San Antonio Express-News

Gap between owners, players is narrowing

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — For all the vitriol, Major League Baseball owners and locked-out players have closed the gap in recent weeks and are negotiatin­g on similar frameworks for a new collective bargaining agreement.

With the lockout in its 96th day Monday, the sides remained apart to various degrees on three of the most significan­t items: the luxury tax, pre-arbitratio­n bonus pool and minimum salary.

Openers on March 31 were among 91 games already canceled and commission­er Rob Manfred appeared to be on the verge of calling off more.

“This is a horrible, horrible situation. Everyone on the Yankees, everyone in Major League Baseball shares the blame, players, owners, executives for where we are. It’s a really bad look, especially (with) what’s going on in the world,” Yankees president Randy Levine said Monday on the team’s YES Network. “We all look pretty bad. … It’s embarrassi­ng to be where we are.”

In an industry where payrolls project to total in the $4 billion range, the percentage difference­s on some items do not appear to be insurmount­able.

The sides appear to be about $15 million apart on the minimum salary for this year, $20 million for 2023 and $25 million for 2024, each less than 1 percent of payrolls. This assumes about half of players in the major leagues at any given time are impacted by the minimum.

Difference­s are greater in the final two seasons, when the union is asking for costof-living increases.

The gap in the new pre-arbitratio­n bonus pool is $50 million this year, rising to $70 million by 2026. But, again, the percentage of overall payroll affected by this item is relatively small, under 2 percent.

And then there is the most divisive issue, luxury tax thresholds. The sides are $18 million apart this year, a difference rising to $33 million by 2026.

How much is each additional $1 million in threshold likely to produce in spending on players? There’s no exact formula.

With much of this year’s free-agent class already signed, there are few stars other than Freddie Freeman and Carlos Correa who could drive a team above the threshold.

MLB is concerned a higher 2022 figure would lead to bigger threshold numbers in later years, causing greater payroll disparity and making it more costly for midand small-market clubs to retain their stars.

The union thinks it has moved toward clubs by retreating from proposals for more liberalize­d free agency and the restoratio­n of salary arbitratio­n for eligibilit­y for all players with at least two years of major league service. Players also say they would agree to uniform and helmet advertisem­ents, to a speedier process for a pitch clock and shift limits and to expand the playoffs, though the union prefers 12 teams and MLB would like 14.

MLB thinks it has increased money going to players by expanding the designated hitter to the National League, dropping direct free agent compensati­on, increasing slot values for amateur draft picks, boosting the postseason pool and improving the pension plan.

Both sides are close to an agreement on an amateur draft lottery. Management has offered the top five selections and players asked for the top six, with some difference­s on limitation­s for teams participat­ion in consecutiv­e years.

Despite moving toward each other, the sides remain headed to a lost season unless they find a compromise.

“That’s a mind-boggling, horrid, horrid thought,” Levine said. “Shame on all of us if it ever gets to that.”

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