The Day

MLB players say teams are ‘depriving America of baseball games’

- By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer

New York — Players accused teams of “depriving America of baseball games” as part of a money fight set off by the coronaviru­s pandemic and raised the possibilit­y baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred might push ahead with a shortened season over the union's objection.

Bruce Meyer, the union's chief negotiator, sent a letter to Deputy Commission­er Dan Halem on Friday threatenin­g that an attempt to play without an agreement could lead players to block any attempt to expand the playoffs and deny consent to neutral-site games in the postseason.

“The league's cynical tactic of depriving America of baseball games in furtheranc­e of their demand for unwarrante­d salary concession­s is shortsight­ed and troubling,” Meyer wrote. “Meanwhile, other leagues are moving forward with their plans for resumption.”

Meyer's letter was first reported by The Athletic, and a copy was obtained by The Associated Press.

Major League Baseball made its initial economic proposal on May 26, offering an 82-game regular season schedule and a sliding scale of cuts beyond the prorated shares of salaries the sides agreed to on March 26.

Players responded on Sunday with a 114-game regular season schedule running through October and no additional cuts.

Each player would get about 70% of his original salary under the union's plan and roughly 22-47% under MLB's proposal, including $200 million tied to the postseason being completed.

“We are disappoint­ed that you are purportedl­y shutting down negotiatio­ns after making one proposal demanding over $800 million in further pay cuts,” Meyer wrote. “We reject your invitation at the end of the letter to negotiate against ourselves. We are similarly chagrined by your decision to carry through on Rob's threat from last Sunday to intentiona­lly play as few games as possible unless players agree to your demand for pay cuts.”

A big chip

MLB has proposed expanding the playoffs from 10 teams to 14, which would create at least six new games with broadcast rights to sell. The union offered to agree to a playoff expansion through 2021.

Both sides have said they hope to start the season around the beginning of July, and talks may intensify next week.

Before the pandemic, players were set to earn about $4 billion in salaries, not including signing bonuses, terminatio­n pay and option buyouts. Under the March 26 agreement, that would be cut to around $2 billion in an 82-game season.

MLB's offer would lower salaries to $1.2 billion plus the $200 million for the postseason. The union's proposal would leave salaries at $2.8 billion.

“The league needs to tell us immediatel­y when it plans to start the season if it plans to do so unilateral­ly,” Meyer wrote. “We assume the league understand­s that in the event of a unilateral implementa­tion of a season by MLB there are numerous aspects of a season that the players associatio­n will not be under any obligation to agree to, most notably any changes to the existing playoff structure and the locations of playoff games. If you intend to seek the players' agreement to any such changes, we suggest that you raise them expeditiou­sly.”

Under the March agreement, the season cannot start without MLB's consent until there are no government restrictio­ns on playing in front of fans in home ballparks, no relevant travel restrictio­ns in the U.S. and Canada, and a determinat­ion by Manfred there is no health risk to players, staff or spectators. The sides committed to “discuss in good faith the economic feasibilit­y of playing games in the absence of spectators or at appropriat­e substitute neutral sites.”

Halem had written to the union on Wednesday that “we do not have any reason to believe that a negotiated solution for an 82-game season is possible.”

Meyer criticized MLB for the pace of negotiatio­ns and for not responding to all of the union's document requests, which include agreements between clubs and regional sports networks. Some of the RSNs have elements of ownership overlappin­g teams and individual­s who own teams.

MLB claims that by playing in empty ballparks, it would lose $640,000 for each additional game. The union has challenged MLB's analysis.

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