Baseball.........Anybody still interested?

@jack walsh13

Won't have baseball till May. :smh:

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MLB owners ratify new CBA to end lockout, salvage 162-game season
ByJEFF PASSANvia
March 10, 2022, 7:29 PM
• 7 min read
Major League Baseball and the MLB Players' Association reached a new collective bargaining agreement Thursday afternoon, finally halting a 99-day owner-imposed lockout fraught with rampant tension and colored by heightened mistrust.
Twenty-six of the 38 union leaders voted in favor of a five-year CBA that saw its members make significant gains with regard to minimum salaries and the competitive balance tax threshold, among other areas. The 30 team owners ratified the deal by a unanimous vote, according to the league, finalizing a CBA that provided them with an expanded postseason field and the ability to place advertisements on uniforms.






MLB commissioner Rob Manfred, the face of pointed criticism from players throughout the process, said he "could not be more excited about the future of our game" and vowed to work more closely with MLBPA executive director Tony Clark with hopes of bridging a noticeable gap.
"One of the things that I'm supposed to do is promote a good relationship with our players," Manfred said during a news conference from MLB headquarters in New York. "I've tried to do that. I think that I have not been successful in that. I think that it begins with small steps. It's why I picked the phone up after the ratification and called Tony and expressed my desire to work with him. It's gonna be a priority of mine moving forward to try to make good on the commitment I made to him on the phone."

With the end of the second-longest work stoppage in the game's history, the market officially opened, paving the way for trades and free-agent signings. Players are required to report to their respective spring training facilities by Sunday, and the first exhibition games will take place four or five days later. Opening Day will come on April 7, a week later than originally scheduled, but 162 games will nonetheless be played.

Under the new CBA, minimum salaries will begin at $700,000 in 2022 -- an unprecedented 23% increase from the prior year -- and rise to $780,000 for the final year in 2026. The competitive balance threshold, which taxes big-spending teams who surpass certain thresholds, will be set at $230 million in 2022 -- a near 10% increase from last year -- and reach $244 million by 2026. A $50 million player pool to reward pre-arbitration players who excel will also be incorporated.

"Our union endured the second-longest work stoppage in its history to achieve significant progress in key areas that will improve not just current players' rights and benefits , but those of generations to come," Clark said in a statement. "Players remain engaged and unified from beginning to end, and in the process reenergized in our fraternity."

Other changes within the new CBA include:

• A 12-team postseason, with the top two division winners earning a first-round bye.
• A 45-day window to impose rule changes, with feedback from a joint committee, beginning in 2023.
• A universal designated hitter.
• A six-team draft lottery, implemented with hopes of curtailing tanking.
• A provision that prevents teams from optioning eligible players more than five times within a season.
• Two measures aimed at limiting service-time manipulation: A full year of service time awarded to players who finish within the top two in respective Rookie of the Year voting, and draft picks awarded to teams who promote players on Opening Day and finish among the top vote-getters for major awards.
• Additional advertising through patches on jerseys and decals on helmets.

An international draft, a component that added another layer of difficulty to negotiations on Wednesday, could be implemented as early as 2024. The union has until July 25 to decide on an international draft, which would trigger the removal of draft-pick compensation for high-priced free agents. Under the league's proposal, the draft would be a 20-round, hard-slot system for 16-year-olds outside the United States, Puerto Rico and Canada.

Manfred began his news conference Thursday with an apology to fans.

"I know that the last few months have been difficult," he said. "There was a lot of uncertainty, at a point in time when there's a lot of uncertainty in the world. Sort of the way the process of collective bargaining works sometimes, but I do apologize for it.

"One of the good things about collective bargaining is that it gives our players an opportunity to have input on what their workplace in the game is gonna look like going forward. And they took full opportunity to provide that input during these negotiations. Our players are great, great athletes. I respect them, and I respect the input that we've received from them during this process. And we really did learn a lot."

Tension between the owners and the current crop of players dates back to the ratification of the previous CBA in 2016, which paved the way for an era rife with tanking, service-time manipulation and cost-efficiency that prompted player salaries to decrease at a time of booming league revenues. The bitterness escalated when the two sides failed to come to a mutual agreement for the COVID-19-shortened season in 2020 and boiled over as negotiations for a new CBA ensued.

