulti­es and challenges presented by the pandemic. It gave our fans the chance to see an exciting new post-season format. And, it offered players significan­t benefits.”

MLB’s owners approved going unilateral­ly with the 60-game schedule in ballparks without fans if the final arrangemen­ts can be put in place, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press.

MLB asked the union to respond by 5 p.m. ET Tuesday as to whether players can report to training by July 1 and whether the players’ associatio­n will agree on the operating manual of health and safety protocols.

Given the need for three days of virus testing and 21 days of workouts, opening day likely would be during the final week of July. MLB already has started to investigat­e charter flights that could bring players back from Latin America.

The union announced its rejection, and the decision likely will provoke what figures to be lengthy and costly litigation over the impact of the coronaviru­s on the sport, similar to the collusion cases that sent baseball spiraling to a spring training lockout in 1990 and a 7 1/2month strike in 1994-95 that wiped out the World Series for the first time in nine decades.

It also eliminates a $25 million post-season players’ pool, meaning players will not get paid anything above meal money during the playoffs and World Series, and the clubs’ offer to forgive $33 million in salary advanced to 769 players at the bottom of the salary scale with lower rates of pay while in the minors: $16,500, $30,000 or $60,000 for each of them.

“It’s absolute death for this industry to keep acting as it has been. Both sides,” Cincinnati pitcher Trevor Bauer tweeted in a rare instance of a player criticizin­g the union. “We’re driving the bus straight off a cliff. How is this good for anyone involved? Covid 19 already presented a lose lose lose situation and we’ve somehow found a way to make it worse. Incredible.”

Teams lose what would have been a new right to sell advertisin­g patches on uniforms, broadcast enhancemen­ts such as having players wear microphone­s during games and a 2020 suspension of the luxury tax that for a 60game season projected to save the New York Yankees $8.5 million, Houston $3 million, the Los Angeles Dodgers $434,000 and the Chicago Cubs $116,000.

Manfred loses what would have been an additional $60 million to the commission­er’s discretion­ary fund.

The union said the “board reaffirmed the players’ eagerness to return to work as soon and as safely as possible.

“To that end we anticipate finalizing a comprehens­ive set of health and safety protocols with Major League Baseball in the coming days, and we await word from the league on the resumption of spring training camps and a proposed 2020 schedule,” the union said.

While the framework had included the expanded playoffs for both 2020 and 2021, and Manfred offered to drop it from the second season if players feared it would decrease their future bargaining leverage.

Spring training was suspended on March 12, two weeks ahead of scheduled openers, and the sides have reverted to the familiar financial infighting that fractured the sport in the past.

An initial deal March 26 called for players to receive prorated salaries and gave Manfred power to set the schedule, but that agreement did not require MLB to play in ballparks without fans.

Teams sought additional salary concession­s, claiming they would lose $640,000 for each additional regular-season game. The union was skeptical, requested additional documents and said it did not receive enough to evaluate the true financial picture.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A man tours outside of Coors Field, home of baseball’s Colorado Rockies, Tuesday in Denver.
The Canadian Press A man tours outside of Coors Field, home of baseball’s Colorado Rockies, Tuesday in Denver.

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