Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

MLB players balk at latest league plan

- News services

A rookie at the major league minimum would make a higher percentage of his salary than multimilli­onaire stars like Mike Trout or Gerrit Cole under a sliding-scale proposal by big league teams that players found “extremely disappoint­ing.”

Major League Baseball made the proposal to the players’ union on Tuesday during a digital meeting rather than the 50-50 revenue-sharing plan that owners initially approved for their negotiator­s on May 11, The Associated Press reported.

In addition, the union said “the sides also remain far apart on health and safety protocols” aimed at starting the pandemic-delayed season around the Fourth of July.

“We made a proposal to the union that is completely consistent with the economic realities facing our sport,” MLB said in a statement. “We look forward to a responsive proposal from the MLBPA.”

The revenue-sharing plan earlier this month was met with immediatel­y hostility from the union the day owners gave their negotiator­s the go-ahead. That plan was not presented to players when talks began the following day.

During that session, MLB gave the union a presentati­on claiming billions of dollars of anticipate­d losses and held off making a proposal for two weeks.

Salaries in the major leagues range from $563,500 at the minimum to $36 million each for Trout, the three-time MVP outfielder on the Angels, and Cole, the pitcher signed by the Yankees as a free agent.

According to a study by the AP, 369 of 899 players have salaries of $600,000 or less, according to the rosters frozen in March.

Under MLB’s proposal, the playoffs would expand from 10 teams to 14 and players would receive more money if the postseason is played. Usually, salaries are earned during the regular season only and players receive money from the postseason pool, a maximum of about $382,000 last year for a full share on the World Series champion Nationals.

Players agreed March 26 to a deal in which they would receive prorated shares of their salaries based on what percentage of each team’s 162-game schedule is played. In exchange, players were guaranteed that if no games are played they would receive service time for 2020 matching what they accrued earned in 2019.

MLB told the union on May 12 it hoped to play a season with an 82-game schedule that would have teams play 13 games against each division rival and six against every club in the correspond­ing division in the other league: AL East vs. NL East, for example.

Several governors have said teams are welcome to play in their regular-season ballparks but without fans due to the new coronaviru­s and mandates for social distancing. MLB told the union during the May 12 presentati­on if teams paid players prorated salaries the clubs would combine to have negative $3.58 billion earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on.

Players were scheduled to earn about $4 billion in salary this year. Many players and union leadership have said the March 26 agreement would stand and no additional salary should be given up. Rays All-Star pitcher Blake Snell , the 2018 AL Cy Young Award winner, said he wouldn’t take the mound this year if his pay is cut further, proclaimin­g: “I’m not playing unless I get mine.”

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