MLB players union gathers to
prepare for potentially contentious labor negotiations in 2026
[December 05, 2025]
By DAVID BRANDT
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Roughly a month after the Los Angeles
Dodgers finished a scintillating seven-game World Series triumph
over the Toronto Blue Jays, the Major League Baseball Players'
Association gathered in Arizona this week to discuss the future of
the game and look ahead to a possible lockout next December.
Japanese stars headed by Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto have
sparked record international interest, in-game attendance was up in
2025 for the third straight season, and a set of rule changes that
began in 2023 has produced a faster-paced game that's been widely
lauded.
But the big-spending nature of the $500 million Dodgers — who were
led by high-priced stars like Ohtani, Yamamoto, Mookie Betts and
Freddie Freeman — highlighted baseball's payroll disparity as the
MLBPA prepares for a potentially contentious round of labor
negotiations leading to the expiration of the collective bargaining
agreement next Dec. 1.
Union head Tony Clark said formal bargaining will likely begin in
the spring, consistent with previous negotiations.
“As an organization, you start preparing for the next round of
bargaining as soon as the ink is dry on the previous one,” Clark
said Thursday. “You're constantly assessing the system, you're
assessing how it is that teams and players are responding to the
system.

“A year away, you're really drilling down on what that looks like.”
The eight-person executive subcommittee consists of 2025 Cy Young
Award winners Paul Skenes and Tarik Skubal, along with veterans
Chris Bassitt, Jake Cronenworth, Pete Fairbanks, Cedric Mullins,
Marcus Semien and Brent Suter.
There are also 30 player reps — one for each team.
“We have an outstanding group of player leaders,” Clark said. “We
are better and stronger as an organization when players engage one
another and are educated on the issues. We have that. It’s something
we’re grateful for and something historically our organization has
always had.”
Clark said the MLBPA's main focus continues to be centered on a few
large issues heading into bargaining. One is finding more ways to
encourage all 30 teams to spend on the free-agent market to make
teams as competitive as possible.
While the Dodgers have spent roughly $890 million over the past two
years building back-to-back World Series champions, the Athletics
have committed less than $150 million over the same period. MLB is
the only major U.S.-based professional sports league without a
salary cap.
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Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Tony
Clark answers a question during a news conference in New York on
March 11, 2022. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

The players’ association is bracing to resist a
renewed push for a cap. Demand for a cap from owners is what led to
a 7 1/2-month strike in 1994-95 and the first cancellation of the
World Series in 90 years.
Thirty years later, scars from that experience still remain. Clark
made his MLB debut with the Detroit Tigers in 1995.
“Knowing that there are teams who have the wherewithal to compete,
that choose not to and how that affects the industry,” Clark said.
“In an industry where not all 30 teams are committed to that, what
does that mean? Are there things that we can do to address those
concerns? There are.”
The other major issue is that the MLBPA would like to see more ways
for younger players to be paid in a way that's more consistent with
their on-field value. Most players are eligible for salary
arbitration after three years of MLB service time and can be free
agents after six years.
The union made some gains in compensating younger players in the
last round of bargaining. The minimum salary jumped to $700,000 in
2022 and will be $780,000 next year. And a $50 million annual pool
was established for pre-arbitration-eligible players.
Clark has no update on OneTeam Partners probe
Clark said he did not have any new information to offer about an
ongoing federal investigation into OneTeam Partners, a licensing
company the union founded with the NFL Players Association.
The company has grown in recent years, working with other unions
that represent players in the WNBA, men's and women's soccer, and
college sports.

“We continue to cooperate fully," Clark said. “We don't know the
timing, we don't know when it may wrap. But as they ask questions
and are interested in information, we answer the questions and
provide them information. That's not going to change.”
___
AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.
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