A likely reckoning forthcoming in baseball’s economic order is causing two of its most prominent figures to butt heads.
MLB commissioner Rob Manfred, in the midst of meeting with players to make his case for large-scale change in the sport, got into a heated confrontation with Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper during a session with members of that team.
“If you want to speak about that, get the fuck out of our clubhouse,” Harper is reported to have told Manfred, according to ESPN.
Manfred has not explicitly said “salary cap” in these meetings, and the commissioner has said ownership has not finalized its platform for labor negotiations set to begin next year. The current, five-year deal expires in December of next year. Manfred, however, has described several cap-like concepts, according to multiple reports, as MLB grapples with a widening economic gap between large-revenue teams and smaller ones.
The commissioner, according to the ESPN report, is said to have replied to Harper, “I’m not going to get the fuck out of here,” stressing the existential threats to the league such as large-scale media disruption.
“When I talk to players, I don’t try to convince them that a salary-cap system would be a good thing. I identify a problem in the media business and explain [to players] that owners need to change to address that problem,” he said earlier this month. “I then identify a second problem that we need to work together on, and that is there are fans in a lot of our markets who feel like we have a competitive-balance problem.”
Both Harper, a two-time National League Most Valuable Player, and Manfred have garnered reputations for more pugnacious personalities, particularly Harper as he has received multiple suspensions and fines in the past for on-field fights and umpire confrontations. The latest interaction, however, signals the depth of the labor issues at stake and the growing enmity between the two sides as formal bargaining approaches.
Union Concerns
The MLB Players Association has criticized Manfred’s meetings with players, customary as they’ve been, and said they signal a move to “pit players directly against each other.” The union has also attacked the perceived pursuit of a salary cap by the league, particularly during a time of attendance and ratings growth.
“The game is in a great place. It appears to be moving in the right direction. More attendance and more butts in the seats than we’ve had in a long time. More people are watching and streaming the games than we’ve had,” Clark said at this month’s MLB All-Star Game in Atlanta. “You’d think there’d be an opportunity about how to build instead of how to go backward.
Manfred and Harper later shook hands as the interaction was partially defused by other Phillies players. Harper, however, reportedly did not take a subsequent phone call from the commissioner.