The Norwalk Hour

MLB players’ union rejects internatio­nal draft proposal

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NEW YORK — Major League Baseball’s goal of an internatio­nal amateur draft was thwarted again when the players’ associatio­n rejected management’s final offer on Monday and retained direct draft-pick compensati­on for free agents.

The quirky tie between the two provisions was establishe­d in the March 10 agreement that ended the 99-day lockout and preserved a 162-game season. The sides gave themselves until July 25 to reach an agreement on an internatio­nal draft, which MLB has sought since 2002, and specified the draft-pick provision would be dropped in the event of a deal.

There was little movement over the four months. The union made an offer during a Zoom meeting Saturday, and MLB presented what it termed its final proposal in an email Sunday. Union officials forwarded that plan to the players’ executive board and said they planned to reject it.

Hearing no opposition, union deputy executive director Bruce Meyer telephoned deputy commission­er Dan Halem with the rejection at about 3:45 p.m. Monday.

The decision, announced about eight hours before the deadline, was the final step needed to complete the collective bargaining agreement that expires on Dec. 1, 2026. Retaining compensati­on is likely to limit the market for some older players set to become free agents, a group set to include Anthony Rizzo, J.D. Martinez, Chris Sale and Charlie Morton.

“Each of our proposals was focused on protecting against the scenario that all players fear the most — the erosion of our game on the world stage, with internatio­nal players becoming the latest victim in baseball’s prioritiza­tion of efficiency over fundamenta­l fairness,” the union said in a statement. “The league’s responses fell well short of anything players could consider a fair deal.”

As a result, the internatio­nal signing bonus pool total for 2022-23 will remain at $167 million, its level in 2021-22, according to a side letter between MLB and the union whose contents were divulged to The Associated Press. The total will increase starting in 2023-24 by any correspond­ing percentage rise in industry revenue since 2019 — the last year before the pandemic.

The decision keeps in place a system of qualifying offers for free agents that began in 2012. A club can make a qualifying offer following the World Series to a free agent who has been with the team since opening day, a one-year contract for the average of the top 125 deals by average annual value. Last year’s figure was $18.4 million.

If a player rejects a qualifying offer and signs elsewhere, the signing team is subject to a loss of one or two amateur draft picks and a reduction in internatio­nal signing bonus pool allotment.

Craig Kimbrel and Dallas Keuchel, unhappy with offers during the offseason and spring training, delayed signing in 2019 until June, after the draft pick compensati­on no longer was attached.

Top players have found robust markets. This year’s free-agent group is headed by Aaron Judge, Jacob deGrom and Trea Turner.

“We are disappoint­ed the MLBPA chose the status quo over transition­ing to an internatio­nal draft that would have guaranteed future internatio­nal players larger signing bonuses and better educationa­l opportunit­ies, while enhancing transparen­cy to best address the root causes of corruption in the current system,” MLB said in a statement.

An amateur draft was establishe­d for residents of the United States and Canada in 1965 and extended to residents of U.S. territorie­s such as Puerto Rico in 1990. MLB has pushed for a similar internatio­nal amateur draft, saying part of its rationale was to combat illicit agreements made before players are age eligible — at least 17 at the time of signing or 16 at the time as long as the player turns 17 by the Sept. 1 of the contract’s first season.

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