Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Bauer reinstated by arbitrator

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK » Trevor Bauer was reinstated Thursday by Major League Baseball’s independen­t arbitrator, allowing the pitcher to resume his career at the start of the 2023 season.

The Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher was given an unpreceden­ted twoseason suspension without pay by baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred on April 29 for violating the league’s domestic violence and sexual assault policy after a San Diego woman said Bauer beat and sexually abused her last year, an accusation the pitcher denied.

The players’ associatio­n filed a grievance on Bauer’s behalf, and a three-person panel headed by independen­t arbitrator Martin Scheinman started hearing the case on May 23.

Major League Baseball said Scheinman upheld a 194-game suspension but reinstated Bauer immediatel­y. As a result, Bauer will lose pay for the final 144 games of last season and for the first 50 games of next season, through May 23 if there are no postponeme­nts.

The Dodgers will have to decide whether to retain Bauer. If they cut him, they would be responsibl­e for the remaining salary he is owed.

“While we believe a longer suspension was warranted, MLB will abide by the neutral arbitrator’s decision, which upholds baseball’s longest-ever active player suspension for sexual assault or domestic violence,” MLB said in a statement. “We understand this process was difficult for the witnesses involved and we thank them for their participat­ion.”

The 2020 National League Cy Young Award winner’s original suspension covered 324 games without pay and if left in place would have cost him just over $60 million from a $102 million, threeyear contract that began last year.

Bauer’s accuser sought but was

denied a restrainin­g order against him. Los Angeles prosecutor­s said in February there was insufficie­nt evidence to prove the woman’s accusation­s beyond a reasonable doubt.

Bauer, who hasn’t played since the allegation­s surfaced and MLB began investigat­ing, repeatedly has said that everything that happened between him and the woman was consensual.

Bauer was placed on administra­tive leave on July 2, 2021, under the domestic violence policy, a leave extended 13 times.

Bauer sued his accuser in federal court, a move that came less than three months after prosecutor­s decided not to file criminal charges against the pitcher. Bauer named the woman and one of her attorneys, Niranjan Fred Thiagaraja­h, as defendants in the lawsuit.

The lawsuit said that “the damage to Mr. Bauer has been extreme” after the woman alleged that he had choked her into unconsciou­sness, punched her repeatedly and had anal sex with her without her consent during two sexual encounters last year.

The pitcher has said the two engaged in rough sex at his Pasadena home at her suggestion and followed guidelines they agreed to in advance.

Bauer has said in a past statement sent through his representa­tives that he had a “casual and wholly consensual sexual relationsh­ip from 2013-2018” with the woman, which began when he was pitching for the Triple-A team in Columbus.

 ?? D. ROSS CAMERON — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Trevor Bauer pauses while working for the Dodgers against the Giants during a 2021 game in San Francisco.
D. ROSS CAMERON — ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Trevor Bauer pauses while working for the Dodgers against the Giants during a 2021 game in San Francisco.

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