MLB Commissioner Manfred 'not
confident' of a 2020 season
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[June 16, 2020]
(Reuters) - Major League
Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said on Monday he is "not
confident" a 2020 season will happen now that the players' union
broke off talks about a return-to-play plan amid the COVID-19
outbreak.
Manfred's comments, made during an appearance on ESPN's 'The Return
of Sports' special, are a dramatic shift in tone given just last
week he pegged the likelihood of a 2020 season as "100%."
"I'm not confident," Manfred said when asked if there would be a
season. "I think there's real risk; and as long as there's no
dialogue, that real risk is going to continue."
MLB and the players' union have been trying to find common ground on
a return-to-play plan for the 2020 season but have been unable to
reach agreement in areas like player compensation and the number of
games played.
On Saturday, the union rejected MLB's latest offer, opted not to
counter and said further talks with the league would be futile.
"It's just a disaster for our game, absolutely no question about
it," said Manfred. "It shouldn't be happening, and it's important
that we find a way to get past it and get the game back on the field
for the benefit of our fans."
The Major League Baseball Players Association on Monday denied that
it was responsible for delaying progress on a return to play.
"This latest threat is just one more indication that Major League
Baseball has been negotiating in bad faith since the beginning," the
union said in a statement.
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Rob Manfred, commissioner of Major League Baseball, takes part in
the Yahoo Finance All Markets Summit in New York, U.S., February 8,
2017. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
MLB was scheduled to open its 162-game regular season in late March
but delayed the campaign due to the pandemic.
The players have previously proposed a 114-game regular season with
full prorated pay and expanded playoffs.
But owners would reportedly prefer a shorter regular season with a
sliding pay scale, and an assurance that the post-season would be
completed by Nov. 1 amid concerns about a potential second wave of
novel coronavirus infections.
"The owners are a hundred percent committed to getting baseball back
on the field," said Manfred. "Unfortunately, I can't tell you that
I'm a hundred percent certain that's gonna happen."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
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