Waterloo Region Record

Collusion or common sense?

Either way, baseball may be headed toward labour war

- THOMAS BOSWELL

WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. — The foundation­s of MLB’s long, wonderful period of peace are starting to shake.

Baseball is undergoing the first stage of a dramatic paradigm shift in the way players are valued in the free-agent market, as well as a tilt in MLB’s balance of power toward owners and away from the powerful players’ union.

How the game copes with these tectonic forces between now and the expiration of the current collective bargain agreement after the 2021 season will profoundly impact the health, wealth and popularity of the sport for a generation.

The game has what seems like an eternity — four seasons — to adjust to changing market dynamics and extend what will be a 27-year era of labour peace. But conditions are changing so fast that players are disoriente­d and disturbed, while owners click their heels, with their sport awash in new revenue streams.

The stunning symbol of this confluence of factors is the current spring training camp, run by the union, for players who have no job even though the exhibition season is underway. More than 100 free agents remain unsigned. A few are stars, but dozens are vets who are in shock they have not had multimilli­on-dollar offers.

A team of these “outcasts” would include some players who just don’t want to sign fat contracts because they aren’t fat enough, but also many who don’t even have an invitation to come to a spring training camp to try to make a team.

Such a hypothetic­al club could have Jake Arrieta, Lance Lynn, Alex Cobb, John Lackey and Ricky Nolascio in its rotation, N.L. saves leader Greg Holland as its closer and a lineup with Carlos Gonzalez, Jon Jay and Jose Bautista in its outfield, an infield of Matt Holliday, Neil Walker, J.J. Hardy and Mike Moustakas, as well as Jonathan Lucroy at catcher with Adam Lind, Jayson Werth and Mark Reynolds (30 homers) on its bench. These guys have won batting, home run and RBI titles or helped take teams to World Series. Not one has a deal? Really?

Three weeks ago, MLB Players Associatio­ns president Tony Clark said, “A record number of talented free agents remain unemployed in an industry where revenues and franchise values are at record highs ... This year a significan­t number of teams are engaged in a race to the bottom. This conduct is a fundamenta­l breach of the trust between a team and its fans and threatens the very integrity of our game.”

On Tuesday, the next shoe dropped as the MLB filed a grievance against MLB accusing the A’s, Marlins, Pirates and Rays of failing to abide by the rules on how they spend their revenuesha­ring money.

Whether that is true or not, players will have to recognize that other trends also are underminin­g their salary leverage.

In recent years, analyticsd­riven teams have come to value young controllab­le talent more than ever, while avoiding over-30 vets, especially on long contracts. And many teams now shy from signing top free agents, those who have rejected Qualifying Offers, because of the steep cost in compensati­on that they must pay.

Adding to this youth-over-age, and cheap-over-expensive trend is MLB’s confidence that its drug testing for PEDs and amphetamin­es is effective. That means older players are even less likely to be able to extend their careers through chemistry.

As a result, MLB’s basic model for paying players — underpayin­g players in their prime years in their 20s, while spurning all but the best star players in their 30s — that the sport may have to reinvent the way it does business. The last such upheaval, from the arrival of the first free agent in 1976 through the strike that cancelled the ‘94 World Series, produced almost 20 years of labour war. I covered it all. It was hellish.

“Guys like Adam Lind deserve to be on a big-league team,” the Nats’ Ryan Zimmerman said. “What Adam did last year (.875 OPS), you’re telling me every team’s good? He’s not needed? That’s where I get upset.”

In the past 10 days, three major signings — Eric Hosmer, Yu Darvish and J.D. Martinez for a combined $392 million — has shown that the market for stars, while crimped, is hardly crashing. Perhaps this off-season is just a recalibrat­ion or a financial deep breath by teams that want to save money for next winter’s far more impressive cast of free agents, led by Bryce Harper and Manny Machado.

But plenty of players are mad. They exchange stories, such as an All-Star who got three lowball offers from three tail-end teams, then weeks of silence from the other 27 teams. Softening him up to sign for half of his market price a year ago?

So far, calm players such as the Nationals’ Sean Doolittle are trying to see both sides and figure out where common grounds can be found for “the long-term serious conversati­on that we need to start having — now.

“But it is concerning. I don’t know enough about the moving parts behind the scenes to come right out and call it collusion, because that’s a really serious charge,” said Doolittle, aware that 30 years ago owners were fined $280 million for three straight winters of co-ordinated salary-suppressio­n. “But the later you get in this process, and we’re now in spring training, it does make you wonder what’s going on. Because you hope that’s not the case, right?”

Baseball’s labour-war death wish era need not be repeated. But take heed. Now is the time for measured evaluation, not a rush to condemn either side. Positions, once taken publicly, are hard to walk back.

Players need to understand that the realities of their situation have changed, not through devious actions but by evolution in our understand­ing of the sport. Analytics and PED-testing are both advances for baseball. But they’ve damaged the perceived value of older players while boosting the status of young ones.

Nonetheles­s, players, agents and the union are wise to be skeptical. This month club officials have sworn to me on their grandmothe­r’s graves that they aren’t colluding. They all just got analytical at the same time and came to similar evaluation­s of almost every player’s worth. What a convenient coincidenc­e.

Luckily, baseball has four years to work through this brier patch.

“We’re definitely in a transition period. Because of analytics, the days when 30-year-olds get seven-year deals aren’t going to happen very much anymore,” Zimmerman said. “I don’t blame teams for that. It’s smart. But if owners are going to put so much value into the first part of people’s careers, then (future) players should be compensate­d at the beginning of their career more than they are now.

“Most guys don’t get to the big leagues until they are 24, 25. I’m not a genius, but 24, 25, plus six years (until free agency), is 30 or 31. Look around at how many 30-, 31-year-olds are basically just getting pushed out of the game right now. So, the system, I don’t want to say it’s outdated, but ...”

But it is. Many players fear they won’t get their fair share of MLB’s huge revenues at the beginning or the end of their careers. How do you fix that?

“I don’t even know where to start that discussion,” Zimmerman said. “You’d be switching the entire thing. That’s above my pay grade.”

Rim shot, irony. But someone better figure it out.

Last time MLB had to create a new system, it was a 30-year brawl. Scars still show. Bud Selig is in the Hall of Fame; Marvin Miller isn’t.

Four years seems like plenty of time to avoid a disaster. I promise, it’ll fly past.

 ?? MIKE MCGINNIS GETTY IMAGES ?? Former Toronto Blue Jays Jose Bautista, left, and Adam Lind are still looking for jobs in the big leagues for this season.
MIKE MCGINNIS GETTY IMAGES Former Toronto Blue Jays Jose Bautista, left, and Adam Lind are still looking for jobs in the big leagues for this season.
 ?? KATHY WILLENS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
KATHY WILLENS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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