The post Lockout Looms For 2027 Season If MLB, Union Can’t Come To Terms appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Tony Clark, the executive director of the MLB Players Association, talks to reports before Game 1 of the 2025 World Series. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images) MLB Photos via Getty Images No matter how much anyone tries to diminish it, the word “lockout” is going to hang over the 2026 Major League Baseball season like a plump slider about to be deposited into the far reaches of your favorite neighborhood ballpark. Tony Clark, executive director of the MLB Players Association, has sounded like a broken record this year each time he’s addressed the media: Let’s not try to fix what isn’t broken. During spring training, at the All-Star Game, the World Series and this past week after player meetings in Scottsdale, Ariz., with selected members of the press. An unedited audio file of that conversation was provided to Forbes by the union. “As an organization you get ready for the next negotiations as soon as the ink is dried on the previous one,” Clark said. “I can’t speak for the other side, but our interests are getting into the room and hammering out a fair and equitable deal. That’s our commitment. The other stuff is just noise.” The current Basic Agreement is set to expire on Dec. 1, 2026. Negotiations typically begin during spring training and will be the last for commissioner Rob Manfred, who says he will retire when his current contract expires on Jan. 25, 2029. The union is anticipating tough sessions and is preparing for at least an offseason lockout, a redux of what happened before the current contract was signed during the spring of 2022. While that season was delayed, games were not missed. There have been no negotiations thus far, either front or back channel, Clark said. “The lines of communication are… The post Lockout Looms For 2027 Season If MLB, Union Can’t Come To Terms appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Tony Clark, the executive director of the MLB Players Association, talks to reports before Game 1 of the 2025 World Series. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images) MLB Photos via Getty Images No matter how much anyone tries to diminish it, the word “lockout” is going to hang over the 2026 Major League Baseball season like a plump slider about to be deposited into the far reaches of your favorite neighborhood ballpark. Tony Clark, executive director of the MLB Players Association, has sounded like a broken record this year each time he’s addressed the media: Let’s not try to fix what isn’t broken. During spring training, at the All-Star Game, the World Series and this past week after player meetings in Scottsdale, Ariz., with selected members of the press. An unedited audio file of that conversation was provided to Forbes by the union. “As an organization you get ready for the next negotiations as soon as the ink is dried on the previous one,” Clark said. “I can’t speak for the other side, but our interests are getting into the room and hammering out a fair and equitable deal. That’s our commitment. The other stuff is just noise.” The current Basic Agreement is set to expire on Dec. 1, 2026. Negotiations typically begin during spring training and will be the last for commissioner Rob Manfred, who says he will retire when his current contract expires on Jan. 25, 2029. The union is anticipating tough sessions and is preparing for at least an offseason lockout, a redux of what happened before the current contract was signed during the spring of 2022. While that season was delayed, games were not missed. There have been no negotiations thus far, either front or back channel, Clark said. “The lines of communication are…

Lockout Looms For 2027 Season If MLB, Union Can’t Come To Terms

2025/12/08 00:16

Tony Clark, the executive director of the MLB Players Association, talks to reports before Game 1 of the 2025 World Series. (Photo by Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

MLB Photos via Getty Images

No matter how much anyone tries to diminish it, the word “lockout” is going to hang over the 2026 Major League Baseball season like a plump slider about to be deposited into the far reaches of your favorite neighborhood ballpark.

Tony Clark, executive director of the MLB Players Association, has sounded like a broken record this year each time he’s addressed the media: Let’s not try to fix what isn’t broken. During spring training, at the All-Star Game, the World Series and this past week after player meetings in Scottsdale, Ariz., with selected members of the press.

An unedited audio file of that conversation was provided to Forbes by the union.

“As an organization you get ready for the next negotiations as soon as the ink is dried on the previous one,” Clark said. “I can’t speak for the other side, but our interests are getting into the room and hammering out a fair and equitable deal. That’s our commitment. The other stuff is just noise.”

The current Basic Agreement is set to expire on Dec. 1, 2026. Negotiations typically begin during spring training and will be the last for commissioner Rob Manfred, who says he will retire when his current contract expires on Jan. 25, 2029.

The union is anticipating tough sessions and is preparing for at least an offseason lockout, a redux of what happened before the current contract was signed during the spring of 2022. While that season was delayed, games were not missed.

There have been no negotiations thus far, either front or back channel, Clark said.

“The lines of communication are open. And any time those happen our players know about it.”

Earlier this year, Manfred rattled the sword about another lockout, although lately he’s been silent on the issue, refusing to address it during the World Series. Clark spoke out during last spring training saying, “Unless I am mistaken, the league has said there’s going to be a work stoppage. So, I don’t think I’m speaking out of school in that regard.”

He didn’t mention the possible lockout in his 35-minute talk last week.

“We never go into negotiations trying to miss games,” Clark said. “I can’t speak for the other side. But in our history we’ve missed games. We go in trying to move the industry forward. But we’re going to be prepared for what the other side is telling us they’re doing.”

The owners have talked about a salary cap and floor as exists in all the other organized pro sports to allegedly promote competitive balance. But the union is dead set against that. They will point out there are penalties in the current contract, involving the luxury tax threshold, many of them not enforced.

Lesser earning teams are supposed to invest their revenue-sharing dollars – with some exclusions – into player payrolls. Some do and others use it to offset losses.

Clark said this has been a hot topic of discussion with the players. Every team has the wherewithal to compete, he said.

“Knowing there are some teams that can compete, but have chosen not to, how does that affect the industry?” he asked.

The owners need to introduce some sort of creative concept proving the cap/floor system is better for the financial health of all the players, rather than a chosen few. They have to resolve their own differences on how to evenly share local television and streaming dollars before negotiations with the union even begin.

