New York Daily News

OWNERS VOTE LOCKOUT

Here’s what happens now during MLB’s first work stoppage since 1994-95

- BY MATTHEW ROBERSON With Tom Biersdorfe­r

Today, Major League Baseball will officially have a work stoppage.

With apparently little progress made in negotiatio­ns on a new Collective Bargaining Agreement, baseball owners unanimousl­y voted to lock out the players, starting at an undetermin­ed time today.

The current CBA expired at 11:59 p.m. EST on Wednesday. The league and the players’ union cut off negotiatio­ns earlier in the day after a meeting that lasted just seven minutes.

This will be the ninth work stoppage in MLB history. Though it’s the first since the 1994-95 players strike that wiped out part of the 1994 season, along with the playoffs and World Series.

After three days of face-to-face talks, the two sides were no closer to an agreement than they were a month ago. The lockout is viewed by many around the game as a necessary evil if they want to get anything done.

The lockout only becomes a true disaster if it cancels games. The whole point of doing it now is that it provides enough time for a resolution before spring training begins in late February. But as long as the players are locked out, the following things will be true:

No free agent signings, trades involving players on the 40-man

roster or other types of player movement involving members of the MLB Players Associatio­n will be permitted.

Players will not be able to access any team facilities. While most players retreat to their hometown in the offseason, or some non-affiliated gym in a warm-weather state, players like Jameson Taillon (who has been rehabbing at Yankee Stadium) will have to find somewhere else to workout.

The annual Winter Meetings,

typically baseball’s largest summit of executives and media members, would be canceled. They were originally scheduled for Dec. 6-9 in Orlando.

The Rule 5 draft, which had been slated for Dec. 9, would also be postponed.

Arbitratio­n hearings would be halted until the lockout is over.

Seiya Suzuki, the Japanese star looking to make a stateside jump, will have his 30-day “posting” window paused until the lockout is over.

Some of the major talking points in the negotiatio­ns between the players’ union and the owners include postseason expansion, pace of play reforms, draft rules, possible payroll floors, how to address rampant and obvious tanking and developing one standardiz­ed baseball that is both easy for pitchers to grip and not overwhelmi­ngly “dead” or “juiced.” Players will also want to put a stop to service time manipulati­on that often delays them from hitting free agency.

WHAT CAN HAPPEN

The internatio­nal signing period, which was moved from July to January due to the pandemic, would go on as planned. Amateur players are not affected by an MLB lockout. Both the Yankees and the Mets got some of their top current prospects from the internatio­nal signing period, with the Yankees getting shortstop Oswald Peraza from Venezuela and outfielder Jasson Dominguez from the Dominican Republic. Francisco Alvarez, the Mets’ catching prospect who won their Minor League Player of the Year award in 2021, was signed out of Venezuela in 2018. Ronny Mauricio, the club’s third-ranked prospect by MLB Pipeline, was an internatio­nal signing from the Dominican Republic as well.

Teams could still technicall­y make trades, they’d just have to involve players not on the 40-man roster, meaning minor leaguers could still theoretica­lly get dealt. Minor leaguers are not represente­d by the Players’ Associatio­n.

Teams with job openings can contact, interview and hire potential managers and coaches. This is particular­ly important for the Mets (who still do not have a manager) and the Yankees (who are looking to hire two more hitting coaches, an extra pitching coach, and a first base coach).

 ?? AP ?? Baseball commish Rob Manfred and players union boss Tony Clark remain far apart on new Collective Bargaining Agreement, and baseball owners have voted unanimousl­y to begin a lockout.
AP Baseball commish Rob Manfred and players union boss Tony Clark remain far apart on new Collective Bargaining Agreement, and baseball owners have voted unanimousl­y to begin a lockout.

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