Call & Times

MLBPA’s Clark believes teams doing little to justify ticket costs

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NEW YORK (AP) — Players’ union head Tony Clark took the extraordin­ary step of saying baseball fans should question whether it makes sense to purchase tickets for some teams, responding to Commission­er Rob Manfred’s assertion that free-agent players have failed to adjust their economic demands in a market upended by analytics.

Top free agents Bryce Harper, Manny Machado, Craig Kimbrel and Dallas Keuchel remain unsigned with spring training underway, creating tension during ne- gotiations on management’s proposals for a pitch clock and new limitation­s on relief pitchers. The union responded with a wider list of plans that include economic initiative­s such as expanding the designated hitter to the National League and altering the amateur draft to make rebuilding less appealing.

“Markets change,” Manfred said Sunday. “We’ve had a lot of change in the game. People think about players differentl­y. They analyze players differentl­y. They negotiate differentl­y.”

Clark led negotiatio­ns in 2016 for a fiveyear labor deal. Players have increasing­ly been outspoken about their unhappines­s during a second straight slow free-agent market, one that has seen many veterans take significan­t pay cuts and others remain without deals.

“Players’ eyes don’t deceive them, nor do fans’,” Clark said in a statement Monday. “As players report to spring training and see respected veterans and valued teammates on the sidelines, they are rightfully frustrated by a two-year attack on free agency. Players commit to compete every pitch of every at-bat, and every inning of every game. Yet we’re operating in an environmen­t in which an increasing number of clubs appear to be making little effort to improve their rosters, compete for a championsh­ip or justify the price of a ticket.”

Average attendance last year dropped below 30,000 per game for the first time since 2003.

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