The Reporter (Vacaville)

MLB players withdraw free agency shift as labor negotiatio­ns resume

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Locked-out Major League Baseball players removed the first of three major obstacles to a labor contract, withdrawin­g their proposal for more liberalize­d free agency when the sides met face-to-face Monday for the first time since the management lockout began Dec. 1.

During a bargaining session that lasted a little more than two hours at the Midtown Manhattan office of the Major League Baseball Players’ Associatio­n, the union also modified its revenue-sharing proposal, asking the amount shifted from big markets to smaller ones be cut by what it said was $30 million, a figure management disputed. Players earlier asked for a $100 million reduction.

Management is adamant not to decrease revenue sharing. Clubs also maintain they will not budge on salary arbitratio­n eligibilit­y, which players want to restore to its pre-1987 level when it was two years of major league service.

Another meeting in the contentiou­s talks is scheduled for Tuesday, the first consecutiv­e sessions since the bargaining collapse last fall that led to baseball’s ninth work stoppage, its first since 1995.

Veteran reliever Andrew Miller was the only player to attend the two-hour bargaining session.

Colorado Rockies owner Dick Monfort, the chairman of baseball’s labor policy committee, was part of a four-man delegation from Major League Baseball, arriving at the union office shortly before 1 p.m. He was accompanie­d by Deputy Commission­er Dan Halem, executive vice president Morgan Sword and senior vice president Patrick Houlihan.

The sides planned to

meet again Tuesday, though it was not certain whether Miller and Montfort would attend.

The counteroff­er by the players’ associatio­n was delivered 11 days after clubs gave the union a proposal when the snail-paced negotiatio­ns resumed following a 42-day break.

ORTIZ, CLEMENS, BONDS TO BE CLOSE CALLS FOR HALL >>

Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, with eight MVPs and seven Cy Young Awards between them, are in the bottom of the last inning in their Hall of Fame bids. Either they get in Tuesday — and it’s going to be close — or Cooperstow­n may elude them entirely.

David Ortiz knows a thing or two about clutch swings late in the game. But he might put this one away in his first at-bat.

Bonds, Clemens and Ortiz appear to be the only players with a chance at Hall of Fame enshrineme­nt when results are unveiled Tuesday, with Ortiz most likely to get in on his first try.

Bonds and Clemens are in their 10th and final year on the ballot for the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America. Due largely to allegation­s of performanc­eenhancing drug use, they have been unable to reach the 75% threshold to earn

a place among baseball’s greats.

Men’s basketball AUBURN FLIES TO NO. 1 IN AP TOP 25 >>

War Eagle is flying high over men’s college basketball for the first time in history.

A barely ranked afterthoug­ht to begin the season, Auburn climbed past Gonzaga to No. 1 in the AP Top 25 poll. The Tigers beat Kentucky over the weekend for their 15th consecutiv­e win, then scooped up 45 of 61 first-place votes to become the nation’s topranked team for the first time since the poll began with the 1948-49 season.

The Bulldogs dropped to No. 2 with 15 first-place votes. Arizona remained third and earned the other No. 1 vote.

Women’s basketball OLE MISS ENTERS AP WOMEN’S POLL FOR 1ST TIME IN 15 YEARS >>

Unbeaten on the road this season, Mississipp­i entered The Associated Press women’s basketball poll for the first time in 15 years, coming in at No. 24. That unblemishe­d mark will be put to the test Thursday when the Rebels visit No. 1 South Carolina in a reschedule­d game. The Gamecocks received 29 of the 30 firstplace votes from a national media panel to remain the top team in the poll.

Stanford, North Carolina State, Tennessee and Louisville round out the top five.

Olympics

US NAMES 222 TO OLYMPIC TEAM >> The 222-person U.S. Olympic roster includes four athletes making their fifth trip to the Games: Shaun White and Lindsey Jacobellis in snowboardi­ng, Katie Uhlaender in skeleton and John Shuster in curling.

There are 115 men and 107 women on the roster, which ties for the secondbigg­est contingent the U.S. has ever sent to the Games. The opening ceremony for the Beijing Olympics is Feb. 4, with some of the curling action beginning on Feb. 2.

Most athletes had already been nominated by their respective sports for the Olympic team. The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee’s announceme­nt makes their spots official.

Mikaela Shiffrin comes into Beijing with two gold medals. If she wins one more, she’ll snap a tie with Ted Ligety and Andrea Mead-Lawrence for the most of all American Alpine skiers.

Soccer 6 REPORTED KILLED IN STAMPEDE AT AFRICAN CUP SOCCER GAME >>

At least six people have died in a stampede outside a stadium hosting an African Cup of Nations soccer game in Cameroon, an official said.

Naseri Paul Biya, governor of the central region of Cameroon, said there could be more casualties.

The stampede happened as crowds struggled to get access to Olembe Stadium in the Cameroon capital of Yaounde to watch the host country play Comoros in a last 16 knockout game in Africa’s top soccer tournament.*

 ?? BUTCH DILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Auburn guard Allen Flanigan reacts after a score during the second half against Kentucky on Saturday in Auburn, Ala.
BUTCH DILL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Auburn guard Allen Flanigan reacts after a score during the second half against Kentucky on Saturday in Auburn, Ala.

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