Bad Faith Bargaining
A couple of days ago it was being reported that MLB was going to propose to the Players a 30-60 game season at full prorated pay. I found some hope in this, as it seemed like the beginning of a bargain between the 114 games the Players had proposed and the short regular season the owners were pushing. Now it seems as if any optimism on my part was seriously misplaced. When will I learn?
The Owners flat-out rejected the Players proposal without offering anything in return. According to Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drellich at The Athletic, MLB told the Players' Union that they wouldn't be making another offer. They would only consider an agreement that included a very limited number of games and then Playoffs. MLB is interpreting the original agreement in March as allowing the Commissioner full control to set a schedule and, unsurprisingly, the Commissioner is prepared to set a short schedule that is exactly what the owners desire. I believe Rob Manfred has a chance to go down in history as the worst Commissioner in the history of the game, the man who blindly led baseball to self-destruction.
There was a time when a MLB Commissioner was supposed to make decisions that were in the best interests of the game of baseball. It's been a long time since there was even a pretense at any independence from the owners, certainly not since Fay Vincent was ousted in 1992 so MLB could employ hardball tactics against the players. Any doubt at all was erased when Bud Selig was installed as commissioner in 1998. Now we're not even attempting to find common ground with the players. Keep in mind it's the players who are risking health and safety, while owners worry that they might lose some money. Yet the owners are demanding we all take their word for the financial plight they insist on proclaiming without being willing to document.
The one piece of leverage that the players still hold is that MLB would need them to agree to the expanded playoffs that they desire. The Owners will continue their non-stop PR offensive, trying to pressure the Players to play under their terms. I can't see a scenario that's a win for fans coming out of all this. I worry that we're now looking at 3 undesirable outcomes:
The one piece of leverage that the players still hold is that MLB would need them to agree to the expanded playoffs that they desire. The Owners will continue their non-stop PR offensive, trying to pressure the Players to play under their terms. I can't see a scenario that's a win for fans coming out of all this. I worry that we're now looking at 3 undesirable outcomes:
- MLB refuses to consider anything beyond their current proposal and the game goes dark until next year.
- MLB schedules 50 games and expanded playoffs on their own, the Union balks, and most players decide not to play. MLB goes ahead anyway, primarily with replacement players, and make a total farce out of the season.
- MLB gets enough players to cave in that they wind up playing some hybrid where they're fielding teams combining major leaguers with replacements. A farce still, no doubt, but one a bit easier for MLB to sell.
I mean, the very best thing you could hope for if MLB holds their ground is that most of the players decide to play a joke of a season that makes a joke of any Playoffs that follow. As for any of the other possibilities, I just shudder. Everyone has the right to make their own decision, but I won't write about replacement player baseball as if it really is Mets baseball. I won't spend any of my life watching counterfeit Mets baseball.
Shuddering is the most polite reaction one can have at this point.
ReplyDelete