Saturday, June 6, 2026

MLBPA Chief Says League Missing Chance to Build On Success

While baseball continues to grow across many areas, labor storm clouds continue to darken. 

Detroit Free Press

ATLANTA — MLB is awash in a series of business boosts and positive developments, between attendance rising, each of its national TV partners posting audience increases, and other, in-house outlets such as the MLB Network and MLB.TV garnering record engagement. 

All of these markers continue, or in some cases, accelerate the resurgent energy the sport has seen since the early 2023 introduction of the pitch clock, which played a key role in introducing a livelier, more action-filled form of play. 

So why is the league so insistent on potentially tearing that down? Such is the question that the MLB Players Association is asking. 

Speaking before Monday’s MLB Home Run Derby, MLBPA executive director Tony Clark said he was disappointed to see labor talk dominate so far ahead of the December 2026 expiration of the current pact. 

“The game is in a great place. It appears to be moving in the right direction. More attendance and more butts in the seats than we’ve had in a long time. More people are watching and streaming the games than we’ve had,” Clark said. “You’d think there’d be an opportunity about how to build instead of how to go backwards.”

Of course, the MLBPA is responsible for some of that escalation in rhetoric, recently calling out what they see as the league’s push to institute a salary cap, but the union said it is signaling alarms to help ensure that players are informed on the developing situation. 

“[The owners] obviously have their interests, and those interests aren’t much different than the interests they have for the last three or four or five decades at this point,” Clark said.  

Dividing Lines

Clark is expected to revisit many of the same themes Tuesday morning when he meets with the Baseball Writers Association of America, to be immediately followed by MLB commissioner Rob Manfred.

For his part, Manfred said large-scale change is needed, and that current MLBPA leadership is not necessarily on board. Because of that, he’s been meeting with individual players to make the league’s case

“The strategy is to get directly to the players,” Manfred said at a recent investor day for the publicly traded Braves. “I don’t think the leadership of this union is anxious to lead the way to change. So we need to energize the workforce in order to get them familiar with or supportive of the idea that maybe changing the system could be good for everybody.”

The union’s objection to a salary cap extends the same core objection the organization has held for nearly its entire existence. It also continues to point to recent issues in cap-based systems in other major sports, such as frequent cap-driven roster cuts and contract restructurings in the NFL.

“Those other situations enter every conversation we have when we educate players on what a salary-cap system is and what it isn’t,” Clark said. “It fundamentally erodes guaranteed contracts. It pits players directly against one another. … It is the opposite of what you often hear it described as.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Aaron Judge Injury Deals Major Blow to Yankees—and MLB

The Yankees megastar will miss the heart of the season.

MLB’s Long-Stalled Stadium Plans—Rays and A’s—Show Progress

The A’s and Rays both are drawing closer to getting new ballparks.

MLB Owners Hold Firm On Salary Cap, Cite ‘Failure’ With Luxury Tax

Rising willingness by teams to pay the tax prompts a new approach.

MLBPA Says Owners’ Salary Cap Would Cut Player Pay by $500M

The union again decries management’s push to implement a salary cap.

Featured Today

Ai sports slop

How Sports Became Ground Zero for AI Slop

The category is the perfect breeding ground for AI content churn.
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group A - Germany v Luxembourg - Rhein-Neckar-Arena, Sinsheim, Germany - October 10, 2025 Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann
June 4, 2026

‘Weird Corners of the World’: How to Find a World Cup Coach

National associations look for a winning record—and also hope for serendipity.
June 3, 2026

The Elite High Schools Hosting World Cup Teams

Spain, Morocco, Croatia, and Switzerland chose schools as their tournament base camps.
Frances Cabral-Delaney
May 29, 2026

How Arsenal Fandom Went ‘Manic’

“People do not become Arsenal fans because it’s easy,” says Zohran Mamdani.

Mirra Andreeva Wins First Grand Slam at French Open

Andreeva defeated underdog Maja Chwalińska in two sets during the final.
June 4, 2026

Knicks Get-In Prices for Game 3 at MSG Hit $8,000—and Climbing

Knicks Finals tickets now outprice both the Super Bowl and World Cup.
June 5, 2026

Does Market Size Still Matter in the NBA?

This year’s Finals pits the biggest market against one of the smallest.
Sponsored

Landon Donovan: What Soccer in America Still Needs

Landon Donovan discusses the evolution of soccer in America and investing in the NWSL.
June 4, 2026

Chwalińska Makes French Open Final, Nearly Triples Career Earnings

Chwalińska was ranked No. 114 before the French Open began.
Mar 30, 2026; Phoenix, AZ, USA; NFL commissioner Roger Goodell arrives during the 2026 NFL Annual League Meeting at the Arizona Biltmore.
June 4, 2026

NFL Defends TV Deals As Goodell Declines to Testify Before Congress

The league continues to tout its commitment to broadcast television.
SEA at VAN - Nov. 21, 20251
June 4, 2026

Will the PWHL’s Aggressive Expansion Succeed?

The league added four teams ahead of the 2026–27 season.
June 3, 2026

Adam Silver: NBA Europe ‘On Track’ to Launch Next Year

The commissioner also commented on the Aspiration investigation.