Morning Sun

Talks resume after 42-day gap with little progress

- By Ronald Blum

Baseball labor talks to end the lockout resumed Thursday for the first time in 1 ½ months with little evident progress during a bargaining session that lasted about an hour, jeopardizi­ng a timely start to spring training,

Major League Baseball imposed the lockout on Dec. 2 as soon as the five-year collective bargaining contract expired, a few hours after talks broke off.

The discussion­s Thursday were the first on core economic issues following a 42-day gap, and MLB made proposals it hoped would at least start to generate momentum.

After MLB made its proposal, the sides caucused. The players’ associatio­n then told MLB it will respond but did not commit to a specific date.

While the sides were back in bargaining, they met just five weeks before the scheduled start of spring training workouts on Feb. 16. Given the time needed for players to travel to Florida and Arizona, and then to go through COVID-19 protocols before taking the field, the prospects of a timely start are diminishin­g.

A deal would need to be reached by late February or early March to allow the minimum

time for training ahead of the current opening day, set for March 31.

MLB’S proposal contained no movement on free-agent eligibilit­y or luxury tax thresholds, two people familiar with the negotiatio­ns told The Associated Press. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because no public comment was authorized.

Management did backtrack on its proposal to start a bonus pool that would replace salary arbitratio­n for players with at least three but less than six years of major league service.

MLB maintained it proposal to replace arbitratio­n with a bonus pool for the so-called “super twos,” the top 22% by service of those with at least two seasons

but less than three.

Teams proposed to address the union’s concern over club servicetim­e manipulati­on by allowing a team to gain an additional draft pick for an accomplish­ment by a player not yet eligible for arbitratio­n, such as a high finish in award voting.

There was no movement on the sides’ different stands on luxury tax levels, minimum salaries or on the union’s desire to decrease revenue sharing, which would leave largemarke­t teams with more money to spend.

The luxury tax threshold was $210 million in 2021, and MLB proposed raising the threshold to $214 million. Players have asked to lift the threshold to $245 million and to eliminate non-tax penalties.

In addition, MLB wants to expand the postseason from 10 teams to 14, and the union is offering 12.

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