Santa Fe New Mexican

No way out: Minor League season called off for 2020

- By Dave Sheinin

With no players to fill rosters, no major television contracts to generate revenue and no way to put fans in seats, Minor League Baseball bowed to the inevitable Tuesday and canceled its 2020 season, which had already been delayed by nearly three months by the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

The cancellati­on, first reported by Baseball America on Tuesday and confirmed by a source familiar with the discussion­s, came following a meeting of Minor League Baseball’s board of trustees. An official announceme­nt was expected later Tuesday.

The move has been expected for months, since the business model for minor league teams — which lack the same lucrative television contracts as major league teams — isn’t built to withstand the financial pressures created by games played without fans.

In addition, due to the national emergency, Major League Baseball suspended the agreement covering the assignment of players to minor league affiliates, and decided to adopt a “taxi squad” model to supply its teams with extra players — who will train together at one location per team — during this truncated, 60-game season.

In other words, to survive, minor league teams would have had to find and pay their own players in 2020.

While big league teams are permitted to start the 2020 season with 30-man rosters, and can keep taxi squads of up to another 30 extra players in reserve, the lack of a minor league season still dooms hundreds of farmhands to a year without organized baseball. Some could latch on with independen­t league teams, or seek winter league spots in foreign countries.

Minor league players had been receiving $400 per week stipends through the end of June. However, while some teams, including the Washington Nationals, have said they will continue paying minor leaguers through the end of their season (Sept. 7), others have not made the same commitment. According to reports, three teams — the Los Angeles Angels, Arizona Diamondbac­ks and Cleveland Indians — will not pay their minor leaguers beyond June.

As for the minor league franchises, many have turned their ballparks into makeshift outdoor restaurant­s, farmers markets or outdoor movie theaters — with proper social distancing — to generate revenue. A handful of those minor league facilities will be used as headquarte­rs for MLB’s taxi squads this season.

Tuesday’s news was the only the latest blow in a tumultuous, eight-month stretch for Minor League Baseball, which was confronted last fall by MLB’s plans to eliminate the affiliatio­ns of as many as 42 of its 160 minor league franchises beginning in 2021.

If it is ultimately adopted, the plan would lead to the dissolutio­n of the short-season New York-Penn League and the rookie-level Appalachia­n and Pioneer Leagues, though some of those franchises could find their way into the remaining minor leagues.

And with the 2020 season now falling victim to the global pandemic, many of the teams that fall off the baseball map will disappear without so much as a chance to say goodbye.

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