The union -- looking to incentivize competition, put more money in the pockets of young players, diminish caps on big-market spending and revitalize the middle class of free agency -- initially sought structural changes such as earlier free agency, automatic arbitration after two years and cuts in revenue sharing. Their first core-economics proposal came in May, but the league didn't counter until August. Manfred instituted a lockout on Dec. 2, stating hopes that it would trigger accelerated bargaining, and the two sides went 43 days without talking.

Eight days of negotiations in Jupiter, Florida -- which saw the union relent on prior requests around free agency, arbitration eligibility and revenue sharing -- ended with Manfred postponing the start of Opening Day on March 1. The league imposed another deadline for Tuesday, this time for a full 162-game season, and finally agreed to higher competitive balance thresholds, seemingly carving a path for a deal. But the international draft, an unpopular mechanism for Latin American players who prefer a free market, emerged as a divisive issue that took two days to navigate around.
Asked if something could have been done to get a deal done sooner, without pushing back Opening Day and canceling several spring training games, Manfred said: "The way the process of collective bargaining is designed to work under the statute, it's really driven by two things: time and economic leverage. No agreement comes together before those two things play out in a way that you find common ground. I think we made an agreement when it was possible to make an agreement."

That agreement will now trigger a frenzied next four weeks for the sport. More than 200 free agents -- most notably Freddie Freeman, Carlos Correa, Trevor Story and Kris Bryant -- remain unsigned. Cash-strapped teams such as the Oakland Athletics and the Cincinnati Reds are expected to trade star players. The Rule 5 draft will be canceled, but arbitration hearings will be scheduled. And it'll all take place with spring training as the backdrop.

A major question will loom beyond all of that: Can the league and its players begin to work more harmoniously together?

"I do believe -- I hope -- that the players will see the effort we made to address their concerns in this agreement as an olive branch in terms of building a better relationship," Manfred said. "We built some processes into this agreement where we're gonna be interacting more regularly with players on topics like the international draft and rule changes. I think those opportunities for positive interaction help to build a better relationship."
 

New York Mets acquire RHP Chris Bassitt from Oakland Athletics after All-Star season
7:33 PM ET
  • Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. -- All-Star right-hander Chris Bassitt, who made a remarkable recovery from a frightening line drive to the head last year, was traded by the Oakland Athletics to the New York Mets on Saturday for a pair of minor league pitchers.
The Mets sent right-handers J.T. Ginn and Adam Oller to the A's for Bassitt.
Bassitt gives the Mets a much-needed starter for the middle of the rotation, seemingly a good fit behind aces Jacob deGrom and Max Scherzer.
The 33-year-old Bassitt came back to make two starts in late September, just more than a month after he took a 100 mph liner to the face on Aug. 17 in Chicago. The drive came off Brian Goodwin's bat in the second inning of a 9-0 loss to the White Sox.
EDITOR'S PICKS
Bassitt underwent surgery for three fractures in his right cheekbone. Immediately after the injury, his right eye was swollen shut.
Bassitt wound up 12-4 with a 3.15 ERA in 27 starts, including his first career complete game, and was a first-time All-Star. He had been an AL Cy Young candidate when he got hurt and his absence took a toll on the A's beyond the field. He was 12-3 with a 3.06 ERA and leading the AL in victories when he was injured.
Oakland, which won the AL West in the virus-shortened 2020 season, finished 86-76 and nine games behind the division champion Houston Astros to miss the playoffs following three straight appearances. The small-budget A's have long been known for trading away their key players during the offseason.
The Athletics will be led by first-year manager Mark Kotsay, a former outfielder for the club.

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Bassitt is 31-25 with a 3.47 ERA in parts of seven seasons with the A's and White Sox.
New York made a huge splash by landing Scherzer in free agency before the Major League Baseball lockout, giving the team an imposing duo with deGrom that's combined to win five Cy Young Awards. But overlooked a bit in that excitement was the fact that Marcus Stroman, the club's best starter last season, signed with the Chicago Cubs and right-hander Noah Syndergaard, coming back from Tommy John surgery, left for the Los Angeles Angels.

