MLB locks out players after failing to reach new labor deal
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[December 03, 2021] (Reuters)
- Major League Baseball locked out its
players on Thursday after failing to reach terms on a new collective
bargaining agreement (CBA) ahead of a midnight deadline.
The decision halts all player activity as relates to their clubs
including free-agent signings, trades and use of team facilities.
"Despite the league's best efforts to make a deal with the Players
Association, we were unable to extend our 26 year-long history of
labor peace and come to an agreement with the MLBPA before the
current CBA expired," MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said.
"Therefore, we have been forced to commence a lockout of Major
League players, effective at 12:01 a.m. ET on Dec. 2."
The lockout marks the first work stoppage in MLB since the players'
strike of 1994-95.
That dispute forced a premature end to the season, delayed the start
of the following year's campaign and turned off fans, with
attendances plummeting when play finally resumed.
"The shutdown is a dramatic measure, regardless of the timing," the
players' association (MLBPA) said.
"It was the owners' choice, plain and simple, specifically
calculated to pressure players into relinquishing rights and
benefits and abandoning good faith bargaining proposals.
"These tactics are not new. We have been here before, and players
have risen to the occasion time and again -- guided by a solidarity
that has been forged over generations. We will do so here again."
Among the main problem areas, media reports said, were owners and
players not agreeing on service time toward free agency, playoff
expansion, a luxury tax and possible salary floor, and several
proposed rule changes.
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Major League Baseball locked out its players on Thursday after
failing to reach terms on a new collective bargaining agreement
ahead of a midnight deadline.
ESPN reported that the league had offered to remove
direct draft-pick compensation and suggested a draft lottery to
disincentivize teams from 'tanking' to get a higher draft position.
Manfred said MLB had offered to establish a minimum payroll for all
clubs, allow the majority of players to reach free agency earlier,
and boosting compensation for all young players including increases
in the minimum salary.
"When negotiations lacked momentum, we tried to create some by
offering to accept the universal designated hitter, to create a new
draft system using a lottery similar to other leagues, and to
increase the competitive balance tax threshold that affects only a
small number of teams," he added.
"To be clear: this hard but important step does not necessarily mean
games will be canceled."
The 2022 season is not scheduled to begin until March while players
are scheduled to report to 'Spring Training' in mid-February.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto and Simon Jennings in
Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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