Los Angeles Times

60-game season to start in July

Commission­er imposes a season expected to be 60 games after talks with players’ union collapse

- By Bill Shaikin

After talks break down, commission­er imposes owners’ timetable.

This town, this fall, year, could be all about basketball.

In September, in the final two weeks of what should be a wacky 2020 baseball season, with the Dodgers and Angels potentiall­y fighting for a postseason berth, the Lakers and Clippers could be battling one another in the NBA Western Conference finals.

In October, whether the

Dodgers advance to the playoffs for the eighth consecutiv­e year or the Angels get there for the first time in six years, Los Angeles could be preoccupie­d with the Lakers or Clippers in the NBA Finals.

Baseball could have taken center stage in July, with an Independen­ce Day launch that would have given the national pastime a four-week head start on the NBA. Yet baseball botched its return so badly that the head start might amount to four days.

It’s Time for Dodger Baseball, in the shadows of the NBA, and subject to interrupti­on by a killer virus.

On Monday, after Major League Baseball owners and

players traded bargaining proposals, hostile lawyer letters and accusatory public statements for more than a month, the two sides officially gave up on making a deal.

The league and its players’ union instead decided to implement the terms of a March 26 agreement, under which the players earn prorated pay for every game played this season and the owners dictate how many games the season will include.

The season is expected to be 60 games, starting on or about July 24, provided a health and safety protocol can be finalized this week. The season is normally 162 regular-season games, plus playoffs, but it has been cut short by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The unresolved questions include sensitive ones.

For example: Angels star Mike Trout is not thought to be at high risk for contractin­g the coronaviru­s, but his wife is due to give birth to the couple’s first child during the season.

Could Trout be excused for this two-month season without forfeiting his salary? And would players reluctant to complete an entire season under quarantine be willing to do so to complete the postseason?

The teams are expected to stage a second spring training as soon as next week at their home ballparks, largely chased from Arizona and Florida training sites by surges in the virus in those states. The league then would monitor the virus to see whether it appears under control to start the season, or whether the spread of the virus might force the season be called off before it could start.

The sides could have made this deal six weeks ago, and players would have been in spring training by now.

Owners insisted that, because games without fans would mean less revenue than games with fans, players should take less money to play them.

The March 26 agreement provided for prorated salaries regardless of attendance, but the owners did not include that until their fourth proposal.

Players insisted that the season could extend into November and even December, proposing seasons of as long as 114 games. Owners rejected those bids because of concerns about a possible second wave of the coronaviru­s — Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told The Times he would wrap up the season in September — and because the league’s television partners want the postseason to end in October.

The failure to reach an agreement meant that radical changes proposed during negotiatio­ns — the permanent adoption of the designated hitter in the National League, a postseason expanded from 10 teams to 16 and advertisin­g patches on uniforms — were put on hold until at least the 2022 season, pending negotiatio­ns on a new collective bargaining agreement.

Those future negotiatio­ns were expected to be stormy even before the coronaviru­s emerged, as industry revenues have risen in recent years while salaries have remained flat. The negotiatio­ns now could be complicate­d by a grievance the players’ union is expected to file against the league.

The union would argue the league did not “work in good faith to … complete the fullest 2020 championsh­ip season and postseason that is economical­ly feasible,” as it was written in that March agreement.

The union believes owners stalled negotiatio­ns to be able to impose a season and say time would not permit a longer one, and the difference in collective salary could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.

The league would argue, presumably with documentat­ion to back up the claims it has made publicly, that Commission­er Rob Manfred and union chief Tony Clark agreed last week on a 60-game season, only to have the union renege on the deal. Clark has called that claim “unequivoca­lly false.”

The league also would argue that Manfred did not punitively reduce the schedule beyond his final offer and that players did not negotiate in good faith for possible tradeoffs to reduced salaries. The owners do not consider themselves at significan­t risk of having to pay damages.

The players turned down an offer worth a collective $300 million more than they will earn now, standing firm against any dilution of their prorated salaries in the hope that an arbitrator might award them even more in the end.

This season will most likely be completed before the grievance process, so for now Dodgers fans await the 11 words they have longed to hear in the four months since the team Dodgers acquired one of the most dynamic players in baseball from the Boston Red Sox:

“Leading off for the Dodgers, right fielder, number 50, Mookie Betts.”

 ?? John Raoux Associated Press ?? ROB MANFRED, Major League Baseball commission­er, will impose a season of 60 games, starting about July 24. The season has been cut short by the pandemic.
John Raoux Associated Press ROB MANFRED, Major League Baseball commission­er, will impose a season of 60 games, starting about July 24. The season has been cut short by the pandemic.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? DODGER STADIUM has been empty of fans, but the players are expected to stage a second spring training there as soon as next week.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times DODGER STADIUM has been empty of fans, but the players are expected to stage a second spring training there as soon as next week.

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