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Tag: Rob Manfred

  • The Texas Rangers are behaving like a team that hopes MLB will save them

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    Rangers shortstop Corey Seager is in entering the fifth year of his 10-year, $325 million contract.

    Rangers shortstop Corey Seager is in entering the fifth year of his 10-year, $325 million contract.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    The Category 7 tornado that is the Los Angeles Dodgers cut a swath through the hopes of at least a dozen MLB clubs long before the regular season begins.

    The Texas Rangers are not the Pirates, Rockies, Marlins or the other handful of teams that play the same game as the Dodgers, but aren’t in their league. The Rangers are also no longer in the upper echelon, where they previously paid to belong.

    Since the 2025 season ended, the Rangers are acting like one of the clubs that expects the league to save them. The team is gambling that MLB will implement a hard salary cap in its next collective bargaining agreement with the MLB Players Association, a deal that expires Dec. 1.

    There is often alarming rhetoric and threats between the players and ownership when it comes to CBA negotiations, but this time it sounds more like 1994, when a players’ strike wiped out the World Series.

    The Rangers’ ‘big market’ challenge

    The last time the contract between the players union and the league expired, in the winter of 2021, resulting in a lockout that did not affect the regular season, the Rangers didn’t worry about anything. Rangers owner Ray Davis told then-GM Jon Daniels to spend some of their money; just before the CBA expired, the team signed expensive free agents Corey Seager, Kole Calhoun, Marcus Semien and Jon Gray.

    The next year, they signed free agent pitcher Jacob deGrom. In the span of two offseasons, the Rangers committed to more than $740 million for five players. Consistently, Davis approved moves that added to the payroll, including a 2-year, $37 million deal for DH Joc Pederson, signed in December 2024.

    That spending aggression has stopped. The change in the regional TV sports model affected the Rangers, as the once-lucrative deal with Fox Sports Southwest, eventually Bally, was effectively scrapped two years ago. That loss of revenue is not everything, but it’s not nothing.

    Rangers GM Chris Young is adamant that given the size — and growth — of Dallas-Fort Worth, the Rangers should never have to go through a rebuild and unload their top players.

    DFW is the fourth-largest media market in the U.S., behind New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. There is usually a direct correlation between media markets and the top payrolls in MLB. The Rangers are an outlier; their projected payroll of $214 million in 2026 is 14th in the league; they were sixth in 2025.

    Davis and the ownership group are feeling the fatigue of covering a top five, or 10, payroll, something they’ve done consistently in nearly 15 years of running the franchise. With the prospect, and increasing pressure reportedly from other franchises on MLB to create a new payroll structure, the Rangers are one of many teams not active in free agency for the 2026 season.

    MLB’s ‘Dodger’ Problem

    The sustained success of the Dodgers has increased the temperature on MLB commissioner Rob Manfred to correct the imbalance in the league.

    The two-time defending champion Dodgers’ 2026 payroll is projected to be $414 million, which includes the MLB payroll tax. That would be more than the combined payrolls of three teams — the Guardians, Rays and Marlins. The Dodgers’ payroll is expected to be $90 million to $100 million more than any other team.

    When the team signed top free agent Kyle Tucker to a four-year, $240 million contract in January, the reaction in baseball was, “That’s enough.” All this does is increase the overall price on salaries.

    This has happened before in the last 30 years, but the gap between big spenders and those who don’t has never been so wide.

    Since big money started to pour into MLB in the early ‘90s, the perception/concern is that too many teams essentially act as farm systems for the Dodgers, Mets, Yankees, Cubs and Red Sox.

    Since 2015, one team outside the top 10 in payroll has won the World Series: the Braves in 2021. Their payroll was 11th. Six times since 2015 the World Series champion’s payroll ranked in the top five.

    The players union will fight anything that obstructs spending. The owners will insist the only way to get a balanced field among 30 teams is a cap, which will make the game more affordable to families. They’re lying about the last part.

    According to a report by ESPN, there is momentum among owners to dig in for a salary cap.

    The Rangers in MLB’s future system

    MLB is the only major sports league without a hard salary cap. The league established a payroll tax in 1997, which was later branded a Competitive Balance Tax, but this is not a drag on salaries.

    The MLBPA has routinely exploited the fractured state of the MLB owners to win this point in negotiations. Historically, there are just enough owners to stop the league from going all in to enforce the financial restrictions and penalties that exist in the NBA, NFL and NHL.

    The last 30 years of pro sports has shown the owners will overspend, driving up the salaries on coaches and players.

    Even if the Rangers are in a top-five media market, they’ve never had top-five media market revenues, which did not stop Hicks or Davis from spending like it. Under Hicks, spending did not lead to winning, which ultimately convinced him build through the farm system.

