Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MLB work stoppage now more likely

- RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK — A work stoppage at the start of spring training 2022 seems increasing­ly likely after baseball players refused to negotiate with owners over a one-month delay for this spring training and regular season.

The breakdown Monday came after the sides were unable to reach a deal in June over the start of the pandemic-shortened 2021 season, although they did work out an opening-day agreement for expanded 2020 playoffs.

With the collective bargaining agreement set to expire Dec. 1, it is not hard to envision management institutin­g a lockout for baseball’s first work stoppage since the 71/2-month strike that wiped out the 1994 World Series.

“I hope we don’t have a work stoppage. I hope we are able to play,” All-Star third baseman Nolan Arenado said Tuesday during his introducto­ry news conference after his trade to St. Louis from Colorado. “I think both sides want to play, and especially with this 2020 season and it got delayed and all the things that are going on in the country, it probably wouldn’t be very good if we had a stoppage.”

Baseball had five strikes and three lockouts from 1972-95, losing 86 regular-season games at the start of the 1972 season; 713 during midseason in 1981; and 669 games during the final two months of 1994, a stoppage that cut 1995 schedules from 162 games per team to 144.

Whatever ability to work together that developed after the last stoppage has dissipated, largely because union head Tony Clark, his staff and players believe economics have tilted toward owners and clubs during the labor contracts agreed to in 2011 and 2016.

Those agreements saw luxury tax rates increase and restraints imposed on signing bonuses for amateurs, while among the objectives players gained included increases in minimum salaries, earlier offseason deadlines, a decease in team compensati­on for the loss of free agents, and clubs assuming the cost of clubhouse food spreads.

Players have seethed in recent years over the way teams have delayed call-ups of rookie stars to delay eligibilit­y for free agency and sometimes salary arbitratio­n. Teams say it is their right to determine when players are ready for the major leagues.

MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred claims teams combined to lose $2.7 billion to $3 billion during the pandemic. Payrolls even before last year’s regular season without fans stayed in a historic narrow range of $4.24 billion in 2017, $4.23 billion in 2018 and $4.22 billion in 2019, then dropped to $1.75 billion last year when players received 37% of salaries due to the 60-game schedule.

Players view clubs’ large-scale rebuilding as tanking. Both sides are troubled by regular-season attendance that dropped from 73.76 million in 2016 to 68.49 million in 2019.

Scott Boras, who negotiated more than $1.2 billion in contracts during the 2019-20 offseason, said the losses will contribute toward an agreement next offseason.

“We’ve had an interrupti­on in our sport which was unforeseen and lengthy, and when you look back at our bargaining history, there’s not been an interrupti­on of that length in modern time,” Boras said. “And for those reasons, I think the clarity of each side’s advances is something that is going to be measured within the framework of the recent influence of the pandemic on baseball.”

Since the last baseball work stoppage, the NFL had a preseason lockout in 2011, and the NBA had lockouts that cut 1998-99 to 50 games per team and 2011-12 to 66 games per team. In the NHL, lockouts wiped out the entire 2004-05 season, and reduced both 1994-95 and 2012-13 to 48 games per team.

“It’s incumbent upon both parties to reach a mutually beneficial agreement, and I know both parties will make every effort to do that,” Cardinals CEO Bill DeWitt Jr. said. “Historical­ly MLB and the players’ associatio­n have avoided work stoppages for a long, long time, longer than any other profession­al sport. So let’s hope that that continues through next year.”

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