Current:Home > MyAgent Scott Boras calls out 'coup' within union as MLB Players' Association divide grows -AssetVision
Agent Scott Boras calls out 'coup' within union as MLB Players' Association divide grows
View
Date:2025-04-21 19:03:23
The MLB Players’ Association became the most powerful and effective sports union through decades of unity and, largely, keeping any internal squabbles out of public view.
Yet during the typically placid midterm of its current collective bargaining agreement with Major League Baseball, an ugly power struggle has surfaced.
A faction of ballplayers has rallied behind former minor-league advocate and MLBPA official Harry Marino, aiming to elevate him into a position of power at the expense of chief negotiator Bruce Meyer, a maneuver top agent Scott Boras called “a coup d’etat,” according to published reports in The Athletic.
It reported that the union held a video call Monday night with executive director Tony Clark, Meyer and members of the MLBPA’s executive council, during which Meyer claimed Marino was coming for his job.
That spilled into a war of words Tuesday, in which Boras accused Marino of underhanded tactics that undermined the union’s solidarity. Marino worked with the union on including minor-league players in the CBA for the first time, which grew the MLBPA executive board to a 72-member group.
HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.
“If you have issues with the union and you want to be involved with the union, you take your ideas to them. You do not take them publicly, you do not create this coup d’etat and create really a disruption inside the union,” Boras told The Athletic. “If your goal is to help players, it should never be done this way.”
Many current major leaguers were just starting their careers when Marino emerged as a key advocate for minor-leaguers. Meanwhile, the MLBPA took several hits in its previous two CBA negotiations with MLB, resulting in free-agent freezeouts in 2017 and 2018. In response, Clark hired Meyer, who seemed to hold the line and perhaps claw back some gains in withstanding a 99-day lockout imposed by the league.
Now, something of a proxy war has emerged, with Meyer and Boras clinging to the union’s longstanding notion that the top of the market floats all boats. Boras has had a challenging winter, struggling to find long-term riches for his top clients – pitchers Blake Snell and Jordan Montgomery and sluggers Cody Bellinger and Matt Chapman.
While all four have their flaws – and the overall free agent class beyond Shohei Ohtani was the weakest in several years – Boras’s standard strategy of waiting until a top suitor emerges did not pay off this winter.
Snell only Monday agreed to a $62 million guarantee with the San Francisco Giants, who earlier this month scooped up Chapman for a guaranteed $54 million. Snell, Bellinger and Chapman all fell short of the nine-figure – or larger – payday many believed would be theirs, though they may opt out of their current deals after every season; Montgomery remains unsigned.
Marino seemed to sense a crack in the empire in a statement to The Athletic.
“The players who sought me out want a union that represents the will of the majority,” he said Tuesday. “Scott Boras is rich because he makes — or used to make — the richest players in the game richer. That he is running to the defense of Tony Clark and Bruce Meyer is genuinely alarming.”
The Clark-Meyer regime did make gains for younger players in the last CBA, raising the minimum salary to $780,000 by 2026 and creating an annual bonus pool for the highest-achieving pre-arbitration players.
Yet baseball’s middle class only continues to shrivel, a trend many of its fans will recognize. Whether Marino would be more effective than current union leadership at compelling teams to pay aging, mid-range players rather than offer similar, below-market contracts is unknown.
What’s clear is that a fight is brewing, one the union needs to settle well before the next round of CBA negotiations in 2026.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Tony Romo once again jumps the gun on Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce's relationship
- Iran executes another prisoner detained during nationwide protests that erupted in 2022
- Clothing company Kyte Baby tries to fend off boycott after denying mom's request to work from preemie son's hospital
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Chicago Cubs Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg reveals cancer diagnosis
- More than 150 DWI cases dismissed as part of federal public corruption probe in New Mexico
- Floridians wait to see which version of Ron DeSantis returns from the presidential campaign trail
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Saturday's Texans vs. Ravens playoff game was ESPN's most-watched NFL game of all time
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Video shows small asteroid burning up as it zooms through skies over eastern Germany
- Bear rescued from bombed-out Ukrainian zoo gets new home in Scotland
- Emma Stone and director Yorgos Lanthimos on Poor Things
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Emergency declared after extreme rainfall, flash flooding wreck havoc in San Diego
- Zendaya Debuts Bangin' New Hair Transformation for Paris Fashion Week
- Nikki Haley mostly avoids identity politics as Republican woman running for president in 2024
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Live updates | Palestinians flee heavy fighting in southern Gaza as US and UK bomb Yemen again
Man charged with killing his wife in 1991 in Virginia brought back to US to face charges
Burton Wilde : Three Pieces of Advice and Eight Considerations for Stock Investments.
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
US, British militaries team up again to bomb sites in Yemen used by Iran-backed Houthis
Purported leader of criminal gang is slain at a beachfront restaurant in Rio de Janeiro
Woman charged with killing Hollywood consultant Michael Latt pleads not guilty