Marin Independent Journal

Manfred, Clark indicate lengthy lockout

Divergent views means another work stoppage for baseball

- By Stephen Hawkins and Ronald Blum

ARLINGTON, TEXAS >> Hours into Major League Baseball’s first work stoppage in 26 years, Commission­er Rob Manfred and union head Tony Clark presented diametrica­lly opposed views of each side’s negotiatin­g positions that point to a lengthy lockout.

In separate news conference­s less than half a day into baseball’s ninth work stoppage, Manfred said the union’s proposal for greater free agency and wider salary arbitratio­n would damage small-market teams.

Clark, the first former player to head the union, accused Manfred of “misreprese­ntations” in his letter to fans explaining the lockout, and said “it would have been beneficial to the process to have spent as much time negotiatin­g in the room as it appeared it was spent on the letter.”

“It’s unnecessar­y to continue the dialogue,” Clark said of the lockout. “At the first instance in some time of a bumpy water, the recourse was a strategic decision to lock players out.”

In many ways, after 26 ½ years of labor peace the sides have reverted to the bitter squabbling that marked eight work stoppages from 1972-95, including a 7 ½-month strike that wiped out the 1994 World Series.

Owners locked out players at 12:01 a.m. Thursday following the expiration of the sport’s five-year collective bargaining agreement.

“If you play without an agreement, you are vulnerable to a strike at any point in time,” Manfred said. “What happened in 1994 is the MLBPA picked August, when we were most vulnerable because of the proximity of the large revenue dollars associated with the postseason. We wanted to take that option away and try to force the parties to deal with the issues and get an agreement now.”

Players gained salary arbitratio­n in 1974 and free agency two years later, and most of the previous disputes centered on the rise of big salaries caused by both, along with demands, mostly by small- and middle-market owners, to control costs and increase their competitiv­e ability.

Management gained an ever-increasing series of restraints over the last two decades, such as a luxury tax on high payrolls, leading to a decrease in average salary during the latter years of the most recent labor deal.

Now players want more liberalize­d free agency and arbitratio­n, leading to a confrontat­ion.

Since 1976, players can become free agents after six seasons of major league service. The players’ associatio­n proposed starting with the 2023-24 offseason that it changes to six years or five years and age 30.5, with the age in the second option dropping to 29.5 starting in 2025-26.

Players want arbitratio­n eligibilit­y to decrease to two years of service, its level until the mid-1980s.

Central to the strife is the union’s anger over a larger number of teams in recent seasons jettisonin­g veterans in favor of rebuilding while accumulati­ng prospects. Teams sometimes conclude rebuilding — the players call it tanking — is a preferred strategy for long-term success, even though it can rankle their fans.

In the signing scramble ahead of the lockout, teams committed $1 billion to contracts on Wednesday, including six nine-figure agreements that raised the total to nine in the last month and total spending to $2.5 billion since Oct. 1.

“The fact that this year there seems to be more activity sooner by clubs in free agency than a normal year raises more questions than it answers about all the other years,” Meyer said. “One good week of free agency doesn’t address all the negative trends that we’ve seen.”

MLB would keep existing free-agency provision or change eligibilit­y to age 29.5.

The dispute threatens the start of spring training on Feb. 16 and opening day on March 31.

“The players’ associatio­n, as is their right, made an aggressive set of proposals in May, and they have refused to budge from the core of those proposals,” Manfred said. “Things like a shortened reserve period, a $100 million reduction in revenue sharing and salary arbitratio­n for the whole two-year class are bad for the sport, bad for the fans and bad for competitiv­e balance.”

An agreement by earlyto-mid-March is needed for a full season.

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