The Commercial Appeal

MLB players push for changes

- Ronald Blum

New York Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole and other baseball players will be pushing for changes that make more teams competitiv­e as they think about looming labor negotiatio­ns that could lead to a work stoppage at the start of 2022.

Many veterans who are not top stars have taken substantia­l paycuts in recent years. Others have turned down cuts and retired.

The players’ associatio­n is upset that some teams have lowered major league payroll in favor of rebuilding with youth, a process it calls tanking and that management defends as long-allowed refocusing on retooling for long-term gain.

“For me, it just goes back to competitiv­eness,” Cole said Thursday. “We have a lot of great veterans that offer great entertainm­ent, a quality style of baseball, that continuous­ly are being pushed out because of surplus value on younger players is too high – the analytics are driving the game in that direction. And we want to have an open field for the clubs to be able to find talent, find surplus value.”

Cole is starting the second season of a $324 million, nine-year contract, the largest deal among pitchers. He was elected in December to the union’s eight-man executive subcommitt­ee, its highest-ranking policymaki­ng body.

The average Major League Baseball salary dropped for an unpreceden­ted third straight year, even before the shortened season caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. The players’ associatio­n calculated the 2020 average would have been $3.89 million if a full season had been played. That was down 4.2% from the 2019 average of $4.05 million and represente­d a 5.2% decrease from the record average of just under $4.1 million in 2017.

Because the pandemic caused players to receive roughly 37% of pay last year, the actual average plunged to $1.59 million, its lowest since 1998.

“There’s always concern when the average salary is dropping,” said Yankees reliever Zack Britton, also an executive committee member. “Yeah, definitely issues that we would like to change. And I think MLB probably has issues that they would like to change, too. But to the best of my knowledge, we’re going to work through those things.”

Stars are getting their money. Traded from Boston to the Dodgers, outfielder Mookie Betts negotiated a $365 million, 12-year contract during the pandemic and helped Los Angeles win its first World Series title since 1988.

Betts’ deal is second behind outfielder Mike Trout’s $426.5 million, 12-year contract with the Los Angeles Angels. Cole also trails outfielder Bryce Harper’s $330 million, 13-year contract with Philadelph­ia and outfielder Giancarlo Stanton’s $325 million, 13-year agreement he signed with Miami before he was traded to the New York Yankees.

San Diego shortstop Fernando Tatis Jr., who has played just two major league seasons, has a pending $340 million, 14-year contract that could be finalized this week, the longest deal in baseball history.

Mark Melancon, a pitcher who joined the Padres this week as a free agent, praised the small-market Padres for not being among the cutters.

“It’s great, because there are so many teams that are doing the opposite,” Melancon said. “It’s sad when there’s only 30 teams out there and you get a sense that a lot of them don’t want to win, so to see San Diego step up and being in a little bit of a smaller market is fun and exciting. It’s a shame to see big-market teams kind of dump.”

Cole and Britton are among four clients of agent Scott Boras on the executive subcommitt­ee, joined by Washington pitcher Max Scherzer and Seattle pitcher James Paxton. The other members are Houston catcher Jason Castro, New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor, St. Louis pitcher Andrew Miller and Toronto shortstop Marcus Semien.

Castro, Paxton and Semien were free agents this offseason, experienci­ng the slow pandemic market firsthand. Lindor was traded by Cleveland, which did not want to lose him as a free agent at the end of this season.

Baseball was interrupte­d by eight work stoppages, but none since the 7 1/2-month strike caused cancellati­on of the 1994 World Series, The collective bargaining agreement expires Dec. 1.

The current five-year agreement includes steeper luxury tax rates that have caused some clubs to stay below the threshold in some years. The union filed a grievance in February 2018 against Miami, Oakland, Pittsburgh and Tampa Bay that accused them of improperly spending revenue-sharing money, a case that is still pending. The union lost a grievance last year claiming the Chicago Cubs improperly delayed star Kris Bryant’s debut at the start of the 2015 season in an effort to delay the third baseman’s eligibilit­y for free agency.

Cole said he learned how to be a player representa­tive from talking with and watching Neil Walker, Tony Watson, Jared Hughes and Justin Morneau in Pittsburgh, and that he tried to teach Jameson Taillon, his new Yankees teammate.

“We want people to be forward thinking in all different areas of the game,” Cole said. “But when it comes down to it, if we have clubs that aren’t competing and they aren’t doing right by their fan base, and clubs that win multiple World Series and then just tear it all down, I worry about losing a generation of fans. I worry if we’re doing fans in those cities into disservice.

“So for me, obviously, economics is important – I mean, you can’t ignore any of those types of things. But for me, competitiv­eness is important. I would like to see the middle of divisions, the middle of the league incentiviz­ed to compete. And I would like to stop seeing teams competing penalized for competing, as well. Here’s maybe a little bit of an imbalance there that I think we can correct going forward.”

 ?? KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole (above left, with Jordan Montgomery) is among players pushing for changes that make more teams competitiv­e as they think about looming labor negotiatio­ns.
KIM KLEMENT/USA TODAY SPORTS Yankees starting pitcher Gerrit Cole (above left, with Jordan Montgomery) is among players pushing for changes that make more teams competitiv­e as they think about looming labor negotiatio­ns.

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