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Source: MLB owners approve plan to start season in July

The "Teammates" statues of former Boston Red Sox players Ted Williams, Bobby Doerr, Johnny Pesky and Dom DiMaggio wear makeshift masks made of Red Sox merchandise as the Major League Baseball season is postponed due the coronavirus pandemic on April 9, 2020, at Fenway Park in Boston. (Billie Weiss/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images)

NEW YORK (AP) — Major League Baseball owners gave the go-ahead Monday to making a proposal to the players’ union that could lead to the coronavirus-delayed season starting around the Fourth of July weekend in ballparks without fans, a plan that envisioned expanding the designated hitter to the National League for 2020.

Spring training would start in early to mid-June, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because details of the plan were not announced.

MLB officials are slated
to make a presentation to the union on Tuesday. An agreement with the
players’ association is needed, and talks are expected to be difficult —
especially over a proposal for a revenue split that would be
unprecedented for baseball.

Each team would play about 82
regular-season games: against opponents in its own division plus
interleague matchups limited to AL East vs. NL East, AL Central vs. NL
Central and AL West vs. NL West.

Postseason play would be expanded from 10 clubs to 14 by doubling wild cards in each league to four.

Teams
would prefer to play at their regular-season ballparks but would switch
to spring training stadiums or neutral sites if medical and government
approvals can’t be obtained for games at home. Toronto might have to
play home games in Dunedin, Florida.

The All-Star Game, scheduled for Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on July 14, likely would be called off.

Teams
will propose that players receive the percentage of their 2020 salaries
based on a 50-50 split of revenues MLB receives during the
regular-season and postseason, which likely will be among the most
contentious aspects of the proposal during negotiations with the
players’ association.

That proposal would take into account fans
being able to return to ballparks at some point, perhaps with a small
percentage of seats sold at first and then gradually increasing.

Baseball
players have refused to consider even the frameworks for the type of
revenue splits that have been agreed to by unions in the NFL, NBA and
NHL. The last attempt by baseball owners to gain a salary cap with a
revenue split led to a 7 1/2-month strike in 1994-95 that wiped out the
World Series for the first time in 90 years.

Rosters would be
expanded from 26 to around 30. With minor leagues shuttered, there
likely will be the addition of about 20 players per club akin to the
NFL’s practice squad.

Players and teams agreed to a deal on March 26
that called for each player to receive only a portion of salary,
determined by what percentage of a 162-game schedule is played. As part
of that deal, if no season is played each player would receive 2020
service time matching what the player earned in 2019.

But that
deal is contingent there being no restrictions on mass gatherings at the
federal, state, city and local level; no relevant travel restrictions
in the U.S. and Canada; and Commissioner Rob Manfred after consulting
the union and medical expects, determines there is no risk to playing in
front of fans at regular-season ballparks.

Players and teams
committed to “discuss in good faith the economic feasibility of playing
games in the absence of spectators or at appropriate neutral sites.”
Manfred has said about 40% of MLB revenue is tied to gate, including
concessions, parking, ballpark advertising, luxury suites and programs.

Union officials and players have cited the March 26 agreement
as setting economic terms and say they have no inclination for
additional cuts. Players are more interested in medical protocols and
testing designed to protect them from and detect the new coronavirus.
The proposal will detail the plan for dealing with players and staff who
test positive.

Because players accrue salaries for the regular
season only and not for spring training or the postseason, the union may
counter by asking for more regular-season games during negotiations
that could significantly alter or possibly even scuttle the restart
plan.

The DH was adopted by the American League for the 1973
season but has been resisted by National League owners. The players’
union has favored it because it would create more jobs for high-paying
hitters in their 30s, by MLB has looked at it as an economic issue.

Money, however, has disappeared as an issue at this stage for 2020 because nearly all veteran players have agreed to contracts. Yasiel Puig is the most notable exception.