MLB expected to present proposal to begin season in July
LOS ANGELES —Major league owners are expected to ask players Tuesday to agree to a regular season that would cover about 80 games. The Los Angeles Dodgers have not won a World Series championship in 32 years, and their manager believes victory would taste just as sweet after what would normally be considered half a season.
“This is something unprecedented,” Dave Roberts said Saturday. “To keep guys focused and together in mind and body, and then to win a championship, I see no reason why anyone should even entertain an asterisk.”
Under the owners’ plan, players would report to training camp in June and start an abbreviated season in early July. Teams would play regionally to minimize travel, so the Dodgers and Angels would play largely along the West Coast. Rosters would be expanded to account for the probable cancellation of the minor league season, and the postseason would be expanded too. Fans would not be admitted, at least at the start.
Owners could tweak some of those concepts, first reported by The Athletic, in a conference call Monday. The commissioner’s office would then begin what could be a contentious negotiation with the players’ union.
“I’m still hopeful,” Roberts said. “I don’t see how we can’t come to some consensus on both sides. Everyone will benefit. It’s time for the fans to have baseball in their homes.”
It is uncertain what alterations the league might propose in the event local authorities do not let teams play in their home ballparks, or a coronavirus outbreak occurs or recurs. It also is uncertain how the owners might propose to protect the health and safety of players and other personnel.
“I don’t think anything can be done until that (safety) can be guaranteed and we feel comfortable with it,” St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Andrew Miller told ESPN. “We want to put a good product on the field, but that’s totally secondary to the health of the players. We are generally younger and healthier, but that doesn’t mean our staff is, that doesn’t mean the umpires are going to be in the clear.
Agent Scott Boras said MLB can learn from the experiences of baseball leagues underway in Taiwan and South Korea, and from soccer leagues around the world.
Boras, who represents about 100 major league players, said none of his clients has expressed concerns about playing. However, he said, any player with a medical issue that might put him at risk should be allowed to choose whether he wants to play.
“These contracts aren’t servitude,” Boras said.