The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Stars missing, but baseball will avoid labor strife

- By Paul Newberry AP Sports Columnist

Spring training has started, yet two of baseball’s biggest stars, Bryce Harper and Manny Machado, are sitting at home.

For those who think this is a strong indication that the national pastime is headed toward another paralyzing labor dispute, do not fret.

There’s too much money at stake — on all sides — to let that happen.

It’s certainly troubling that somewhere between 60 and 100 viable free agents (depending on how you count) are still without jobs as teams reported to camp this week in Florida and Arizona.

Sluggers Harper and Machado, along with 2015 AL Cy Young Award winner Dallas Keuchel and closer Craig Kimbrel, are the most notable players still looking for work. Not surprising­ly, their absence prompted some high-profile grumbling from players who are gainfully employed, such as Houston Astros ace Justin Verlander.

“System is broken,” he wrote on Twitter. “You’re telling me you couldn’t sign Bryce or Manny for 10 years and go from there?”

Certainly, the next labor agreement will require some hefty

tweaking and plenty of compromise to address the concerns of both players and owners. But there seems more than enough common ground — namely, all those hefty checks that everyone is cashing — to ensure there’s not another of those strikes or lockouts that once dogged the game, most notably leading to the cancellati­on of the 1994 World Series.

If anything, the sides are likely to begin negotiatio­ns on a new deal sometime this year, even though the current arrangemen­t isn’t set to expire until after the 2021 season. Commission­er Rob Manfred has been pushing hard for changes that are designed to speed up the game, while the players are concerned about parts of the labor agreement that they feel cut into their bargaining power.

Both sides would benefit from sitting down as soon as possible at the negotiatin­g table.

“I hope and I really do believe that there is a common interest between the players’ associatio­n, the players, the owners and the commission­er’s office in changes, whether they’re midterm or otherwise, that make our entertainm­ent product the best it could possibly be,” Manfred said last week.

Verlander and Washington Nationals star Max Scherzer complained that the game is hurt by constant merry-go-round of teams that essentiall­y throw in the towel for several seasons, committing themselves to long-term rebuilding projects centered on younger, cheaper players.

They feel that’s a big reason so many useful players are still unemployed.

They also believe it’s cutting into a fan base already bleeding young followers.

“If you’re constantly just going into this win-loss cycle that MLB is pushing, you create bandwagon fans and that’s not the type of fans that you want to create,” said Scherzer, a newly elected member of the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n executive board. “You want to create fans that are following teams year in and year out. It’s up to the fans, honestly, to demand that.”

But that’s not really what’s going on with Harper and Machado, who went into free agency with a pair of agents (Scott Boras and Dan Lozano, respective­ly) who were determined to land record deals in excess of Giancarlo Stanton’s $325 million.

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