Houston Chronicle

Players’ proposal puts season at 89 games

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — Baseball players moved toward the owners’ side but remained far apart economical­ly in their latest proposal for starting the pandemic-delayed season, adamant they receive full prorated salaries while offering to cut the regular season to 89 games.

The proposal by the players’ associatio­n was given to Major League Baseball electronic­ally Tuesday evening without a negotiatin­g session.

MLB did not appear to view the proposal as productive but made no comment. MLB has said that absent an agreement it could go ahead with a shorter schedule of perhaps 50 games.

Players made their move one day after management cut its proposed schedule from 82 games to 76. The union proposed the regular season start July 10 and end Oct. 11, and it accepted MLB’s plan to expand the postseason from 10 teams to as many as 16. However, if management announces a schedule without an agreement, it would not be able to alter the establishe­d postseason format.

The union’s plan would have the World Series end in mid-to-late November, and players said they would accept MLB’s proposal to have the ability to shift postseason games to neutral sites.

Teams say they fear a second wave of the coronaviru­s and do not want to extend the World Series past October. Deputy commission­er Dan Halem told the union a 76game schedule could not be staged unless players agreed to a deal by Wednesday.

Players continue to insist on full prorated salaries as specified in the March 26 agreement between the perpetuall­y feuding sides. The deal gave players service time in the event no games are played this year along with a $170 million salary advance.

MLB says that because the season likely would be played in empty ballparks without fans, the absence of gate-related revenue would lead to a loss of $640,000 for each additional game played, a figure the union questions. MLB’s proposal would guarantee players 50 percent of prorated salaries and another 20 percent if the postseason is completed, and teams would fund a $50 million pool for players’ postseason shares even if no tickets sold. MLB also would forgive 20 percent of the salary advance.

Players had been set to earn about $4 billion in salaries this year before opening day was pushed back from March 26 due to the new coronaviru­s, and the union’s initial economic proposal on May 31 called for a 114-game schedule running through October and salaries totaling $2.8 billion. The shorter schedule in the new plan lowered the amount to about $2.2 billion.

MLB’s offer Monday was for just under $1.3 billion in salaries, but only about $1 billion would be guaranteed. The rest is contingent on the postseason’s completion.

Mike Trout and Gerrit Cole, the highest-paid players with $36 million salaries, would get $19,777,778 each under the union’s plan.

MLB’s offer would guarantee each $8,723,967 with the chance to increase to $12,190,633 apiece if the postseason is completed.

A player at the $563,500 minimum would earn $309,577 under the union plan and up to $244,492 from MLB’s offer. Those at $1 million — about half those on current active rosters — would get $549,383 under the union proposal and up to $389,496 in the MLB formula.

A 50-game schedule with prorated salaries would total just over $1.2 billion and leave Cole and Trout at $11,111,111 each.

Players proposed that $5 million from joint management-union funds be marked toward supporting non-union minor leaguers and social causes. Players would agree to participat­e in events such as an offseason All-Star Game and/or Home Run Derby and to broadcast enhancemen­ts such as wearing microphone­s during games.

The union did not accept management’s offer to suspend freeagent compensati­on this offseason, which would eliminate the qualifying offers that cause some teams to decline to pursue players.

 ?? Charles Rex Arbogast / Associated Press ?? MLB players insist they receive their full prorated salaries based on the number of regular-season games.
Charles Rex Arbogast / Associated Press MLB players insist they receive their full prorated salaries based on the number of regular-season games.

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