New York Post

SO CLOSE (YET STILL SO FAR)

UNION DROPS TO 70 GAMES BUT OWNERS STILL REJECT OFFER

- By KEN DAVIDOFF and JOEL SHERMAN

The players and owners, having finally set up camp in the same galaxy just earlier this week, might actually be hurtling toward the same planet. Not surprising­ly, however, they’re at risk of a crash landing.

Rob Manfred quickly rejected the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n’s latest 2020 restart proposal on Thursday, a plan that called for a 70-game regular season at the players’ prorated pay. That package, announced by PA executive director Tony Clark, countered the 60-game idea that Manfred floated to Clark during an in-person meeting on Tuesday.

“This needs to be over,” Manfred told the Associated Press. “Until I speak with owners, I can’t give you a firm deadline.”

The commission­er has the right to unilateral­ly implement the length of the season as long as the players get their full prorated pay.

The day featured a characteri­stically dizzying exchange of statements and interviews, as the two sides — consistent with the way they have comported themselves since the sport shut down in March — offered different accounts of what had transpired.

Clark actually released two statements, the first one recognizin­g his 70-game proposal (featuring expanded playoffs for this year and next) and the second one disputing Manfred’s interpreta­tion of his 60-game schedule, which the commission­er described Wednesday as a “jointly developed framework that we agreed could form the basis of an agreement.”

“In my discussion­s with Rob in Arizona we explored a potential pro rata framework, but I made clear repeatedly in that meeting and after it that there were a number of significan­t issues with what he proposed, in particular the number of games,” Clark said. “It is unequivoca­lly false to suggest that any tentative agreement or other agreement was reached in that meeting. In fact, in conversati­ons within the last 24 hours, Rob invited a counterpro­posal for more games that he would take back to the owners. We submitted that counterpro­posal today.”

Manfred, in response, said, “I told [Clark] 70 games was simply impossible given the calen

dar and the public health situation, and he went ahead and made that proposal anyway.”

The PA’s 70-game regular season would end on Sept. 30, just three days later than MLB’s 60-game calendar, with a July 19 Opening Day.

The PA’s counterpro­posal also included a doubling of the postseason pool from $25 million to $50 million, as well as a 50-50 split of new postseason revenues for 2021, which would feature an expanded, 16-team playoff just like this year; this represents a rare instance of the union supporting the notion of revenue sharing.

The players agreed to let the clubs sell advertisin­g on their uniforms and also expressed the willingnes­s to cooperate on broadcast enhancemen­ts like players wearing microphone­s, which generated positive buzz in spring training. The players suggested the possibilit­y of holding the playoffs on neutral sites in order to maximize the likelihood of concluding the World Series, a scenario that respects the unpredicta­bility of COVID-19, and also on the health-and-safety front, the players would like full salary and service time for their brethren who sit out this campaign because they either are high-risk or they live with high-risk individual­s.

The salary difference between the two packages, about $1.51 billion for 60 games and $1.757 billion for 70 games, is $247 million, or a little over $8.2 million per team.

For all the tension resulting from both sides pooh-poohing their opponents’ assertions of a “basis” for agreement, the owners and players have come a long way this week after nearly a month of fruitless negotiatio­ns. They also have signed off on the universal implementa­tion of the designated hitter this year and next — and it could easily stay in place following the expiration of the Basic Agreement after 2021 — as well as forgivenes­s on $33 million of the $170 million lump-sum payment that the players negotiated in March and a mutual agreement to not file a grievance against the other side.

Can they travel the relatively light distance required to finally launch this season — say, split the difference between 60 and 70 to get 65? Would they be shortsight­ed enough to torpedo each other now? While these talks have taught us to bet the under, the owners and players would need to sink to new lows to not bridge their tiny gap.

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 ??  ?? Anthony J. Causi
Anthony J. Causi
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