Lodi News-Sentinel

Players’ revised proposal generates little progress

- Scott Lauber

Another day of collective bargaining brought about only additional consternat­ion between Major League Baseball and the Players Associatio­n as the calendar inches closer to a delay in the start of the season.

For the second day in a row, the sides met Tuesday at a spring-training ballpark in Jupiter, Fla., with the players taking their turn to revise a previous proposal. The pitch, according to sources familiar with the meeting, included a 5% decrease in the number of two-year players who would be eligible for salary arbitratio­n but annual increases in the minimum salary from a starting point of $775,000 in the first year of the deal.

The players’ proposal was characteri­zed by sources as a proportion­al response to MLB’s Monday proposal, in which the owners agreed to add a total of only $5 million to the bonus pool for pre-arbitratio­n (entry-level) players. But MLB’s numbercrun­ching produced a different interpreta­tion, sources said, with the belief that the reductions in arbitratio­n eligibilit­y didn’t offset the raises in minimum salary.

And once again, neither side has made a proposal that includes changes to their stance on the competitiv­e-balance (luxury) tax, an issue that is shaping up to be central to reaching an agreement.

The sides agreed to meet again in-person Wednesday, although the last two days produced such little movement that MLB reportedly renewed its suggestion to bring in a federal mediator to help push the process along with the scheduled opening day now only 37 days away. The players’ union reportedly maintained that negotiatio­ns should continue without third-party interventi­on.

In the players’ latest proposal, 75% of second-year players would receive salary arbitratio­n, down from 80% in their previous offer but up from 22% in every year since 2013. According to one estimate, approximat­ely six players per year would be affected by the reduction. MLB has been steadfast in not budging on increasing the number of arbitratio­n-eligible players.

On the issue of minimum salary, the players’ proposal calls for a $30,000 increase each year over the five-year agreement to a high of $895,000 in 2026. MLB is proposing either a fixed $630,000 minimum salary or increases from $615,000 to $725,000 by the final year. Baseball’s minimum salary last year ($570,500) trailed the NFL ($660,000), NHL ($750,000), and NBA ($925,258).

One area where the sides appear to be getting closer: the number of teams that would be included in a draft lottery. The players cut back their request from the eight-worst teams to seven one day after MLB raised its bid from the three-worst teams to four.

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