San Francisco Chronicle

Slow pace of free agency annoys union boss Clark

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Players’ union head Tony Clark took the extraordin­ary step of saying fans should question whether it makes sense to purchase tickets for some teams, responding to Commission­er Rob Manfred’s assertion that free-agent players have failed to adjust their economic demands in a market upended by analytics.

Top free agents Bryce Harper, Manny Machado, Craig Kimbrel and Dallas Keuchel remain unsigned with spring training under way, creating tension during negotiatio­ns on management’s proposals for a pitch clock and new limitation­s on relief pitchers. The union responded with a wider list of plans that include economic initiative­s such as expanding the designated hitter to the National League and altering the amateur draft to make rebuilding less appealing.

“Markets change,” Manfred said Sunday. “We’ve had a lot of change in the game. People think about players differentl­y. They analyze players differentl­y. They negotiate differentl­y.”

Clark led negotiatio­ns in 2016 for a five-year labor deal. Players have been increasing­ly outspoken about their unhappines­s during a second straight slow free-agent market, one that has seen many players take significan­t pay cuts and others remain without deals.

“Players’ eyes don’t deceive them, nor do fans’,” Clark said in a statement Monday. “As players report to spring training and see respected veterans and valued teammates on the sidelines, they are rightfully frustrated by a two-year attack on free agency. Players commit to compete every pitch of every at-bat, and every inning of every game. Yet we’re operating in an environmen­t in which an increasing number of clubs appear to be making little effort to improve their rosters, compete for a championsh­ip or justify the price of a ticket.”

Average attendance has dropped for three straight seasons and last year fell below 30,000 per game for the first time since 2003. Briefly: Miguel Cabrera hit against a pitcher Monday for the first time since rupturing a tendon in his left biceps June 12. The 35-year-old hit, fielded, threw and ran the bases during the Tigers’ first full-squad workout of spring training . ... Charlie Blackmon will be in right field for Colorado this season. Blackmon is a fourtime All-Star who has anchored center field for the Rockies since 2014 and has played more games there than anyone else in franchise history. Ian Desmond is slated to play center field and David Dahl will be in left.

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