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Some agents have said the union should have been more aggressive and more public in pursuing those claims.
Rob Manfred, Major League Baseball's executive vice president of labor relations, said no improper conduct occurred.
"The free-agent market proceeded in a manner that was completely consistent with the requirements of the basic agreement," he said.
During the offseason, some teams said they were taking a less aggressive approach to free agents because of the recession. Teams cut payroll for their active rosters and disabled lists by $47 million from opening day in 2008 to the first day of this season, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.
"I think the clubs uniformly felt they were taking the momentum of a national event -- that being the economy -- and suggesting that that was going to have an impact on their revenues," agent Scott Boras said. "I think they were attempting to leverage that into a belief structure that the value of players has gone down because there's a perception that baseball will suffer because of the economy. After experiencing the biggest blow of the economy in the fall of 2008, we know that baseball has stood its ground and still has an extraordinary revenue base."
[Associated Press;
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