USA TODAY International Edition

Locked- out MLB players stand together

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist

IRVING, Texas – The first day of baseball’s labor war produced hostility, resentment, anxiety and apprehensi­on as MLB and the players union departed town Thursday with a lockout officially on.

The two sides arrived into town Sunday with hopes of reaching an agreement – or at least making progress by Wednesday night’s deadline – but instead couldn’t even agree on the legitimacy of the proposals from each side.

The players, with about 65 in town for the union executive board meetings, were visibly angry at the official lockout announceme­nt at 12: 01 a. m. ET Thursday and agitated by the league’s decision to scrub all of their images from the league’s website, MLB. com, replacing them with generic silhouette­s.

Several players, starting with pitchers Joe Musgrove, James Taillon, Trevor Williams, Lucas Giolito and Taijuan Walker, changed their profile Twitter pictures to those blank avatars, showing solidarity among the players.

Commission­er Rob Manfred said the decision by its website was for legal reasons, with several teams such as the Phillies informing their local media that all employees were prohibited from speaking to reporters with the exception of its ownership group.

There will be no restrictio­ns on the players speaking to the media during the lockout, executive director Tony Clark said during his press conference hours after Manfred’s.

Really, Clark says, there’s no reason for a lockout in the first place, denying Manfred’s assertion that a lockout was necessary to accelerate bargaining

negotiatio­ns to avoid a disruption of the 2022 season.

“People need pressure sometimes to get an agreement,” Manfred said in a sparsely attended press conference at Globe Life Field in Arlington, “but candidly we didn’t feel that sense of pressure from the other side during the course of this week. The tool available to you under the ( National Labor Relations) Act is to apply economic leverage.”

Manfred said it was too big of a risk to continue negotiatio­ns without enforcing a lockout after the damages caused after the 1994- 95 strike that canceled the World Series.

“If you play without an agreement, you are vulnerable to a strike at any point in time,” Manfred said. “What happened in 1994 is the MLBPA picked August, when we were most vulnerable because of the proximity of the large revenue dollars associated with the postseason. We wanted to take that option away and try to force the parties to deal with the issues and get an agreement now.”

Clark and Bruce Meyer, the union’s lead negotiator, strongly disagreed there was a need for a lockout, saying they wanted to continue negotiatin­g.

“From the outset,” Clark said, “the league has been more interested in the appearance of bargaining than bargaining itself. ... The league was not required to declare a lockout. The decision to impose a lockout was a conscious decision made by the league. And contrary to the statement that imposing a lockout would be helpful in bringing negotiatio­ns to a conclusion, players considered it unnecessar­y and provocativ­e.

“This lockout won’t pressure or intimidate players into a deal that they don’t believe is fair.”

Manfred and MLB negotiator­s said the union was asking for radical proposals, including the reduction of free agency from six years to five years, and salary arbitratio­n eligibilit­y lowered from three years to two years, along with a $ 100 million reduction in revenue sharing.

Yet the union said MLB negotiator­s were being unrealisti­c seeking to replace salary arbitratio­n with a statistica­l- based system along with other measures to hurt the game’s competitiv­e integrity.

They wound up spending only about 31⁄ hours in negotiatio­ns during their 2 three- day stay. Their final round of talks lasted seven minutes when the union refused to concede to MLB’s request to drop the proposals for free agency, revenue sharing and service time manipulati­on to hear a counteroffer.

“We had hoped that the league would seriously engage here in Dallas,” Clark said. “Unfortunat­ely that wasn’t necessaril­y the case. We made proposals that move significantly toward MLB on a number of key economic issues. The league refused repeatedly to make counteroffers on any of those core issues.”

Clark even cracked that MLB spent more time crafting Manfred’s open letter to the fans after the imposed lockout than negotiatin­g a deal in Texas with no proposals addressing core economic issues.

“It would have been beneficial to the process to have spent as much time negotiatin­g in the room,” Clark said, “as it appeared was spent on the letter.”

Said Meyer: “It’s a whole list of topics that they’ve told us they will not negotiate. They will not agree, for example, to expand salary arbitratio­n eligibilit­y.

They will not agree to any path for any player to achieve free agency earlier. They will not agree to anything that would allow players to have additional ways to get service time to combat service time manipulati­on. They told us on all of those things they will not agree.

“We, on the other hand, indicated that we’re prepared to continue talking about anything and everything and we haven’t drawn any lines in the sand on anything.”

Really, the only issues the two sides appeared to make movement on during their talks was MLB’s willingnes­s to eliminate the qualifying offer and draft pick compensati­on for free agency while the union agreed to expand the playoffs from 10 teams to 12 teams with realignmen­t. MLB originally proposed a 14- team playoff field.

Manfred argued that the union’s proposals for players reaching free agency earlier and expanding salary arbitratio­n to players with two years of service instead of three years would damage small- market teams.

“We already have teams in smaller markets that struggle to compete,” Manfred said. “Shortening the period of time that they can control players makes it even harder for them to compete. It’s also bad for fans in those markets. The most negative reaction we have is when a player leaves via free agency. We don’t see that making it earlier, available easier, we don’t see that as a positive. …

“Things like a shortened reserve period, a $ 100 million reduction in revenue sharing and salary arbitratio­n for the whole two- year class are bad for the sport, bad for the fans and bad for competitiv­e balance.”

Countered Meyer: “We feel our proposals would positively affect competitiv­e balance, competitiv­e integrity. We’ve all seen in recent years the problem with teams that don’t seem to be trying their hardest to win games or put the best teams on the field.”

Manfred and MLB argued that the $ 1.7 billion spent in free agent contracts this winter – including $ 1 billion on Wednesday before the deadline – shows that the current CBA has worked well for the players.

Meyer said the rash of signings, including six players who received contracts in excess of $ 100 million, only drew suspicion about clubs’ past spending behavior.

“The fact that this year there seems to be more activity sooner by clubs in free agency than a normal year,” Meyer said, “raises more questions than it answers about all the other years. One good week of free agency doesn’t address all the negative trends that we’ve seen.”

While the two sides agreed to soon resume negotiatio­ns, no timetable has been set. The soft deadline for reaching an agreement is Feb. 1, two weeks before the start of spring training. They likely would need an agreement by March 1 to avoid the disruption of the regular season, which is scheduled to begin March 31.

“Speculatin­g about drop- dead deadlines at this point is not productive,” Manfred said. “So, I’m not going to do it.”

It leaves baseball in a deep freeze, halting all major league signings, trades, and transactio­ns, and prevents players from working out at team facilities or using the team’s health care staff.

“Look, it’s not a good thing for the sport,” Manfred said. “It’s not something that we undertake lightly. We understand it’s bad for our business. We took it out of a desire to drive the process forward to an agreement now. It is my hope and expectatio­n that the parties will get back to the table and get an agreement done.”

 ?? LM OTERO/ AP ?? MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred cited small- market concerns.
LM OTERO/ AP MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred cited small- market concerns.
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 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The lockout is MLB’s first stoppage since 1994- 95.
USA TODAY SPORTS The lockout is MLB’s first stoppage since 1994- 95.

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