Bryce Harper will probably not get a vacation card of the MLB commissioner, Rob Manfred.
Monday, Jeff Passan d’Espn reported that the Philadelphia Phillies superstar confronted the baseball commissioner in an exchange of heated changing rooms last week, telling him to “withdraw the F – of our clubhouse” if Manfred wanted to discuss the potential implementation of a salary ceiling.
The dust occurred during the Manfred routine meetings with the 30 MLB clubs in order to improve relations with the players of each team. The meeting lasted more than an hour and ended with Harper telling the main baseball boss to kick when the discussion swivel in the game economy.
The collective negotiation agreement between MLB and the MLB Players Association should expire on December 1, 2026 – just a few weeks after the crown of the World Series 2026 champion.
Of course, players like Harper will never want a salary ceiling. He signed a 13 -year contract worth $ 330 million with the Phillies in 2019. He still has seven years on this agreement and is already looking to extend the commitment even longer.
On the other side of the argument, the owners through baseball will probably put pressure for a salary ceiling. Teams of small markets such as Pittsburgh or Cleveland Guardians Pirates find themselves disadvantaged, because their limited sources of income would almost certainly prevent them from offering themselves a player like Harper, Shohei Ohtani or Juan Soto – even if they write them and developed them.
According to Passan, Harper became frustrated by the conversation after being silent during most of the meeting and said that if the MLB had to offer a ceiling and stick to it, the players “are not afraid to lose 162 games”.
And that’s exactly where it all goes. MLB players will remain dug. They will never gladly accept a ceiling on their potential income.
If Harper, who is one of the most recognized stars of the game, already threatens a lockout in 2027, things seem dark for this collective conduct to be productive.
Manfred would have supported his field, telling Harper that he “was not going to take out the F – from here” because it was important to discuss threats confronted with the MLB and the means of developing the game.
The report indicates that Harper went hand in hand with Manfred, and the situation was released by Nick Castellanos. It ended with Harper and Manfred shaking hands, but Harper would not have answered Manfred calls in the days that followed.
Manfred began to hold these routine meetings in MLB clubs in the aftermath of the collective collective agreements negotiations in 2022. We also remember the way things disorder during the coco-19 pandemic, when other leagues found ways to do sports inside while baseball was fighting on the length of the season.
The question of salary ceilings and salary soils in baseball has been debated for years. The players have long expressed their frustration with regard to certain organizations that refuse to spend. Meanwhile, teams and Los Angeles Dodgers can differ from hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts for decades without any penalty.
No one wants a work stoppage in baseball. Not the League, because it would lose income from its television partnerships. Not players because they have limited windows to win. Not fans, because living a summer without baseball just feels bad.
So, if no one wants, why does it feel inevitable?