Baseball

MLB Players Pitch sweeping labor overhaul as contract deadline looms

Union seeks expanded free agency, higher minimum pay, and new revenue‑sharing guarantees, while owners warn of revenue impacts

The collective bargaining agreement that governs Major League Baseball and its players is due to expire on Dec. 1, and both the league and the union are preparing for the possibility of a lockout as negotiations intensify.

Proposed Labor Reforms

The union’s proposal calls for a sweeping expansion of free‑agency rights, allowing a larger pool of players to become unrestricted after only a few years of service, and it would raise the league‑wide minimum salary from roughly $780,000 to about $1.5 million for the upcoming season.

In addition, the plan would lift the luxury‑tax threshold to $300 million in 2027, increase it by $15 million each year thereafter, and introduce a competitive integrity tax that would penalize teams that fall below a mandated payroll floor.

MLB has responded by warning that these measures would undermine the existing revenue‑sharing framework that supports smaller‑market clubs and could exacerbate competitive imbalance, potentially reducing the financial incentives for owners to invest in lower‑revenue franchises.

The players’ association has countered that the reforms are essential to guarantee a baseline of financial health for those clubs, proposing a guarantee that each small‑market team receive at least $240 million annually, while also expanding the amateur draft lottery from six to eight teams and tightening rules to curb service‑time manipulation.

Union leaders have emphasized that the changes are not merely about money but about preserving competitive parity, and several high‑profile players have voiced public support, pledging never to accept a salary cap that they say would fundamentally alter the sport’s structure.

If an agreement is not reached before the deadline, the league may lock out players, a scenario that could delay the start of the season and force both sides back to the negotiating table under heightened pressure.

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