So the Mets need to add depth on the mound, especially with deGrom coming off an injury-abbreviated season and Scherzer set to turn 38 in July. They also have Carlos Carrasco, who managed 12 mostly ineffective starts last year in his first season with the Mets, and Taijuan Walker, who followed up an All-Star first half with a miserable second half.
Third-year lefty David Peterson and right-hander Tylor Megill are also rotation options after each showed some promise as a rookie.
The 22-year-old Ginn was a second-round pick by the Mets in 2020. He was a combined 5-5 with a 3.33 ERA in two levels of Class A ball last year.
Oller, 27, was a combined 9-4 with a 3.45 ERA in Triple-A and Double-A last year.
 
MLB, union agree to extend administrative leave of Los Angeles Dodgers' Trevor Bauer again
Mar 11, 2022

With the lockout lifted, Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association have agreed to extend Trevor Bauer's administrative leave for another seven days (March 13 to 19), preventing the right-hander from reporting to the Los Angeles Dodgers' spring training facility.
Bauer spent the last four months of the 2021 regular season on administrative leave while contesting sexual assault allegations that he and his lawyers have denied. A judge ruled in August to dissolve a temporary restraining order that was sought against him by a woman who alleged he took consensual rough sex too far over the course of two encounters last April and May.
The L.A. District Attorney's Office then decided not to file charges against Bauer in early February. But MLB has yet to rule on a potential suspension and has yet to interview Bauer because of the lockout, which lasted 99 days and wasn't lifted until the players and the owners agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement on Thursday.
Bauer's attorneys have served a subpoena asking the Pasadena (California) Police Department to provide missing cell phone records from the woman that his lawyers say "will further reveal [the woman's] plan to ruin [Bauer's] reputation and career and to earn a large paycheck by making false and misleading allegations in her Petition." The woman's attorneys have asked that the subpoena be thrown out. A hearing on the matter is scheduled for April 4 in L.A. Superior Court.

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Bauer made his full $38 million salary in 2021 despite spending half the season on administrative leave and can make up to $47 million in 2022.
Prior to the revelation that Bauer had been placed back on administrative leave, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was asked whether the pitcher would be in camp and didn't rule out the possibility.
"I don't want to completely close the door on him potentially being in spring training because I just don't know enough," Roberts said.
 
MLB, union agree to extend administrative leave of Los Angeles Dodgers' Trevor Bauer again
Mar 11, 2022
With the lockout lifted, Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association have agreed to extend Trevor Bauer's administrative leave for another seven days (March 13 to 19), preventing the right-hander from reporting to the Los Angeles Dodgers' spring training facility.
Bauer spent the last four months of the 2021 regular season on administrative leave while contesting sexual assault allegations that he and his lawyers have denied. A judge ruled in August to dissolve a temporary restraining order that was sought against him by a woman who alleged he took consensual rough sex too far over the course of two encounters last April and May.
The L.A. District Attorney's Office then decided not to file charges against Bauer in early February. But MLB has yet to rule on a potential suspension and has yet to interview Bauer because of the lockout, which lasted 99 days and wasn't lifted until the players and the owners agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement on Thursday.
Bauer's attorneys have served a subpoena asking the Pasadena (California) Police Department to provide missing cell phone records from the woman that his lawyers say "will further reveal [the woman's] plan to ruin [Bauer's] reputation and career and to earn a large paycheck by making false and misleading allegations in her Petition." The woman's attorneys have asked that the subpoena be thrown out. A hearing on the matter is scheduled for April 4 in L.A. Superior Court.

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Bauer made his full $38 million salary in 2021 despite spending half the season on administrative leave and can make up to $47 million in 2022.
Prior to the revelation that Bauer had been placed back on administrative leave, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts was asked whether the pitcher would be in camp and didn't rule out the possibility.
"I don't want to completely close the door on him potentially being in spring training because I just don't know enough," Roberts said.
WHY? I'M NOT UNDERSTANDING THIS. BOTTOM LINE IS THE DODGERS JUST DON'T WANT HIM BACK.

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