MLB players blast owners after league cancels regular season games amid lockout
For the first time in nearly three decades, MLB games have been canceled due to a labor stoppage.
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred announced Tuesday that the first two regular season series for each team will be canceled, as well as spring training.
The move comes after MLB and the MLB Players Association went one day past the owners' self-imposed Feb. 28 deadline to arrive at a new collective bargaining agreement. The two sides had been negotiating in person at Jupiter, Florida, since Feb. 21, but no deal was reached even after a 16-hour session Monday led MLB to push its deadline to Tuesday.
Barring a last-gasp reversal, MLB will lose games via labor stoppage for the first time since the 1994 player strike that canceled the World Series (not counting the de facto labor stoppage in 2020). If this year's canceled games aren't made up, it will be the first time in MLB history any games that count have been canceled due to a lockout (a 1990 lockout delayed opening day, but a 162-game season was still played).
As you can imagine, the players are not happy after a negotiation process that ultimately ended with them rejecting a proposal from ownership that barely budged on the competitive balance tax threshold, which owners have used as a virtual salary cap for years.
In a statement, the MLBPA characterized the lockout as an attempt by Manfred and the owners to break the union.
Statement from the Major League Baseball Players Association: pic.twitter.com/rmpciPsQm4
— MLBPA Communications (@MLBPA_News) March 1, 2022
Plenty more players, including Los Angeles Angels star Mike Trout, aired out their frustrations on Twitter.
Regarding The MLB Lockout: pic.twitter.com/QQUC1pWr5F
— Mike Trout (@MikeTrout) March 2, 2022
— Jonathan India (@JonathanIndia) March 1, 2022
i think it might be time to apply for that mcdonald's job everybody said i'd be working
— Clint Frazier (@clintfrazier) March 1, 2022
https://t.co/n4EWwoIEnv pic.twitter.com/j2HIpU4vBt
— Brett Anderson (@_BAnderson30_) March 1, 2022
To the fans we will miss you most. To the younger generation of baseball players, this is for you.
— Anthony Rizzo (@ARizzo44) March 1, 2022
Have no clue how he has the ability to laugh about anything right now. Mind is blown. pic.twitter.com/xxwHnF9cUW
— Michael Lorenzen (@Lorenzen55) March 1, 2022
This dude is lying to the public. They literally went quite on us for 43 days and say they “negotiated” in good faith.
— Dustin Garneau (@dusgar13) March 1, 2022
Manfred gotta go.
— Marcus Stroman (@STR0) March 1, 2022
Cancel opening day a whole tradition thrown out the window today, one of the biggest and most exciting days of the season, 😢 A sad day for all of us who love baseball. #MLBPA #MLB
— Robinson Chirinos (@robinson28ch) March 1, 2022
— Jose Trevino (@HipHipJose5) March 1, 2022
This was SOOOOOO easily avoidable, so easy…..That’s what makes this even more frustrating 🙄🙄. Sad day for the sport. pic.twitter.com/AY4KeVGlWh
— Travis Shaw (@travis_shaw21) March 1, 2022
Yikes
— Logan Webb (@LoganWebb1053) March 1, 2022
Ahh yes. “The Union has struck a different note today.” Of course.
Just another tactic trying to control the narrative. Same thing we have already seen over and over. Nothing new here. https://t.co/UYBCQqbQM4— James McCann (@McCannon33) March 1, 2022
Smh this 💩 Is ridiculous 🤦🏾♂️
— Shed Long Jr. (@SLONG895) March 1, 2022
this is just another episode of succession
— Jack Flaherty (@Jack9Flaherty) March 1, 2022
Plenty of reporters and observers placed the blame at the feet of the owners, who instituted the lockout in the first place, waited weeks to approach the bargaining table and self-imposed the deadline to cancel games. Others were simply unhappy that baseball seems to be once again be eating its future to fill its owners' pockets in the present.
Obviously, that was never going to happen, but presenting the outcome of regular season cancellations as something beyond MLB’s strategic and negotiating control is factually inaccurate.
— Alex Speier (@alexspeier) March 1, 2022
$220 million for the first CBT threshold is not a serious proposal from MLB's owners, in my opinion. That's an obvious no from players.