    Under Davis, spending resulted in a World Series, and now a place where they are betting that the next CBA will allow them to contend for another title without having to spend like the Dodgers.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Mac Engel

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  • Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed a law legalizing sports betting. He now says he’s opposed to it

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — If Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine could turn back time, he would not have signed the law that legalized sports betting in his state.

    With two Cleveland Guardians pitchers and an Ohio-born guard for the Miami Heat snared in separate betting-related criminal probes, the second-term Republican says he now “absolutely” regrets unleashing this unbridled new industry on Ohioans with his 2021 signature.

    “Look, we’ve always had gambling, we’re always going to have gambling,” DeWine told The Associated Press last week. “But just the power of these companies and the deep, deep, deep pockets they have to advertise and do everything they can to get someone to place that bet is really different once you have legalization of them.”

    His comments reflect a reckoning that’s unfolding across sports and politics as sports betting becomes more ingrained across much of the U.S. The wave of legalization in recent years unleashed a massive industry centered around betting and, more recently, a wave of investigations and arrests tied to allegations of rigged games. It’s a dynamic that DeWine says he doesn’t think lawmakers fully anticipated.

    “Ohio shouldn’t have done it,” he said.

    DeWine prompted a rare move to limit prop bets

    DeWine recently emerged as a key player in the negotiations between Major League Baseball and its authorized gaming operators that resulted in the capping of prop bets on individual pitches at $200 and excluding them from parlays. The deal was announced earlier this month, a day after Guardians pitchers Luis Ortiz and Emmanuel Clase were indicted and accused of rigging pitches at the behest of gamblers. Both have pleaded not guilty.

    “Gov. DeWine really did a huge service, I think — to us, certainly, I can’t speak for any of the other sports — in terms of kind of bringing forward the need to do something in this area,” MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told reporters last week.

    And DeWine doesn’t plan to stop there. Shortly after Ortiz and Clase were first placed on paid leave this summer, he announced he’d be asking the commissioners and players’ unions of all the major U.S. sports leagues to ban prop bets — sometimes called micro-betting — like those implicated in the Guardians scandal. While that goal has not yet been achieved — micro-betting is critical to the business strategy in an industry with over $11 billion in revenue in the U.S. this year — DeWine said limits put in place for baseball are a good first step.

    “It needs to be holistic, it needs to be universal,” he told the AP. “They’re just playing with fire. I mean, they are just asking for more and more trouble, their failure to address this.”

    The gambling industry’s investments in Ohio politics

    DeWine’s recent sentiments mark a notable position shift after he pledged to — and then did — sign a legalization law that was sweeping in scope. The legislation allowed adults 21 and older to place sports bets online, at casinos, at racinos and at stand-alone betting kiosks in bars, restaurants and professional sports facilities. Wagering was permitted under the bill on professional sports teams, motor sports, Olympic events, golf, tennis and even major college sports, including Ohio State football.

    It was clear in the run-up to DeWine’s re-election in 2022 that the gambling industry was intensely interested in what was transpiring in the state.

    An AP investigation that year found that casino operators, slot machine makers, gaming technology companies, sports interests or their lobbyists donated nearly $1 million in 2021 and 2022 to the nonprofit Republican Governors Association, which supported pro-DeWine committees through its campaign arm. Entities and individuals with ties to the industry also donated more than $22,000 directly to DeWine’s campaign, according to campaign finance reports.

    A review of more recent campaign filings finds that industry largesse has continued to flow to Ohio politicians with sway over gaming’s future.

    Lobbyists and a PAC with ties to Jack Casino, DraftKings, FanDuel, MGM, Gamewise, Hard Rock, Underdog, Rush Street or Caesars have donated about $130,000 to Ohio state legislators in the past three years, records show — about a third of that directed to top House and Senate leaders. Then-Republican Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, who was positioning as DeWine’s likely gubernatorial successor, had received about $9,000 from industry-connected entities and individuals before being appointed to the U.S. Senate.

    At least one powerful state lawmaker, Republican House Finance Chairman Brian Stewart, had vowed to introduce legislation protecting prop bets prior to professional baseball’s crackdown.

    “I think that prop bets are a significant part of sports betting in the state of Ohio,” Stewart told cleveland.com in August. “It’s something that clearly a lot of Ohioans have taken part in and enjoy, and I don’t think there’s something that we should eliminate entirely.”

    Amid such pushback, DeWine and others now view voluntary buy-in from leagues, players’ unions and sportsbooks as a superior approach to pursuing gambling restrictions on a state-by-state basis, where the authority lies.

    Matt Schuler, executive director of the Ohio Casino Control Commission, said the baseball deal DeWine helped broker has shown it can be done.

