Yuma Sun

MLB players reaffirm pay stance, leaving huge gap between teams

Neither side finding any middle ground

- MLB/B5

NEW YORK — Baseball players reaffirmed their stance for full prorated pay, leaving a huge gap with teams that could scuttle plans to start the coronaviru­s-delayed season around the Fourth of July and may leave owners focusing on a schedule as short as 50 games.

More than 100 players, including the union’s executive board, held a two-hour digital meeting with officials of the Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n on Thursday, a day after the union’s offer was rejected by Major League Baseball.

“Earlier this week, Major League Baseball communicat­ed its intention to schedule a dramatical­ly shortened 2020 season unless players negotiate salary concession­s,” union head Tony Clark said in a statement. “The concession­s being sought are in addition to billions in player salary reductions that have already been agreed upon. This threat came in response to an associatio­n proposal aimed at charting a path forward.”

“Rather than engage, the league replied it will shorten the season unless players agree to further salary reductions,” Clark added.

Players originally were set to earn about $4 billion in 2020 salaries, exclusive of guaranteed money such as signing bonuses, terminatio­n pay and option buyouts. The union’s plan would cut that to around $2.8 billion and management to approximat­ely $1.2 billion plus a $200 million bonus pool if the postseason is completed.

MLB last week proposed an 82-game season with an additional sliding scale of pay cuts that would leave a player at the $563,500 minimum with 47% of his original salary and top stars Mike Trout and Gerrit Cole at less than 22% of the $36 million they had been set to earn.

Players countered Sunday with a plan for a 114-game regular season with no pay cuts beyond the prorated salaries they agreed to on March 26. That would leave each player with about 70% of his original pay.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS FEB. 19, 2017, FILE PHOTO, Tony Clark, executive director of the Major League Players Associatio­n, answers questions at a news conference in Phoenix.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS FEB. 19, 2017, FILE PHOTO, Tony Clark, executive director of the Major League Players Associatio­n, answers questions at a news conference in Phoenix.
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