SJ24
New member
But there are other insiders posting on Twitter that there is no deal close. Basically Heyman is the only one saying a deal is coming.
https://twitter.com/EvanDrellich/status/1273322775319662607?s=20
You are a joke.
"Skeeter"
But there are other insiders posting on Twitter that there is no deal close. Basically Heyman is the only one saying a deal is coming.
https://twitter.com/EvanDrellich/status/1273322775319662607?s=20
It’s cute that you have a thing for me. But maybe keep it to baseball discussions.You are a joke.
"Skeeter"
[TW]1273331814480912384[/TW]
At this point you hate to complicate things further, but if you split the divisions up the right way, there's not a whole lot of reasons that couldn't be 70 games in 70 days if you're expanding the rosters. We're talking about 10 weeks with 6 games each. If you eliminate the coast-to-coast travel, why not have one doubleheader day each week?
A pretty interesting take on this whole mess has been the one that Ryan Spilborghs has been spouting off about the whole time. The owners only wanted to spend X number of dollars on salaries regardless of the length of season. The players didn't want to take less than full prorated salaries. If that's the case and what pushed this over the finish line turns out to be owners giving 10 extra regular season games at full salary, this is one of the stupidest things they've EVER argued over. He did the math on XM a few minutes ago and showed that the 10 extra games with full pay works out to be the same total as the 80 games at 80% that the owners proposed in the first place.
In essence, the players aren't getting a dime more salary-wise than they'd been offered to begin with. The owners will certainly be better off with the expanded playoffs though - assuming they're played.
[TW]1273397692560019464[/TW]
That's not actually what the owners were offering, though—initially, or later.
Just flatly untrue. Craig Edwards has broken this down at Fangraphs, with the following helpful table:
Salaries Under MLB Plans vs. 54-Game Pro-Rated Pay
[table="width: 500, class: grid, align: left"]
[tr]
[td]Playoff Scenario[/td]
[td]Sliding-Scale Salary Cut (82 G)[/td]
[td]50%/75% Pro-rated (76 G)[/td]
[td]70%/80% Pro-Rated (72 G)[/td]
[td]54-G Pro-Rated[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]No Playoffs[/td]
[td]$1.03 B[/td]
[td]$0.99 B[/td]
[td]$1.27 B[/td]
[td]$1.36 B[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]With Playoffs[/td]
[td]$1.23 B[/td]
[td]$1.44 B[/td]
[td]$1.50 B[/td]
[td]$1.36 B[/td]
[/tr]
[/table]
As you can see, relative to MLB's official initial proposal, even 54 games at full pro rata is financially superior (playoffs or no playoffs); 60+ plus games at full pro rata would be, well, even more superior. Moreover, unlike the second and third proposals from MLB (which are only financially superior if the playoffs are staged, meaning the players absorb substantial downside risk in the event they cannot be staged), this "framework towards an accord" doesn't trade more games for the potential of a return, but just straight-up pays the players, per game, for playing more games ... which, coincidentally, is exactly what the players have maintained they want this whole time.
Ultimately, I think we may get slightly more than 60 games—maybe back up to the 72 that's been floated previously—because the real sledgehammer MLBPA has been wielding is the threat of a grievance, which could (and would) have been filed with a shorter, imposed season (like the 48- or 54-game option) or in the event of a cancellation. I think ownership believes both (a) there's a non-trivial chance the union would win that grievance, and (b) disclosure of financial documents from teams would've meant a win for the union (in light of the looming CBA renegotiation) even if they lost the grievance.
More than happy to finally have the DH.