    “He’s using the bully pulpit and he’s able to connect with the right people in that way,” Schuler said of DeWine. “No one thought that everyone could get on the same page, but now they did because everyone realizes the risk. The bets are small, but the risk is big, and so, having observed gaming and regulated it for about 14 years, this is impressive.”

    Harassment and scandal in Ohio changed DeWine’s mind

    DeWine said his concerns with sports gambling began almost as soon as Ohio’s law took effect in 2023. Very quickly, his office began receiving reports that gamblers were threatening members of the University of Dayton basketball team.

    So he contacted NCAA President Charlie Baker, whom he knew from Baker’s time as governor of Massachusetts, and learned that he shared DeWine’s concern. He got Baker to write a letter requesting the removal of collegiate prop bets from the list of legal wagers that sportsbooks operating in Ohio could place, which allowed DeWine to usher the change through the casino commission.

    After the Guardians case emerged this summer, DeWine approached Manfred with the same idea. They hadn’t both been governors, but DeWine did have one cache going in: his family’s long-time ownership of North Carolina’s Asheville Tourists. DeWine said Manfred asked him to hold off on pushing unilateral action in Ohio, in hopes of getting the parties to agree to a new national rule.

    “I would have preferred to have completely done away with the micro-prop bets, but this is the area that he was able to settle on with them, and I was pleased with that,” DeWine said. “And so, I think that’s progress.”

    DeWine, who faces term limits next year, said he would be happy to sign a repeal of Ohio’s sports betting law at this point, but he’s certain there’s not enough support for that at the Ohio Statehouse.

    “There’s not the votes for that. I can count,” he said. “I’m not always right, but I can pretty much guarantee you that they’re not ready to do this.”

    Instead, he’ll continue to make his case in other ways.

    DeWine, an avid baseball fan, particularly of his hometown Cincinnati Reds, said he believes “these sports are playing with dynamite here and the integrity of the sports is at stake.”

    “So, you try to do what you can do, and you try and warn people, and try to take action like we did with collegiate, and you try take action like what we’re doing with baseball,” he said. “But we’ve got to keep pushing these other sports to do it, too.”

    ___

    AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.

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  • MLB integrates Negro League statistics into all-time record book with Josh Gibson now career batting average leader

    MLB integrates Negro League statistics into all-time record book with Josh Gibson now career batting average leader

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    (CNN) — Major League Baseball has incorporated the statistics of former Negro Leagues players into its historical records on its website, meaning legendary leaders in some categories like Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb have now been replaced in the record books by players who were not allowed to play on the same fields as them during segregation.

    Josh Gibson, one of the greatest sluggers in the history of the Negro Leagues, is now listed as MLB’s new all-time career leader in batting average at .372, moving ahead of Ty Cobb at .367.

    The MLB website shows Gibson also overtaking Babe Ruth in career slugging percentage.

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  • MLB: Bally network troubles could lead to end of blackouts

    MLB: Bally network troubles could lead to end of blackouts

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    DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) — As baseball prepares for a possible local broadcasting crisis, Commissioner Rob Manfred sees an opportunity.

    Manfred said Thursday that Major League Baseball can produce games digitally in conjunction with MLB.TV if Bally Sports regional networks are no longer broadcasting them. In fact, he said this is a chance to address the game blackouts that inspire so much anger among fans.

    Diamond Sports Group, the parent company of 19 Bally Sports networks, skipped about $140 million in interest payments due Wednesday, starting a 30-day grace period that could be the prelude to a bankruptcy filing.

    “I don’t relish any of this,” Manfred said at a spring training media day. “I think it’s necessary to have a centrally based solution to what’s a really serious problem and move us forward to our next stage of delivering games to fans, delivering them where they want to watch them, and without the kind of blackouts that we’ve had in the old model.”

    Manfred acknowledged some teams could be at risk of losing revenue, depending on the status of their regional sports networks, and that MLB is prepared to help.

    “You know, we have a pretty good balance sheet in central baseball,” he said. “I think it’s safe to assume that we will provide every support that we possibly can to those clubs that are at risk.”

    Manfred said MLB’s willingness to step in aggressively if the Bally networks can no longer broadcast is driven partly by the fact that it would give baseball a chance to fix blackout issues. Currently, a game might be unavailable digitally in the market of the competing teams if a RSN has exclusive rights in that area.

    If a regional network like Bally is no longer broadcasting, Manfred said the games can be offered digitally or perhaps within a cable bundle.

    “From a fan’s perspective, while it may not be whatever channel is your traditional RSN, if you think about it from a reach perspective, the games being available digitally, in-market is something fans have been screaming for for years,” he said.

    “I hope we get to the point where on the digital side, when you go to MLB.TV, you can buy whatever the heck you want, right?” Manfred added. “I think what has happened among ownership is they have realized that as we go more digital, there is an opportunity for us to become a more national product. So that people aren’t so wedded to their individual local markets.”

