The Day

MLB players are concerned about retooling teams, attendance drop

- By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer

New York — Baseball players are concerned the Seattle Mariners have become yet another rebuilding team and may be joined by others following a season of steep attendance drops among clubs that faded early and never contended for the playoffs.

Union head Tony Clark and new collective bargaining director Bruce Meyer said Wednesday their members also are concerned about rapid change in the way games are played, such as the increased use of relief pitchers, and are willing to speak with management this offseason about whether counteract­ing changes are needed.

Altering the amateur draft to include an NBA-style lottery for the top picks, the 10-day disabled list and the 10-day minimum for the recall of players optioned to the minors are among the topics the union is prepared to talk about as part of a wider discussion. So are possible rules to counter offense-suffocatin­g defensive shifts.

And the union maintains its agreement is necessary for any changes in anti-gambling rules in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision that allows more widespread legal betting.

But Seattle’s decision to trade Robinson Cano, James Paxton, Jean Segura and Edwin Diaz raised concern among players already angered by Baltimore, the Chicago White Sox, Cincinnati, Detroit, Kansas City, Miami and Pittsburgh jettisonin­g veterans.

“We have seen some things that are eerily similar to last offseason,” Clark said. “One of the concerns in general has to do with the level of competitio­n or interest in competitio­n across the teams in general . ... When you have teams who are as we’ve seen already moving considerab­le amounts of their roster and/or other teams who are talking about doing so, it raises concerns about how that’s going to affect the market.”

Hours after Clark spoke, Arizona dealt All-Star first baseman Paul Goldschmid­t to St. Louis for prospects, perhaps signaling an exodus of veterans from the desert.

Players have taken to calling the process tanking, while management calls it the type of normal rebuilding that has been going on throughout Major League Baseball’s history. There were three 100-loss teams this year for the second time since 1985 and eight 95-loss teams for the first time in big league history.

“There are teams that are effectivel­y announcing at the beginning of the year that they’re not going to be competitiv­e that year, and in some cases that they’re not going to field the best players that they have,” said Meyer.

MLB points to data showing 27 percent of teams had 90 or more losses in each of the last three years, a figured that has fluctuated between 20 percent and 33 percent since 2000.

“Last offseason, the union filed a grievance against four clubs that it claimed were not trying to win,” said MLB Deputy Commission­er Dan Halem, citing a case against Miami, Oakland, Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay. “One of those clubs made the playoffs, another club won 90 games and a third club was in contention through the trade deadline. I don’t think the players’ associatio­n has any credibilit­y on opining on how clubs will perform.”

Attendance has gotten the attention of both sides. Toronto and Miami each had attendance drops of more than 800,000, Kansas City by over 500,000, and Baltimore, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Texas in excess of 400,000.

Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred attributes part of the drop to unusual weather that led to 54 postponeme­nts, the most since 1989, and many more games played in cold. Players see lack of competitiv­eness as a bigger factor.

“We have teams ... talking about a three-, four-, five-, six-year plans,” Clark said. “We saw how that manifested itself last year and have concerns about how it’s going to manifest itself this year.”

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