Windsor Star

MLB owners prepare plan to salvage season

Many details to work out with players regarding safety, pay, writes Dave Sheinin.

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Major League Baseball’s desperate effort to launch its 2020 season is approachin­g a critical milestone this week, with the owners preparing to present a proposal to the players’ union on Tuesday outlining a tentative midsummer start and creative, adaptable scheduling, and rule changes designed to maximize a dwindling playing window.

But while much of that plotting and best case projecting remains dependent upon the unknowable trajectory of the ongoing novel coronaviru­s pandemic — which has delayed Opening Day by some six weeks and counting — the sides also must navigate the equally sticky territory of economics.

That arena contains fewer hypothetic­als than the one based in epidemiolo­gy, but at least as much potential to ruin baseball’s hopeful return.

MLB’S proposal was outlined to the sport’s 30 owners in a conference call on Monday and will be sent to the union on Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the proposal. Baseball’s preferred plan, all of it at the mercy of the virus, reportedly is to hold a streamline­d “spring training 2.0” in June, then stage 78-82 regular season games beginning in July — without fans, at least at first — in as many home stadiums as possible, with some teams relocating their operations to spring training facilities in Arizona or Florida.

Teams would be grouped regionally, as opposed to by league and division, to reduce travel considerat­ions. Among the proposed rule changes would be a universal designated hitter. The regular season would be followed by an expanded post-season, involving as many as 14 teams, as opposed to the current 10.

Any such path forward, however, requires a handful of assumption­s, none of which can be regarded as certain. States and municipali­ties must decide to reopen their economies.

The availabili­ty of coronaviru­s testing must be expanded to the point where baseball isn’t seen as diverting scarce resources from the public. A plan must be cemented to deal with the contingenc­y of players or essential personnel testing positive.

The thorny matter of how players will be paid will proceed on a parallel track, beginning when MLB submits its proposal to the union. The issue, at its heart, comes down to an interpreta­tion of the agreement the sides reached on March 26 — the day that was supposed to have been Opening Day — to govern the conditions of the shutdown. As part of that agreement, players received a US$170 million advance on their 2020 salaries and agreed to be paid pro-rated portions of their remaining salaries based on the number of games played.

However, MLB contends that the March agreement pertained to games played with fans, and that the notion of games played without fans requires a different calculus to account for the loss of revenue from tickets, parking, concession­s and luxury suites. The union disagrees and considers the economic negotiatio­n to be effectivel­y over. Both sides appear dug in.

MLB, with industry revenue of $10.7 billion, according to Forbes, contends it will lose billions this year, regardless of what happens now, and that it will lose money with every game played without fans unless it gets additional salary relief from the players.

The union, meanwhile, believes that viewpoint fails to account for the reduction in expenses from fan-free games, as well as the potential windfall for owners from an expanded post-season.

Some view a temporary revenue share — with players receiving slightly less than half of revenue generated in 2020 — as a potential solution, and such a system is expected to be part of MLB’S proposal to the union.

However, even such a creative proposal would bump up against the union’s contention that the matter of 2020 salaries has been agreed upon, and it could spark a bitter reaction among players — who see themselves as the group being asked to take on the greatest health risk in any plan to bring back baseball before a vaccine arrives.

“I don’t think anything can be done until (players’ safety) can be guaranteed and we feel comfortabl­e with it,” St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Andrew Miller, a member of the union’s executive board, told ESPN.

The Washington Post

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