— Andy Martino (@martinonyc) March 1, 2022
Rob Manfred: "The last five years were difficult from a revenue perspective."
In 2019, the last season before the pandemic, MLB revenues jumped for a 17th straight year to a record $10.7 billion, per Forbes.— Jason Mastrodonato (@JMastrodonato) March 1, 2022
The days since Dec. 2 have come to the most expected result, and yet it’s still been just as incredibly annoying, frustrating, exhausting and maddening a process as we’d imagine it could be. The bar was low, and they couldn’t clear it.
— Fabian Ardaya (@FabianArdaya) March 1, 2022
The last time a work stoppage led to lost baseball games, the damage was immeasurable. Today, MLB teams are even more profitable yet owners declined to step up and make players a better offer. Embarrassing for the sport that should be celebrating its players, not fighting them.
— Ben Nicholson-Smith (@bnicholsonsmith) March 1, 2022
Baseball’s owners should feel embarrased — but that would be assuming that any of them have the capacity to feel shame.
— Marc Carig (@MarcCarig) March 1, 2022
The owners imposed a lockout Dec. 2 & framed it as jumpstarting negotiations before going 43 days without negotiating. Then they set an arbitrary deadline. Then they threatened to miss a month of games. Then they utilized public rhetoric to apply 11th-hour pressure. What a time. https://t.co/tzAHqcZzH7
— Alec Lewis (@alec_lewis) March 1, 2022
I'm just dumbfounded.
How baseball can be about to cancel opening day at this point in time is just stunning.
Just stunning.— Evan Grant (@Evan_P_Grant) March 1, 2022
Baseball continues to lose an entire generation of fans who will be denied a normal season for a third straight year.
— John Shea (@JohnSheaHey) March 1, 2022
— BILL OAKLEY (@thatbilloakley) March 1, 2022
Some of the largest concerns, though, were for the team employees caught in the conflict between the owners and players. Spring training and regular season games being canceled means a loss of revenue for countless people, people who don't have millions of dollars squirreled away to wait out a labor stoppage.
I also can't help but think of all the ancillary folks who are negatively impacted by this, people whose livelihoods depend on MLB games being played and who have suffered enough the last 2 years. Stadium workers. Restaurant/bar owners and employees. Broadcast crew members. Etc.
— Mark Zuckerman (@MarkZuckerman) March 1, 2022
Conversations about the MLB v MLBPA standoff are centering players v owners. But, let’s not forget about all non-uniform employees, who won’t get paid if there aren’t games. There’s gonna be a lot of people who’ll suffer if there’s no baseball games.
— Nubyjas Wilborn (@nwilborn19) March 1, 2022
Just to state the obvious, workers at the ballpark are affected. There could be layoffs or deferments in the FOs if this drags out. Salt of the earth folks that take care of the game will be hurt — they’re being hurt in AZ and FL already. MLB shoots itself in the foot (again)
— Maury Brown (@BizballMaury) March 1, 2022
The amount of exhaustion, despair and anger I’m hearing from people around baseball — people who have dedicated their lives to this industry — is remarkable. The owners are breaking the spirits of the people who run their businesses.
— Andy McCullough (@ByMcCullough) March 1, 2022
How did MLB and the MLBPA get here?
MLB owners initiated the lockout back on Dec. 2, a move commissioner Rob Manfred publicly claimed was meant to "jumpstart" negotiations. The league proceeded to wait more than six weeks to submit its first CBA proposal, which the players promptly rejected.
The two sides have been in a protracted back-and-forth ever since. The battle over the next CBA features many fronts, including arbitration eligibility for younger players, competitive balance tax dynamics and expanding the postseason. At one point, the owners requested a federal mediator to help resolve the standoff, but the MLBPA declined, noting the league hadn't even countered its first official proposal.
MLB started canceling spring training games on Feb. 18, adding urgency to the Jupiter talks that began last week, especially after Manfred reiterated on the Feb. 28 deadline. The two sides appeared to make some headway, but that all went out the window when a Saturday meeting turned hostile. They kept meeting on Sunday and Monday, pushing the deadline to Tuesday at 5 p.m. After the union rejected what MLB called its "best" offer, Manfred promptly announced the canceled games.
So here we are.