A Dark Day for Baseball

By now, every baseball fan on the planet is aware that negotiations between Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association to establish a new Collective Bargaining Agreement have ended on less-than-favorable terms, with MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announcing that the league is canceling the first two series of the 2022 regular season.

The calendar dictates that we’re not going to be able to play the first two series of the regular season,” Manfred told reporters. “Those games are officially canceled.”

Shortly after his announcement, Manfred posted this letter on Twitter:

To Our Fans:

I had hoped against hope that I would not have to be in the position of canceling games. We worked hard to avoid an outcome that is bad for our fans, bad for our players and bad for our clubs.

I want to assure our fans that our failure to reach an agreement was not due to a lack of effort on the part of either party. The Players came here for nine days, worked hard and tried to make a deal. I appreciate their effort.

Our committee of Club representatives committed to the process, offered compromise after compromise, and hung in past the deadline to exhaust all efforts to reach an agreement.

So far, we have failed to achieve our mutual goal of a fair deal. The unfortunate thing is that the agreement we have offered has huge benefits for fans and players.

We have listened to the Players Association throughout this process. A primary goal of the Players Association has been to increase pay for younger players. As I have said previously, we agree and share that goal. We offered to raise the minimum salary to $700,000, an increase of $130,000 from 2021. We offered to create an annual bonus pool of $30 million for the very best young players. In total, we are offering a 33% raise to nearly two-thirds of Major League players and adding more than $100 million annually in additional compensation for younger players.

The proposal also addressed player and fan concerns about issues like service time and competitive issues. Baseball would for the first time have a draft lottery — the most aggressive in professional sports. Also, for the first time ever, we agreed to an incentive system to encourage clubs to promote top prospects to their Opening Day rosters. We also proposed that the first and second-place finishers in the Rookie of the Year voting in each league would receive a full year of service.

The MLBPA asked to make free agency more robust. For the first time ever, we agreed to eliminate direct draft pick compensation, a change the MLBPA has sought for decades. On the Competitive Balance Tax, we offered a significantly larger first-year increase than in the last two agreements, bearing in mind that the Competitive Balance Tax is the only mechanism in the agreement that protects some semblance of a level playing field among clubs.

The International Draft would have more fairly allocated talent among the clubs and reduced abuses in some international markets.

We also listened to our fans. The expanded playoffs would bring the excitement of meaningful September baseball and postseason baseball to fans in more of our markets. While we preferred a 14-team format, when the format became a significant obstacle, we listened to the players’ concerns, and offered to compromise by accepting their 12-team format.

Finally, we offered a procedural agreement that would allow for the timely implementation of sorely needed rules like the pitch timer and elimination of shifts to improve the entertainment value of the game on the field. And we agreed to the universal DH.

So, what is next? The calendar dictates that we are not going to be able to play the first two series of regular season games and those games are officially canceled. We are prepared to continue negotiations. We have been informed that the MLBPA is headed back to New York meaning that no agreement is possible until at least Thursday. Currently, camps could not meaningfully operate until at least March 8th, leaving only 23 days before scheduled Opening Day.

We played without an agreement in 1994 and the players went on strike in August, forcing the cancellation of the World Series. It was a painful chapter in our game’s history. We cannot risk such an outcome again for our fans and our sport.

The Clubs and our owners fully understand just how important it is to our millions of fans that we get the game on the field as soon as possible. To that end, we want to bargain and we want a deal with the Players Association as quickly as possible.

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Within minutes of Manfred’s tweet, the MLBPA posted this:

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Additionally, Spring Training games have also been canceled “until further notice.”

It was later reported that the two sides plan to meet again in New York, although no date or time has been set.

There was some good news for baseball fans following Tuesday’s news. Shortly after the MLB and MLBPA announcements, the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, the Dodgers Low-A Minor League affiliate, posted this:

It goes without saying that this entire trainwreck is all about millionaires working for billionaires.

The sad part is, how do you explain that to these guys?

(Photo credit – Ron Cervenka)

Play Ball!.

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3 Responses to “A Dark Day for Baseball”

  1. Jesse Pearce says:

    Manfred’s statement “we want to bargain and we want to deal with the Players Association” is a clear message that MLB did not make its BAFO — and trying to sneak rule changes in at the last moment smacks of underhanded tactics that may not be considered bad faith bargaining, but certainly isn’t good faith bargaining. Manfred’s negotiating tactics over the last two years has obliterated any trust the players may have had in his leadership as Commissioner. And, those owners who manipulated players major league service time clearly demonstrated to players and the union how far they can be trusted.

    The Players don’t escape their share of responsibility for this failed negotiation. While the players bitterly complain about the owners’ lock-out, there is no doubt that their angst is about losing the threat of an economic strike at any time during the upcoming season. Their reported demands at the 11th hour (Dec. 1, 2021) did not signal any intention of reaching consensus agreement at that point. They wanted more and the way to getting more was to shutdown baseball on their terms.

    How to fix it? I don’t know, but more concerning is that the owners and players don’t seem to know how to fix it.

    As far as I am concerned, MLB fans should go on strike for the 2022 season.

  2. Stevebendodger says:

    The thing that’s most unappealing is that the game has grown economically a lot. Both sides owners and players have done very well in the last 10 years and the fans are stuck ponying up with larger ticket prices and food prices at the ballpark.
    Neither side endears themselves to us fans. At least the Dodgers have been great and broke the Championship drought. Love our Dodgers, but you reach a point in life where if they never play again I have other things to do like go fishing.
    Hope is all that’s left.

    • Jesse Pearce says:

      Fortunately, we Dodgers fans now enjoy a great ownership group and executives. How the team has responded to Andrew Toles needs demonstrates a classy organization.

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