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Rob Manfred (Image Source: Getty)
The dysfunction of offseason baseball once again caught the ire of Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred. Manfred believes the current system sucks life out of the league and aggravates fans, what with marquee free agents still without a contract well into the winter.
With baseball not the hottest item during the months when snow is a common visitor, the commissioner is floating an idea of his own, putting in a hard deadline on signings to hasten the pace of free agency and introduce a little bit of urgency into the market.The plan, likely to be hammered out in the next collective-bargaining agreement, has already ignited controversy. When the league leadership salivates over restructuring the offseason calendar, the players' union is warning that it might take too much power from players' hands.
Those statements have brought reform in the offseason back into the forefront, as labor negotiations loom.
Rob Manfred believes a signing deadline could revive MLB’s offseason
The baseball offseason has earned a reputation for being slow as molasses, with clubs sometimes taking months before finally locking up any large contracts. With spring training approaching, some big-name players are still without deals, a symptom of a free agency process that some argue has outlasted its usefulness for the game.
Manfred has suggested a signing deadline could condense activity into a more exciting period, perhaps just before December's Winter Meetings. A tight schedule would create continuous press coverage for the league, enhance connectivity with fans, and give a clearer off-season picture from the league's point of view. Modern pro sports, not only the MLB regular season and playoffs, must leverage relevance throughout the entire year, Manfred has repeatedly stressed.Supporters of the idea also believe a deadline would help clubs finalize rosters earlier, giving teams and fans greater clarity heading into spring training. While details remain undefined, the concept reflects MLB’s growing interest in reforming offseason economics.
Tony Clark and the MLB Players Association push back on the proposal
Executive director Tony Clark and the Major League Baseball Players Association have been adamantly against a signing deadline. Free agency is most effective and beneficial to the players when they have more time to review offers, the opinion goes, and not to rush into the best one because of some artificially-created pressure from the league.A strict deadline could limit leverage and push decisions benefiting ownership, as seen from the players, however. The union also argues that the submission of a deadline could truly spur spending or change the competitive leverage of the sport, saying that other economic challenges exist.Also Read: Rob Manfred reveals Wrigley Field as 2027 All-Star Game venue in Chicago




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