Former Tiger Tony Clark Has Contract As Head Of MLBPA Extended Through 2022
IRVING, Texas (AP) — Tony Clark's contract as executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association was extended through 2022, a year past the expiration of the current collective bargaining agreement with MLB.
The former All-Star first baseman became executive director after previous union head Michael Weiner died in 2013, and Clark led negotiations for a labor contract covering 2017-21.
"As much as anything, the engagement of our guys, the interest that they have, both now and moving forward, being connected to that, supportive of that, and leading them through that is something that I'm grateful for the opportunity to do," Clark said Wednesday after the MLBPA finished its annual executive board meeting.
This week's meeting was at the same North Texas resort hotel where Clark and the MLPBA met two years ago with management and reached a verbal agreement on the current labor contract. In August, the union made a key addition to its staff when it hired Bruce Meyer as senior director of collective bargaining and legal.
There were increased tensions between players and management when dozens of experienced free agents went unsigned into spring training this year — and some even much longer. Two weeks into spring training, about one-third of the 166 players who exercised free agency rights last November hadn't reached contract agreements.
There are about 150 free agents right now early in this offseason.
Asked whether he felt things would be different this time, Clark said he is "cautiously optimistic" that they will.
"We have concerns that we had last year, particularly as they're related to competition on the field and how those manifest themselves into decisions related to rosters and individual players. Those concerns are still there," he said. "But we remain cautiously optimistic that a year later the interests of the individual clubs and the industry as a whole has teams making decisions with an eye on competition in the near term, and now three, four, five, six years down the road."
Clark said there have been a number of informal conversations with MLB and Commissioner Rob Manfred during the last few months trying to get an idea of what talks the sides are interested in having during the offseason.
"My expectations after the conversations that we had today is a lot of things that you've heard, whether from their side or our side, are going to be discussed," Clark said. "Then the question becomes whether common ground can be found against the interests they have and the interests we have. So different values may be placed on different pieces of that puzzle."
Pace of play has been an ongoing discussion for several years, and now there are also on-field items such as the drastic defensive shifts being used by some teams and the increased use of relievers on pitching staffs, including some in the role of "openers" to start games.
While not getting into specifics about where those issues could go, and how exactly they were discussed, Clark said the players have always had a passion for the game and remain committed to it.
"So any time you talk about the game and having to make changes, appreciating why the changes are being discussed while acknowledging that you're changing the game that the guys love and are passionate about, the conversations are personal," he said. "But the one thing that the guys have always known, and have always appreciated, is that when the game does well everybody tends to benefit."
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