Lodi News-Sentinel

MLB, players need breakthrou­gh before deadline

- Scott Lauber THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER

In need of a breakthrou­gh to avoid a delayed — and shortened — regular season, Major League Baseball and the Players Associatio­n increasing­ly appear headed for a breakdown instead.

A fourth consecutiv­e day of collective bargaining Thursday brought a continuati­on of the mutual game of chicken, with the players making incrementa­l changes on two issues: service-time accrual and the amateur draft order, according to sources familiar with the dialogue. In response, MLB and the owners were once again said to be unimpresse­d by both the narrow scope of the players’ revised offers and the amount of movement they would generate.

With Monday looming as the deadline set by MLB to reach an agreement or begin cancelling games from the 162-game schedule and withholdin­g the players’ pay, the sides are scheduled to meet again Friday at a spring-training ballpark in Jupiter, Fla., where they have negotiated since Monday. But as long as neither MLB nor the players make a big move on a major issue — the competitiv­e-balance (luxury) tax, for instance — the odds of a deal within the next four days are somewhere between slim and none.

If MLB follows through on canceling games, sources said the players intend to deny the owners’ proposal for expanded playoffs, which would be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The players also would pull back their agreement to wear commercial patches and decals on their uniforms, another revenue driver for the owners.

The players, locked out by the owners since Dec. 2, continue to maintain that MLB can rescind the lockout at any time, open spring training, and even begin the season without a collective bargaining agreement while continuing to negotiate. The owners haven’t indicated a willingnes­s to do that, according to sources.

Both sides have expressed “frustratio­n,” a word used by multiple sources this week, with the minor revisions to previous proposals on many of the core economic issues over which they are far apart, including minimum salary and a bonus pool for pre-arbitratio­n players. MLB also had been hoping for a more wide-ranging proposal from the players.

The players’ latest offer centered on service time. In an attempt to prevent teams from delaying the promotion of a player to gain an additional year of contractua­l control, as the Chicago Cubs notoriousl­y did with Kris Bryant, the union proposed awarding a full year of service time to rookies who receive votes for endof-season awards or achieve statistica­l benchmarks.

Minor-league players on 40-man rosters are the untold stories of MLB’s lockout

In a previous proposal, the players asked for that year of service time for infielders, catchers, and designated hitters who finish in the top seven in Wins Above Replacemen­t (WAR) and outfielder­s and pitchers who finish in the top 20. They revised those numbers to top 5 for the first category of players and top 15 for the second, an adjustment that the union estimated would impact 20 players over the fiveyear agreement rather than 29.

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