With Major League Baseball and the Players Association (MLBPA) far apart on several important issues, many around the sport are expecting a lockout to be imposed when the current collective bargaining agreement (CBA) expires in December 2026.
The players remain strongly against a salary cap as it would limit their potential earnings, while the league believes implementing one is necessary to improve competitive balance across the sport.
The union also wants to see changes made to the MLB rule competition committee, which currently consists of six team owners, four players and one umpire. No matter how the committee votes on certain issues, the league ultimately has the final say.
MLBPA executive director Tony Clark wants players’ opinions to be valued more, via Bob Nightengale of USA Today:
“The players have a concern about the well-being of the game,” Clark said. “They love it. They’ve dedicated their lives to it, and they recognize the window for them to play it is remarkably small. So they want the game to be the best version of itself.
“When you represent that as a part of the committee, even if you have less votes, and it’s either considered … it tells players that their value, their voice, isn’t being valued. So I remain hopeful, with less votes, will at some point in time yield more substantive responses to the input that players are offering. …. It hasn’t manifested itself the way players had expected.”
Players made their voices heard during the last round of CBA talks in 2022, leading to increased minimum salaries and measures to prevent service time manipulation.
While the union feels overlooked in terms of new rules that get implemented, they will undoubtedly play an important role when the next round of CBA talks begin in the spring.
Tony Clark: MLB salary cap ‘not about growing the game’
Clark has gone on the record several times to suggest the MLBPA won’t be receptive to any salary cap proposals in the next round of CBA talks.
While speaking with reporters earlier this year, Clark reiterated the union’s stance that a salary cap would do more harm than good for baseball.
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