MLBPA Sends ‘Work Stoppage’ Response To $245 Million Salary Cap Proposal

Date:

Share post:

Major League Baseball’s owners and its players appear to be heading quickly toward a lockout next season.

In public proposals meant to open the negotiations for a new collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the owners and the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA), the players’ union suggested several top-line changes designed to improve compensation for its members and stave off a salary cap, which has appeared to be a key goal for the team owners.

“During a meeting in New York City, the players proposed to increase revenue sharing between clubs,” The Athletic’s Evan Drelich reported, summarizing the opening proposal from MLBPA, released on Wednesday. “The union also offered to install a soft salary floor that penalizes teams that do not reach it, a ‘competitive integrity tax.’”

MLBPA also proposed several changes to improve pay and benefits for players, including raising the minimum salary and increasing the base competitive balance tax threshold, among other changes.

ForbesPhillies Ex-Manager Rob Thomson Returns To Former Team Before Historic Game

MLB Owners Respond To Players Association With Salary Cap Proposal

In response, on Thursday, the owners shared their initial proposal which included, as was widely expected, a proposal for a salary cap as well as a salary floor.

“As expected, MLB proposed a hard salary cap to union officials today as part of the next CBA,” ESPN’s Jesse Rogers reported. “The salary floor for teams beginning in 2027 would be set at $171.2 million which includes player benefits with the ceiling at $245.3 million.”

Aside from the introduction of a salary cap, the two initial proposals covered numerous other key points for a new CBA. The current agreement will expire at the end of the year and the two sides would have to come to terms shortly after that to avoid delaying the typical free agency window or, potentially, the start of next season.

ForbesPhillies Cut Former Cubs Shortstop After Just 35 Games

MLB Players Association Calls Out ‘Billionaire Owners’ Over Salary Cap Proposal

And quickly after the owners shared their proposal for a specific salary cap, the MLBPA offered a terse response, which suggested that the two sides won’t come to terms very quickly.

“The owners responded today with a demand for a salary cap system, something generations of players have fought against,” MLBPA wrote in a statement sent to Forbes. “The last time the owners made such an explicit push for a cap — over 30 years ago — it led to the longest work stoppage in MLB history.”

That response seemed to suggest the MLBPA would approach a work stoppage again rather that acquiesce to the introduction of a salary cap. And the statement underscored that possibility with some strong language about the optics of such an imposition on player salaries.

“Baseball is experiencing unprecedented momentum and owners are enjoying record viewership, revenues and franchise values,” the MLBPA response continued. “Billionaire owners are not seeking to cap their profits or asset values, only player salaries. This isn’t out of generosity or a desire to protect the game’s well-being. It’s a play to control costs, increase profits and maximize franchise values — all at the expense of players past, present and future.”

The fight over a salary cap in MLB is nothing new and the owners’ interest in adding one was well forecasted, as was the MLBPA’s resistance. But now that a cap has been officially proposed, the response from the players union leaves little doubt that a strike and the potential of missed games next season are very much on the table as some tense negotiations loom.

Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

Russia’s Skating Ban Could Be Lifted At June’s ISU Congress

BEIJING - FEBRUARY 17: Kamila Valieva of Russia in action during the Women's Ice Skating Free Program at...

Iran Wants U.S. To Release Billions In Frozen Funds— Will That Be Part Of Final Deal? Expert Weighs In

On "Forbes Newsroom," Max Meizlish, a research fellow at the FDD, discussed the effectiveness of the economic pressure...

Don’t Discuss Your Legal Problems With Claude Or ChatGPT

Questions you ask AI about a legal case aren't protected by attorney-client confidentiality, a federal court has ruled.GettyAnthropic’s...

Bernie Su’s ‘Whispers’ Showcases A New Kind Of AI-Informed Cinema

Bernie Su, the first person to win an Emmy for his genre-busting new forms of video, is at...