'Somebody's Gotta Say It': Phillies' Bryce Harper Backs Blake Snell After Pitcher Said He Would Not Play If Pay Is Cut Further
PHILADELPHIA (CBS/AP) -- Tampa Bay Rays ace Blake Snell set the baseball world ablaze when he said he would not play this year if his pay is cut further, proclaiming: "I'm not playing unless I get mine." Now, Phillies' slugger Bryce Harper is backing up Snell, saying "he's speaking the truth."
"I'm not splitting no revenue. I want all mine," the 2018 AL Cy Young Award winner said on a Twitch stream Wednesday. "Bro, y'all got to understand, too, because y'all going to be like: 'Bro, play for the love of the game. Man, what's wrong with you, bro? Money should not be a thing.' Bro, I'm risking my life. What do you mean, 'It should not be a thing?' It 100% should be a thing."
Harper, the Phillies' $330 million man, offered his support for Snell while streaming on Twitch Thursday night.
"He ain't lying. He's speaking the truth, bro. I ain't mad at him. Somebody's gotta say it, at least he manned up and said it. Good for him. I love Snell, the guy's a beast," Harper said.
A 27-year-old left-hander, Snell agreed in March 2019 to a $50 million, five-year contract that included a $3 million signing bonus, a $1 million salary last year and a $7 million salary this season.
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As part of the March 26 agreement between Major League Baseball and the players' association to deal with the delay in the season caused by the coronavirus pandemic, Snell is being advanced $286,500 for the first 60 days of the season through May 24 but would not get any more in 2020 if no games are played. The deal calls for players to receive prorated shares of salary if the season does start; Snell would get $43,210 for each day of the schedule.
Teams say they would lose money if games are played in empty ballparks, and owners on Monday approved making a proposal to the union to base salaries on a 50-50 split of revenue. The union says the concept amounts to a salary cap, which players have long voted never to accept.
"If I'm going to play, I should be at the money I signed to be getting paid," Snell said. "I should not be getting half of what I'm getting paid because the season's cut in half, all on top of a 33% cut of the half that's already there, so I'm really getting like 25%. On top of that, it's getting taxed. So imagine how much I'm actually making to play, you know what I'm saying? Like, I ain't making (expletive). And on top of that, so all of that money's gone and now I play risking my life."
Rays manager Kevin Cash did not want to talk about Snell's views of the finances but did discuss their medical worries.
"I would imagine there are players that feel — that have concerns about their specific health and the health of their families and teammates," Cash said Thursday during a telephone news conference. "And, I think that's fair. We all should, to a degree."
"Health and safety is the No. 1 priority right now for myself, our organization, MLB, of our players, our staff, our fans, and our specific communities," Cash said.
"I guess we all have a right to say what we want to say and believe and feel what we want to believe," he added. "But I can assure you that stance of the prioritization of health and safety among everybody affiliated with baseball, and certainly our fans and our communities, and all of the first responders that have been out there working currently through this rough time, we support and continue to support."
Bargaining began Tuesday when MLB made an initial presentation of a plan that calls for an 82-game schedule starting around the Fourth of July, which would reduce Snell's salary to $3,543,210 under the March 26 deal. Frequent testing for the coronavirus would be part of the plan.
Safety is among players' top concerns.
"If I get the 'rona, guess what happens with that? Oh, yeah, that stays — that's in my body forever," Snell said. "The damage that was done to my body, that's going to be there forever. So now I got to play with that on top of that. So, y'all got to — I mean — you'all got to understand, man, for to go, for me to take a pay cut is not happening because the risk is through the roof, it's a shorter season, less pay. Like, bro, this — yeah, man, I've got to, no, I've got to get my money. I'm not playing unless I get mine, OK? And that's just the way it is for me. Like I'm sorry if you guys think differently, but the risk is way the hell higher and the amount of money I make is way lower. Why would I think about doing that?"
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Snell was 21-5 with an American League-best 1.86 ERA in 2018, then went 6-6 with a 4.29 ERA last year, when he broke a toe in his right foot on April 14 while moving furniture and missed nearly two months due to left elbow surgery on July 29.
He is due $10.5 million in 2021, $12.5 million in 2022 and $16 million. His mind already is turning to 2021.
Snell's Twitch stream was posted to Twitter by a person who was a freelance logger with the MLB Network until spring training stopped in March.
"In my head, I'm preparing for next season. I'm preparing — well, I'm actually preparing for right now but as if I'm preparing for next season. Like it's super weird, man," Snell said. "I'm just saying, man, it just doesn't make sense for me to lose all of that money and then go play and then be on lockdown, not around my family, not around the people I love and get paid way the hell less, and then the risk of injury runs every time I step on the field. So is it's, it's just, it's not worth it. It's not. I love baseball to death. It's just not worth it."
(© Copyright 2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)