Since it takes a 75% vote of the 30 owners to approve anything, an even split of regional TV dollars seems unrealistic. The big-market teams that have their own networks or large contracts are enough in number to block it. The New York Yankees, New York Mets, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, Chicago White Sox, Baltimore Orioles, Washington Nationals, San Francisco Giants, and even the Oakland/Sacramento/Las Vegas A’s head that list.

If the owners go into the negotiations attempting again to jam a cap/floor down the union’s throat, there will certainly be a lockout and perhaps a long one that could this time extend into the 2027 season. That would cost both sides games for the first time since the last player strike at the end of 1994 season cancelled 948 games, the playoffs and World Series.

At that point, the owners will lose revenue, and the players will not be paid. They’re paid from the first game of the regular season to the last and no time outside of that period. It will be a matter of which side blinks first; historically it’s the owners.

“We don’t go into the conversation looking to damage the game,” Clark said. “Particularly in a world where the game is moving in a very good direction. We should be celebrating our guys and the game and what we’re seeing. Our guys are doing that night in and night out.”

MLB is making plenty of money. The league set a record this past season by generating team sponsorship revenue of $2.05 billion. The two-time defending World Series-winning Dodgers drew more than 4 million at 50,000-seat Dodger Stadium for the first time and broke the $1 billion mark in local revenue. They are exhibit No. 1.

How long does anyone think Mark Walter and Guggenheim Baseball are going to want to give up any part of that? Include them in the Forbes list of Top 10 valued MLB teams that all should be against an in-season lockout. Again, it takes only 25% of the owners to balk at anything. Will these teams vote in their best interest or the interest of the other owners?

From the union’s point of view, with investment of licensing dollars that have been retained over the past five years rather than dispersed to the players, the MLBPA is in the strongest financal position it’s ever been for players to withstand a lockout that cancels games.

“The dollar amounts are higher than they’ve ever been, and the organization has been preparing to put the players into a position of flexibility to do whatever they want,” Clark said.

So, the clock is ticking. And the lockout is pending.

“The noise is suggesting that the sky is falling,” Clark concluded. “We’ll see once we start formal bargaining, but our players are ready for whatever that’s going to look like.”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/barrymbloom/2025/12/07/lockout-looms-for-2027-season-if-mlb-union-cant-come-to-terms/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Best Crypto to Buy as Saylor & Crypto Execs Meet in US Treasury Council

Best Crypto to Buy as Saylor & Crypto Execs Meet in US Treasury Council

The post Best Crypto to Buy as Saylor & Crypto Execs Meet in US Treasury Council appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Michael Saylor and a group of crypto executives met in Washington, D.C. yesterday to push for the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Bill (the BITCOIN Act), which would see the U.S. acquire up to 1M $BTC over five years. With Bitcoin being positioned yet again as a cornerstone of national monetary policy, many investors are turning their eyes to projects that lean into this narrative – altcoins, meme coins, and presales that could ride on the same wave. Read on for three of the best crypto projects that seem especially well‐suited to benefit from this macro shift:  Bitcoin Hyper, Best Wallet Token, and Remittix. These projects stand out for having a strong use case and high adoption potential, especially given the push for a U.S. Bitcoin reserve.   Why the Bitcoin Reserve Bill Matters for Crypto Markets The strategic Bitcoin Reserve Bill could mark a turning point for the U.S. approach to digital assets. The proposal would see America build a long-term Bitcoin reserve by acquiring up to one million $BTC over five years. To make this happen, lawmakers are exploring creative funding methods such as revaluing old gold certificates. The plan also leans on confiscated Bitcoin already held by the government, worth an estimated $15–20B. This isn’t just a headline for policy wonks. It signals that Bitcoin is moving from the margins into the core of financial strategy. Industry figures like Michael Saylor, Senator Cynthia Lummis, and Marathon Digital’s Fred Thiel are all backing the bill. They see Bitcoin not just as an investment, but as a hedge against systemic risks. For the wider crypto market, this opens the door for projects tied to Bitcoin and the infrastructure that supports it. 1. Bitcoin Hyper ($HYPER) – Turning Bitcoin Into More Than Just Digital Gold The U.S. may soon treat Bitcoin as…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:27
The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters

The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters

The post The Future of Secure Messaging: Why Decentralization Matters appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. From encrypted chats to decentralized messaging Encrypted messengers are having a second wave. Apps like WhatsApp, iMessage and Signal made end-to-end encryption (E2EE) a default expectation. But most still hinge on phone numbers, centralized servers and a lot of metadata, such as who you talk to, when, from which IP and on which device. That is what Vitalik Buterin is aiming at in his recent X post and donation. He argues the next steps for secure messaging are permissionless account creation with no phone numbers or Know Your Customer (KYC) and much stronger metadata privacy. In that context he highlighted Session and SimpleX and sent 128 Ether (ETH) to each to keep pushing in that direction. Session is a good case study because it tries to combine E2E encryption with decentralization. There is no central message server, traffic is routed through onion paths, and user IDs are keys instead of phone numbers. Did you know? Forty-three percent of people who use public WiFi report experiencing a data breach, with man-in-the-middle attacks and packet sniffing against unencrypted traffic among the most common causes. How Session stores your messages Session is built around public key identities. When you sign up, the app generates a keypair locally and derives a Session ID from it with no phone number or email required. Messages travel through a network of service nodes using onion routing so that no single node can see both the sender and the recipient. (You can see your message’s node path in the settings.) For asynchronous delivery when you are offline, messages are stored in small groups of nodes called “swarms.” Each Session ID is mapped to a specific swarm, and your messages are stored there encrypted until your client fetches them. Historically, messages had a default time-to-live of about two weeks…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/08 14:40