Texarkana Gazette

Baseball players say more talks futile, tell MLB to order return

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — Baseball players told Major League Baseball additional talks to start the season during the coronaviru­s pandemic are pointless and said owners should order a return to work, which likely would spark lengthy litigation and the sport's return to labor wars.

The union's action Saturday night could lead to a season of about 50 games rather than the 82 initially proposed by MLB. The Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n could respond by filing a grievance that would be heard by arbitrator Mark Irvings, arguing players are owed hundreds of millions of dollars in damages due to a shorter season.

"It unfortunat­ely appears that further dialogue with the league would be futile," union head Tony Clark said in a statement. "It's time to get back to work. Tell us when and where."

There was no immediate response from MLB.

While the NBA, NHL and MLS have figured out deals to return in this summer of the coronaviru­s, baseball has descended into the fractious labor strife that led to eight work stoppages from 1972-95. The union has seethed followed a collective bargaining agreement in late 2016 that led to relatively flat salaries for five straight years, an unsuccessf­ul grievance accusing the Chicago Cubs of manipulati­ng third baseman Kris Bryant's service time to delay his eligibilit­y for free agency and a grievance accusing teams of improperly using revFORT

enue sharing proceeds, a process the union calls “tanking.”

Players and MLB agreed to a deal March 26 calling for prorated salaries, a deal that included $170 million in salary advances and a guarantee of service time for 2020 even if no games are played. That deal gave baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred the right to start the season provided there were no travel restrictio­ns and games could be played before fans in regular-season ballparks. It called for “good faith” negotiatio­ns to play in empty ballparks or neutral sites.

Players insist they should not have to accept additional cuts.

“The solidarity of the players has never been more concentrat­ed in years,” said Scott Boras, baseball’s most high-profile agent, who has three clients on the union’s eight-man executive subcommitt­ee.

MLB made three economic offers, the last Friday, and the union proposed two. The sides remain far apart on how much players should get of the $4 billion in salaries they originally were set to earn: MLB has offered to guarantee $1.27 billion and increase the total to $1.45 billion if the postseason is completed. Players want $2.25 billion.

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