Times Standard (Eureka)

MLB lockout talks to resume with union offer

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK » Locked out baseball players plan to make a counteroff­er to management on Monday, 11 days after clubs gave the union a proposal when the snailpaced negotiatio­ns resumed following a 42-day break.

The players’ associatio­n asked Major League Baseball on Thursday to schedule the negotiatin­g session, which is to take place in-person.

There is dwindling time to reach an agreement in time for spring training to start as scheduled on Feb. 16.

The scheduled March 31 opening day is also increasing­ly threatened, given the need for players to report, go through COVID-19 protocols and have at least three weeks of workouts that include a minimal number of exhibition games.

Players don’t receive paychecks until the regular season, and owners get only a small percentage of their revenue during the offseason. Those factors create negotiatio­ns that are a game of chicken until mid-to-late February, when significan­t economic losses become more imminent.

When owners made their new proposal during a video meeting on Jan. 13, players reacted coolly and said they would contact MLB when they were ready to respond.

Baseball’s ninth work stoppage, its first since 1995, started Dec. 2 following the expiration of a five-year labor contract.

Unhappy with a 4% drop in payrolls to 2015 levels, players have asked for significan­t change that includes more liberalize­d free agency and salary

arbitratio­n eligibilit­y.

Management says it will not consider changes to free agency, salary arbitratio­n or revenue sharing but made the latest offer in an attempt to propel talks.

Six seasons of major league service have been required for free agency since 1976. Salary arbitratio­n eligibilit­y since 2013 has been three seasons plus the top 22% by service time of players with at least two years but less than three years.

MLB proposed to replace the “super two” arbitratio­n group with additional spending for the entire twoplus class based on performanc­e. Players have proposed have expanding eligibilit­y to all players with at least two seasons.

Players also want to reduce revenue sharing, which would take money away from smaller-market teams and allow large-market clubs to retain a higher percentage of cash — presumably to be spent on salaries.

The luxury tax threshold was $210 million in 2021, and MLB proposed raising the threshold to $214 million. Players have asked to raise the threshold to $245 million and to eliminate non-tax penalties.

Teams also want to expand from 10 postseason teams to 14, and players have offered 12.

Both sides have proposed a draft lottery aimed to spur competitio­n on the field but differ on how many teams to include.

In their latest proposal, teams offered to address the union’s concern over club service-time manipulati­on by allowing a team to gain an additional draft pick for an accomplish­ment by a player not yet eligible for arbitratio­n, such as a high finish in award voting.

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