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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Daryl Van Schouwen

White Sox, Cubs won’t have much tolerance for baseball labor strife

The Cubs and White Sox won’t play some teams in their own leagues but they will play each other under a likely plan that would be in place should their be baseball in 2020. (AP) | AP Photos

Guaranteed Rate Field stands silent. Wrigley Field does, too.

Outside of Chicago, every other major league ballpark in a nation felled by the coronavirus is empty as well. There is hope, however, that the parks will be occupied by teams — but not fans — by early July if team owners and the players union can agree on financial terms for what would be perhaps an 82-games season, about half the usual 162.

On Tuesday, the players and owners reportedly discussed health, safety and economics but held off on talking about the hot button topic, the owners’ proposal for a 50/50 revenue split, a tug of war the two sides will have to get ironed out in two or three weeks. That would be a “deadline” with a targeted July 1-4 start to the season needed, preceded by scaled down spring training of about three weeks.

If you are one of the millions reeling from the physical, mental or financial effects of the pandemic and hoping for a return of baseball as soon as possible, covering your eyes and ears or shutting down your phone while this gets hashed out might be the thing to do, unless billionaires vs. millionaires tiffs are your cup of tea.

The last thing baseball’s image needs is a squabble between these two sides, but that’s what we are probably going to get.

Gov. Pritzker took the owners side Tuesday, saying “fans deserve their pastime back” and that he is “disappointed that players are holding out for these very, very high salaries and payments during a time when I think everybody is sacrificing.”

It’s the players, though, not the owners, who would be taking health risks by playing baseball again.

When we last saw the Cubs and Sox playing baseball on March 12 when spring training was shut down and the start of the season delayed, both teams were enthused about embarking on steppingstone seasons, the Sox to a window of contention and the Cubs to a new era under new manager David Ross trying to keep their closing window propped up.

If the owners and players union settle on a deal, we’ll see a schedule that will keep the crosstown series intact. Each team would play opponents in its own division, plus interleague games limited to NL Central (Cubs) vs. AL Central (Sox), NL East vs. AL East and NL East vs. AL East. Seeing them on TV or radio only is likely with games being played in empty ballparks, at least initially. Rosters would expand from 26 to 30 with “taxi squads” of up to 20 players available to reinforce rosters, playoff teams will increase from 10 to 14 and the designated hitter will be used by NL teams (new for them) as well as AL teams.

That shouldn’t be a problem for the Cubs, who have a natural DH in Kyle Schwarber for that slot.

A much tougher problem to solve is a financial meeting of the minds between owners and players. With about 40 percent of revenue coming from tickets, concessions and various gate-related cash, the owners are angling for the revenue split. The union is having none of it, calling it a salary cap. They agreed in March to prorated salaries based on games played.

“That the league is trying to take advantage of a global health crisis to get what they’ve failed to achieve in the past … suggests they know exactly how this will be received,” MLBPA executive director Tony Clark told The Athletic Monday.

“None of this is beneficial to the process of finding a way for us to safely get back on the field and resume the 2020 season — which continues to be our sole focus,” Clark said.

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