The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MLB plans to give players economic proposal Tuesday

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With progress being made this week on the health front, MLB will submit its economic proposal to the Players Associatio­n on Tuesday, a source confirmed.

With the clock ticking on a projected June start for spring training, figuring out how to play during this pandemic remains a work in progress as the two sides continue their discussion­s of MLB’s 67-page operations manual delivered to the union last Friday. But coming up with a new salary structure for this anticipate­d 82-game season has turned into a contentiou­s process, likely to require every minute up to the point when players actually show up for spring training.

The Athletic was the first to report that MLB will make its financial pitch Tuesday.

Initially, MLB talked about a revenue-sharing plan, featuring a 50-50 split with the players, to cover their remaining salaries under the economic hit teams would suffer without fans

(i.e. paying customers) in the stadiums. But the union insists any talk of revenue-sharing is a nonstarter at the negotiatin­g table; in their view, it represents a de facto salary cap.

The union believes the players are rightfully owed prorated salaries, based on the number of games played, according to the March 26 agreement. Union chief Tony Clark repeatedly has said the topic is closed for discussion.

Still, MLB has pointed to a clause in the same agreement that calls for further negotiatio­n of salaries if games are played without spectators, based on the economic“feasibilit­y”of resuming the season. Owners anticipate huge losses incurred from the absence of gate-related revenues.

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