Truro News

Clark: players still concerned about unsigned free agents

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Nearly two full weeks into spring training, dozens of accomplish­ed free agents around the major leagues are still unsigned.

There’s a new rule limiting visits to the mound, too, creating at least some early confusion about how to keep track.

So while their collective bargaining agreement runs through four more seasons, players have been expressing more frustratio­n with owners lately than usual during an offseason marked by increased tension between the sides.

“The goal of collective bargaining is not labour peace. It’s a fair and equitable deal. Fifteen months in, we’re seeing things that we’ve never seen before, and that raises concerns,” union leader Tony Clark said. “We’ll have to figure out in the near term and in the longer term how those concerns can be addressed, because invariably if they are affecting the industry adversely, everybody should have that concern.”

Clark began his annual tour of camps on Saturday with Boston. Clark said after the meeting in the Red Sox clubhouse that the union’s special training camp for free agents in Bradenton will stay open indefinite­ly. About one-third of the 166 players who exercised free agency rights last November have not reached a contract agreement, including stars like starting pitcher Jake Arrieta and third baseman Mike Moustakas.

Signings have begun to pick up over the past week, though. Clark acknowledg­ed not every player will find a team.

“We’d love everybody to be signed,” he said. “But the truth is at the end of every off-season, in every year you go back to as far back as I can recall, there are always guys who are at home at the end of the off-season. The key is going to be at the end of this one, seeing where we are and perhaps if there’s an explanatio­n as to why, and then determine based on that explanatio­n, assuming there is one or there isn’t one, try to appreciate what the next steps might look like.”

Major League Baseball, in a statement earlier this month, attributed the amount of un- signed players to a misread of the marketplac­e and denied any deliberate attempt at fielding noncompeti­tive clubs.

“In baseball, it has always been true that clubs go through cyclical, multiyear strategies directed at winning,” the MLB statement read.

Clark didn’t directly answer a question about whether charges of collusion are founded. He said “everything’s worthy of more discussion” on the subject of a potential tanking tax or a payroll floor for a future collective bargaining agreement. Clark cited the amount of teams with payrolls nowhere near the competitiv­e balance tax threshold of US$197 million as a reason for the union’s dissatisfa­ction with the winter.

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