Albuquerque Journal

Manfred prefers lockout to the alternativ­e

Ongoing labor talks are lacking momentum

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CHICAGO — While insisting Major League Baseball is focused on reaching a labor deal, Commission­er Rob Manfred signaled Thursday that owners likely will lock out players if the current contract expires Dec. 1 without a new agreement.

Baseball had eight work stoppages from 1972-95, but there has been labor peace since a 7½-month strike began in August 1994 and forced the cancellati­on of the World Series for the first time in 90 years.

“We’ve been down this path. We locked out in ’89-’90,” Manfred said. “I don’t think ’94 worked out too great for anybody. I think when you look at other sports, the pattern has become to control the timing of the labor dispute and try to minimize the prospect of actual disruption of the season. That’s what it’s about. It’s avoiding doing damage to the season.”

Talks have been going on since spring but have lacked the momentum toward an agreement that characteri­zed negotiatio­ns that led to deals in 2006, 2011 and ’16.

Baseball had a 32-day spring training lockout in 1990 and while opening day was delayed a week, each team was scheduled for a full 162 games.

While the luxury tax threshold was $210 million this year with a 20% rate for first-time offenders, management has proposed having a $180 million threshold with a 25% rate.

Teams also have proposed a $100 million payroll floor, which the union opposes because it is tied to tax penalties at the higher end.

Owners also have proposed replacing salary arbitratio­n — for players with three years but less than six of major league service plus the top 17% by service time between two years and three — with pay determined by FanGraphs WAR. The union considers that the type of salary scale it has rejected since 1989.

Players currently eligible for arbitratio­n would have the option of being grandfathe­red under the existing arbitratio­n system.

Players, concerned with servicetim­e manipulati­on, have proposed dropping free agency eligibilit­y from six seasons of service to five and arbitratio­n eligibilit­y to two seasons, where it stood before the 1985 strike settlement.

Owners instead proposed freeagent eligibilit­y be changed to the age of 29.5 years.

Teams have rejected the union’s proposal for revenue-sharing changes, designed to benefit smaller markets and to incentive positive performanc­e. The clubs have proposed a restrictio­n that a team could not pick among the first five in the amateur draft in three consecutiv­e years.

“We remain committed, No. 1 priority, to make an agreement prior to December 1,” said Manfred, who was the league’s chief negotiator before becoming commission­er in 2015.

Manfred was not surprised that several free agents have reached agreements since the World Series, even though CBA rules for next season are uncertain.

On other topics:

TAMPA BAY: The Rays were given permission in June 2019 to explore splitting their home games between Tampa Bay and Montreal after the expiration of their lease at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, which runs through the 2027 season. The Rays made a presentati­on this week to the executive council. Said Manfred: “It’s a complicate­d topic.”

OAKLAND: MLB gave the Athletics permission in May to explore relocation options if they are unable to secure a new waterfront ballpark in Oakland.

“They’ve continued to try to find a solution in Oakland. At the same time, they’re exploring Los Vegas as an alternativ­e,” Manfred said.

RULE CHANGES: Seattle chairman John Stanton, consultant Theo Epstein and MLB executive vice president Morgan Sword reported on the competitio­n committee experiment­s.

“The pitch timer experiment in the Cal League was one that the owners remain very interested in because of the success,” Manfred said.

TACKIER BALLS: MLB is moving toward a new rub for baseballs that will lead to tackier surfaces, which many pitchers have sought, especially after the crackdown on unauthoriz­ed substances began June 21.

“We actually have a couple of options in terms of tackier balls,” Manfred said.

“There’s going to be some testing done over the winter. I think there will be — we will be far enough along that there will actually be kind of live game, I’m hoping, testing in spring training and we could just be using a new ball next year. Maybe it’s going to be 2023 instead, but we’re continuing to work on that project and have made real progress. The trick is tackier, but not so tacky that it’s Spider Tack, right?”

BROADCAST: Diamond Sports Group, a subsidiary of Sinclair Broadcast Group that acquired Fox’s regional sports network, hopes to start a streaming RSN service and has asked permission from MLB.

ELSEWHERE: The Tampa Bay Times reports that the Rays have explored a long-term contract with infielder Wander Franco for “a 10-year-plus commitment worth between $150-200 (million).” … Arizona has hired Brent Strom to be its pitching coach. The 73-year-old has been a pitching coach in the big leagues for 11 seasons, most recently with the Houston Astros from 2014 to 2021. … Colorado agreed to a $14.5 million, three-year contract with catcher Elias Díaz . ... The Mets made it official by hiring Billy Eppler as their general manager to close out a long and and ridiculed search. Eppler was fired as GM of the Los Angeles Angels a little more than a year ago after five unsuccessf­ul seasons.

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Rob Manfred

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