Report: MLB Expected to Officially Close Spring Training Facilities Monday
Update: According to subsequent reports from Gould, MLB is merely limiting informal workouts and not locking camps completely.
“We are not going to start on April 9,” Rob Manfred tells us as he leaves conference call. Says he’s not going to speculate, but he says owners are still hopeful to play a full schedule, unsure how. Limiting informal workouts, not locking camps. Spoke to @stltoday on this matter.
— Derrick Goold (@dgoold) March 16, 2020
Tension had been building between players and teams over access to spring training facilities in the wake of MLB’s shutdown, prompting a league memo with instructions for how to proceed. Among other points, it noted that “40-Man Roster players must be permitted to remain at the Club’s Spring Training site, and are eligible to receive their usual Spring Training allowances.” However, it went on to require social distancing through the avoidance of any group activities.
Non-roster players and all but a skeleton crew of team staff were sent to their offseason homes in anticipation of a break that could last well into May or even beyond. Most Cubs players were expected to remain in the Mesa area, with players from other teams presumably doing the same, both to maintain some semblance of routine and fulfill the remainder of their spring housing agreements.
That’s where problems arose, as Ken Rosenthal and Evan Drelich reported for The Athletic. With labor unrest already at the forefront of the sport, players had grown suspicious of the “apparent inclination of some clubs to close their facilities.” As concerns over the spread of coronavirus have spread and additional CDC guidelines have essentially guaranteed a much later start to the season, however, it appears as though MLB is going to shut camps down entirely.
According to Derrick Goold of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Cardinals players are packing up their gear and leaving the facility. Official word from MLB is expected shortly, but MLB commissioner Rob Manfred was at the Cardinals’ facility for a conference call with owners and league officials. Goold tweeted that “players have been alerted to head home, figure out individual workouts,” as even informal team activities have been suspended.
Manfred is at the #Cardinals facility for conference call with owners/official. Players have been alerted to head home, figure out individual workouts. No team activities, informal even. They’re packing and moving on out. https://t.co/h8eZHaSpai
— Derrick Goold (@dgoold) March 16, 2020
If you weren’t already skeptical about the season starting at any point prior to June, this should be a wake-up call. Even if the CDC guidance on avoiding gatherings of 50 or more people remains at eight weeks, we’re looking at May 10 as the very earliest date by which spring training could resume. This is basically like going back to November and starting the offseason all over again.
Ed note: Rosenthal shared several points of memo from union to agents this morning, among which are details of a transaction freeze and allowances for players who choose to head home or to their team’s city. Talks that began last week to cover some of the necessary concessions for a shortened season will continue.
Key points from memo sent by Players Association to agents this morning:
1. Transaction/signing freeze under discussion, expected in “very near future.” To be lifted when camps reopen. PA wants to protect players with March opt-out clauses that have been effectively nullified.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) March 16, 2020
2. To cover spring-training living allowances, players who return home or to club’s home city can get up to $1,100 per week through PA until 4/9 or until such a time clubs provide similar. Applies to players on 40-man roster players as of 3/13/20 and certain non-roster invitees.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) March 16, 2020
3. Talks with MLB continue on host of issues, including: Conditions for resumption of play; amended scheduling; player salaries; service time; contracts and transactions; core economics; amateur signings and potential adjustments for collectively bargained dates and deadlines.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) March 16, 2020