6/15/20

Mike's Mets - When Money Is All That Matters


When Money Is All That Matters


I enjoyed writing yesterday's post, because writing about prospects and the farm system is a fun subject to write about. As a writer, you're looking forward and anticipating something good happening. After missing my first day since I returned to blogging on Friday, I wanted to give myself a writing topic that gave me a good feeling. Now it's time to share some thoughts on the latest with the negotiations to get a season underway, and that just isn't as fun to write about.

As I'm sure that most of you know, after promising a proposal that would move MLB's position substantially toward the player position, MLB came out with one that was just a minor move from their previous offer. Not only did the Players turn down the offer, but they essentially threw up their hands and asked the Commissioner to implement whatever length schedule the League is comfortable paying full prorated salaries. As quoted by Joel Sherman in the Post, Tony Clark and the union aren't interested in further unproductive negotiations:


"It unfortunately appears that further dialogue with the league would be futile. It is time to get back to work. Tell us where and when."
This was disappointing to read, but it's hard to quibble with. Neither side has bent a great deal in their respective offers, but at least the players got a little creative with money deferrals and length of season. MLB's proposals - the ones they actually presented to the players - never differed all that much other than calling for an increasingly short regular season. The total amount of money going to the players remained fairly constant, with some changes in how it was distributed.

Essentially MLB kept demanding that the players, who are taking 100 percent of the physical risks involved with playing baseball during an ongoing pandemic, not only remain unpaid for any games not played, but absorb all of the losses involved from playing in empty stadiums. To top it off, the players were also asked to take on the financial risks of MLB failing to play their full slate of playoff games, receiving a lower percentage of prorated regular season pay if a COVID-19 resurgence cancelled the Playoffs.

Since this all came down, it's been interesting to read some of the opinions from the folks who cover the game. I've never found ESPN's Buster Olney to be someone who expresses harsh opinions on MLB and the Club Owners, but he was pretty tough on them in a piece posted this morning:
What we'll call the Jeff Luhnow mentality could be defined as the absolute devotion to gleaning every fragment of advantage, every bit of efficiency, regardless of whether you might drift beyond the bounds of common sense. The ends justify the means; just win the moment, baby.
It's as if Major League Baseball's leadership has embraced the Luhnow mindset in these tortuous labor negotiations, because the owners keep making these absurdly incremental offers at a time when the broader international context calls for decisive and bold action. With a resolution now at least three weeks too late, and counting, the industry is becoming a punchline for sports dysfunction... It's the Luhnow mindset as applied to labor relations.
Olney is quite tough on the owners here. He criticizes their recent appearances on local sports radio stations to whine about how unprofitable it is running a baseball franchise. I wrote about this last week. When MLB Commissioner Manfred started talking about their original revenue sharing proposal from a month ago - one that was never actually presented to the players - he insisted that it wasn't an attempt to make it easier to get revenue sharing and some sort of salary cap into the next contract. It's clear now that this is exactly what MLB and the Club Owners are seeking to do.

Tim Kurkjian, another ESPN writer who is not known for strong anti-owner sentiments, had this to say about the Club Owners yesterday:
Most of today's owners aren't in this for the love of the game, not like the family-run franchises in Milwaukee, Baltimore and Los Angeles 40, 50 years ago. These teams are merely commodities to the owners, the game isn't personal to them. It is certainly not intimate. Some franchises are indeed fragile at the moment, so much so that some owners believe they'd lose less money if there were no season, rather than 75 games at 100% prorated salaries. Some owners say they want baseball in 2020 because they have to say it.
Neither Olney or Kurkjian let the players off the hook for their failings. Everyone is guilty of doing most of their negotiating in the press, and that is always guaranteed not to work. What's becoming clear to me, however, is that the biggest danger to the game of baseball going forward is the Club Owners and their attitude towards their team and the overall game of baseball. As Kurkjian points out, they are not in it for the love of the game, to most it looks like owning a club is just a sign of status.

One change we've seen in businesses over the last few decades is a focus on short-term profits over what is best for the business in the long run. Dramatically overpaid CEOs emphasize keeping the stock price high to keep shareholders happy. Their position depends on short-term success. Employees are seen primarily as expenses rather than assets. Investing in the future is more of an afterthought. And now that same class of people are bringing that same mentality into baseball.

I'll be glad to see these negotiations end. They've been quite fruitless and irritating to watch. Let the season happen, whatever the length. If the players choose not to give MLB the expanded Playoffs the owners desire, I'll live without it, even if it winds up costing the Mets a playoff berth. It's going to be hard as a fan to get worked up over Playoffs based on a tiny fraction of a normal regular season, anyway.

Joel Sherman wants Rob Manfred and Tony Clark to at least meet in person and try to actually negotiate before throwing in the towel. You would think that they would have at least tried that by now, but it's clear that there never really was a sense of urgency on both sides to give and take and try to really get a deal done.

Watching all of this sends a chill up and down my spine when I think of the upcoming negotiations after the 2021 season. If they are unable to negotiate during an unprecedented national emergency, what are the odds that they work something out then? If the Club Owners are determined to force through revenue sharing and a salary cap we'll likely see a long strike. By the time the game comes back from that, it's likely to find itself a second-rate sport.


7 comments:

Reese Kaplan said...

Well, get used to baseball for whatever becomes of the 2020 season and the full realm of 2021. There will not be baseball in 2022 due to the strike that is now 99.9% sure to happen.

Unknown said...

Hello Guys,

I am a huge baseball fan but the more time it passes without a compromise, the less I miss it. Its becoming irrelevant in an otherwise year from hell.

The only good thing is knowing that Freddie is bleeding money and will have to sell without any conditions.

Mike Freire said...

I am a lifelong Mets' fan and I have a special place in my heart for baseball in general....BUT, I find myself caring less and less about the current situation as time goes on.

Maybe it was the lack of sports during the "pandemic", but I have found that life isn't that bad without them.

Now that things have gotten more uncertain of late (continued threat from the virus, social unrest), baseball seems almost trivial by comparison. Add to that the current stuggle over $$$ at a time when most of would welcome a diversion from current events and it doesn't generate a good look, regardless of which side is "right".

They are damaging a sport that was already seeing declining interest and participation. I fear that if things continue in this vein, or if there is a long term work stoppage in the near future (I agree with you, Reese), the sport might not survive in the long term. Or, at least it will decline to the point that it will become a niche sport, instead of "America's past time".......sort of like the NHL.

I wish them luck, but I don't see a bright future with all of the bickering and outright greed.

Mike Steffanos said...

I agree with both of you. I agree with Reese that a strike seems inevitable now, and I agree with the other commenter that baseball is making itself more and more irrelevant every day. If they strike for a significant amount of time in 2022 people will turn away.

Mike Steffanos said...

...and I agree with Mike Freire, too

Tom Brennan said...

I have some comedian friends who are very vocal politically on Facebook. To me, it is shortsighted, as it damages how part of their repeat audience (who see their Facebook posts) will look at them going forward, if they disagree with them, when the time comes that comedy shows are back to normal. It can taint.

Same thing with ballplayers and owners - we want BASEBALL, the good stuff, the stuff we grew up on, not to be dragged thru their intransigent disagreements - it will turn many folks off to the game. Some will come back - some won't.

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