The Standard (St. Catharines)

Minor leagues get a reset: 120-team regional alignment

- RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK — Major League Baseball has reorganize­d its minor leagues in a 120-team regional alignment.

MLB released a plan Friday for two Triple-a divisions, and three divisions each for Double-a, High-a and Low-a. Forty affiliates were dropped from 2019, the last season under the old minor-league system, and the remaining teams were offered the 10-year licences in December. All 120 accepted by Wednesday’s deadline

The leagues have not yet been named. Major-league owners, commission­er Rob Manfred and his staff have not decided whether to retain the traditiona­l names of the leagues, such as the Internatio­nal and Pacific Coast at Triple-a, the Eastern, Southern and Texas at Double-a and the California, Florida State and South Atlantic, which had been at Class A.

For now, MLB is calling the minor-league groupings Triple-a East and West, Double-a Central, Northeast and South, High-a Central, East and West and Low-a East, Southeast and West. There are geographic subdivisio­ns within each league.

Triple-a teams for now remain scheduled to open 144game schedules at the start of April but are likely to be pushed back until the start of May because of the pandemic.

Double-a teams, scheduled for 138 games each, and High-a and Low-a teams, with 132 games apiece, are for now slated to open in early May.

Top minor leaguers probably will spend April at alternate training camps, used by MLB teams to keep potential call-ups in shape last year, when the entire minor-league schedule was cancelled due to the virus.

Regular-season schedules are to be announced next week. Schedules will be regionaliz­ed and include six-game series to reduce travel and cut expenses, a person familiar with the planning said.

Minor-league playoff formats have not yet been determined because of the pandemic.

Each franchise’s top four affiliates will include one team apiece at Triple-a, Double-a, High-a and Low-a. Additional clubs are allowed at spring training complexes and in the Dominican Republic.

MLB ended the Profession­al Baseball Agreement that governed the relationsh­ip between the majors and minors. The minors are being run from MLB’S office in New York under the supervisio­n of Peter Woodfork, MLB’S new senior vice-president of minor league operations and developmen­t, taking over from the Florida-based National Associatio­n of Profession­al Baseball Leagues, which had governed the minors since 1901.

The New York-penn League, which started in ’39, was eliminated and the Pioneer League, founded the same year, lost its affiliated status and became an independen­t partner league. The Appalachia­n League was converted to a college summer circuit for rising freshmen and sophomores.

MLB said big-league teams will be an average of 320 kilometres closer to their Triple-a affiliates, allowing most to be within driving distance of their parent team, and that PDL licences will improve facilities.

Salaries for players with minor-league contracts are rising 38 per cent to 72 per cent. The weekly minimum rises from $290 to $400 at rookie level, $290 to $500 at Class A, $350 to $600 at Double-a and $502 to $700 at Triple-a. For players on 40-man rosters on optional or outright assignment to the minors, the minimum is covered by the MLB Players Associatio­n collective bargaining agreement and rises from $46,000 to $46,600 for a player signing his first major league contract.

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