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Baseball’s back: MLB sets 60-game sked, opens July 23 or 24

The main gate of Coors Field, home of the Major League Baseball team the Colorado Rockies, is locked early Tuesday, June 23, 2020, in Denver. The league is waiting for the players' union to respond Tuesday to whether it will agree to health protocols for a 60-game regular-season slate and if players will report for training camp by July 1. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

NEW YORK (AP) — Major League Baseball issued a 60-game schedule
Tuesday night that will start July 23 or 24 in empty ballparks as the
sport tries to push ahead amid the coronavirus following months of
acrimony.

A dramatically altered season with games full of new
rules was the final result of failed financial negotiations. But for
fans eager to see any baseball this year, at least now they can look
forward to opening day.

The announcement by MLB came while more
players continue to test positive for the virus — at least seven on the
Philadelphia Phillies alone. And a stark realization remained, that if
health situations deteriorated, all games could still be wiped out.

“What happens when we all get it?” Milwaukee pitcher Brett Anderson tweeted this week.

One
day after the players’ association rejected an economic agreement and
left open the possibility of a grievance seeking hundreds of millions of
dollars in damages, the bickering sides agreed on an operations manual.
Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred then unilaterally imposed the
schedule, his right under a March agreement with the union.

In a
twist, the sides expanded the designated hitter to games involving
National League teams for the first time and instituted the radical
innovation of starting extra innings with a runner on second base.

Playoff teams remain at 10 for now — there is still talk of a possible expansion. The rejected deal had called for 16 teams.

Players
will start reporting for the resumption of training on July 1. It
remains to be seen which players will report back to work — high-risk
individuals are allowed to opt out and still receive salary and service
time, but others who sit out get neither money nor the service credit
needed for eligibility for free agency and salary arbitration.

Each
team will play 10 games against each of its four division rivals and
four games vs. each of the five clubs in the corresponding division in
the other league, according to details obtained by The Associated Press.

A
team is scheduled to make only one trip to each city it visits in MLB’s
shortest season since 1878. a schedule of such brevity that some fans
may question the legitimacy of records.

No matter what, the
season will be among the most unusual ever for a sport that takes pride
that the race for titles is a marathon and not a sprint: Washington
started 19-31 and 27-33 last year but finished 93-69 to earn a wild card
and won a seven-game World Series for its first title.

“There’s a
lot more pressure because in a 60-game schedule, I think that you have
25% more teams that can compete, that had no idea they were going to
compete for 162 games,” said Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz, now a
broadcaster.

The trade deadline will be Aug. 31 and the deadline
to be in an organization for postseason eligibility is Sept. 15. Teams
can resume making trades Friday, when rosters will no longer be frozen.

Active
rosters will be 30 during the first two weeks of the season, 28 during
the second two weeks and 26 after that. They will not expand to 28 on
Sept. 1, as originally intended this year.

With no minor leagues,
teams would be allowed to retain 60 players each, including a taxi
squad. Up to three players from the taxi squad can travel with a team to
a game, and one of the three must be a catcher.

MLB is keeping
the planned innovation that pitchers must face three batters or finish a
half inning —- players refused to agree a year ago but also waived
their right to block.

The injured list minimum for pitchers at 10 days rather than revert to 15, as initially intended.

Public
opinion shredded both sides as they locked in a ferocious financial
battle during a pandemic that has led to more than 120,000 deaths and
2.3 million infections in the U.S. and led to a 14.7% unemployment rate,
the highest since the Great Depression.

MLB originally hoped to
be the first U.S. major league to return, with an 82-game schedule
starting around the Fourth of July, but public sniping broke out between
management and players who distrust teams’ claims of economic losses
following years of franchise appreciation. MLB claimed that without
gate-related revenue it would lose $640,000 for each additional
regular-season game, a figure the union disputed.

MLB became
exasperated with the union’s leadership team, headed by former All-Star
first baseman Tony Clark and Bruce Meyer, a litigator hired in August
2018. Manfred and Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem were infuriated when
Clark said he considered the result of a one-on-one meeting with Manfred
last week a proposal rather than what MLB termed a framework for a
deal.

Rather than play 162 games over 186 days, the season will be
60 games over 66 or 67 days, depending on whether there is a nationally
televised Thursday night opener. It is scheduled to end Sept. 27, which
leaves little margin to make up September rainouts.

Players are
being given staggered reporting times over several days for intake
screening. The time will be used for coronavirus testing ahead of the
resumption of workouts, which were stopped March 12 due to the pandemic.

Because
of an uptick of infections in Florida and Arizona’s summer heat, 28
teams currently are leaning toward training in their regular-season
ballparks. Detroit remained partial to Lakeland, Florida, and Toronto
was hoping to gain government permission to work out at Rogers Centre.

Under
terms of the deal the sides reached on March 26, which was to have been
opening day, players would receive prorated portions of their salaries
if the 60-game schedule is not cut short by the virus. Salaries
originally totaled $4 billion, and the prorated portion of about 37%
reduces pay to $1.48 billion.

Salaries were to have ranged from
$563,500 at the minimum to $36 million for Mike Trout and Gerrit Cole at
the top, but the spread would now be from $208,704 to $13,333,333.

MLB
initially had sought last month in its initial economic proposal to
reduce pay to about $1 billion, and players vowed not to give up full
prorated pay and proposed a 114-game schedule that amounted to $2.8
billion.

The relationship deteriorated back to the level of the
labor wars that led to eight work stoppages from 1972-95, and the union
has threatened a grievance claiming MLB didn’t fulfill the provision in
the March deal requiring the longest season economically feasible,
conditioned by several other provisions. MLB would claim the union
bargained in bad faith, and the case would be argued before arbitrator
Mark Irvings.

That would be a prelude to the expiration of the
current labor contract on Dec. 1, 2021, which likely will be followed by
a lockout.