    Manfred also discussed the rules changes for this year, which include a pitch clock and restrictions on defensive shifts. He said change always includes some risk, but long-term benefits make this adjustment period worthwhile.

    He said MLB will test both a fully automated balls and strikes system and a challenge system at Triple-A this year Under the challenge system, an umpire’s decision can be appealed to the computer’s decision. Each will be used three days per week — no Monday games are scheduled at Triple-A.

    “To do one at Triple-A and not do the other didn’t seem like a good test to us in terms of really figuring out which might be the best system at the big league level,” Manfred said.

    When asked about payroll disparities between teams, Manfred said a more national product can produce more centrally shared revenue and reduce revenue disparity.

    He said he remains open to solutions like a payroll floor, but the current labor contract runs through the 2026 season.

    ___

    Follow Noah Trister at www.twitter.com/noahtrister

    ___

    More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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  • Trevor Bauer reinstated by MLB’s independent arbitrator

    Trevor Bauer reinstated by MLB’s independent arbitrator

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    NEW YORK — Trevor Bauer was reinstated Thursday by Major League Baseball’s independent arbitrator, allowing the pitcher to resume his career at the start of the 2023 season.

    The 31-year-old Los Angeles Dodgers star was given an unprecedented two-season suspension without pay by baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred on April 29 for violating the league’s domestic violence and sexual assault policy after a San Diego woman said Bauer beat and sexually abused her last year, an accusation the pitcher denied.

    The players’ association filed a grievance on behalf of the former Cy Young Award winner, and a three-person panel headed by independent arbitrator Martin Scheinman started hearing the case on May 23.

    Scheinman upheld a 194-game suspension rather than Manfred’s intended 324-game penalty but reinstated Bauer immediately, assigning 50 games to cover part of the lengthy time Bauer was put on administrative leave while MLB investigated during the 2021 season and early this year.

    “Can’t wait to see y’all out at a stadium soon!” Bauer wrote on Twitter.

    Bauer will lose more than $37 million in salary for the final 144 games of last season and for the first 50 games of next season, through May 23. The lost salary next year is effectively a clawback from part of his administrative leave, when he continued to receive pay.

    MLB said Scheinman affirmed that Bauer violated the domestic violence policy.

    “While we believe a longer suspension was warranted, MLB will abide by the neutral arbitrator’s decision, which upholds baseball’s longest-ever active player suspension for sexual assault or domestic violence,” MLB said in a statement. “We understand this process was difficult for the witnesses involved and we thank them for their participation.”

    While Scheinman issued his award to the parties, a full written decision is not expected until later. The panel included MLB Deputy Commissioner Dan Halem and union assistant general counsel Bob Lenaghan.

    “While we are pleased that Mr. Bauer has been reinstated immediately, we disagree that any discipline should have been imposed,” Bauer’s representatives, Jon Fetterolf, Shawn Holley and Rachel Luba, said in a statement. “That said, Mr. Bauer looks forward to his return to the field, where his goal remains to help his team win a World Series.”

    The players’ association declined comment on Scheinman’s decision.

    Bauer was never charged with a crime. His accuser sought but was denied a restraining order against him, and Los Angeles prosecutors said in February there was insufficient evidence to prove the woman’s accusations beyond a reasonable doubt.

    Bauer, who hasn’t played since the allegations surfaced and MLB began investigating, repeatedly has said that everything that happened between him and the woman was consensual.

    An email sent after business hours Thursday seeking comment from the woman’s attorney, Bryan Freedman, wasn’t immediately returned.

    Bauer sued his accuser in federal court, a move that came less than three months after prosecutors decided not to file criminal charges against the pitcher. Bauer named the woman and one of her attorneys, Niranjan Fred Thiagarajah, as defendants in the lawsuit. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they have been victims of sexual assault.

    The lawsuit said that “the damage to Mr. Bauer has been extreme” after the woman alleged that he had choked her into unconsciousness, punched her repeatedly and had anal sex with her without her consent during two sexual encounters last year.

    The pitcher has said the two engaged in rough sex at his Pasadena home at her suggestion and followed guidelines they agreed to in advance.

    Another woman, from Columbus, Ohio, told The Washington Post that Bauer repeatedly choked her without her consent and sexually assaulted her over the course of a years-long relationship. Bauer, in a statement through his representatives, said their relationship was “casual and wholly consensual.”

    The suspension will cost Bauer $37,594,233 from his $102 million, three-year contract: $28,131,868 of his $32 million salary in 2022 and $9,462,365 of his $32 million salary in 2023.

    Under Major League Rule 2, Bauer will not count against the Dodgers’ player limits for 14 days, giving the team until Jan. 6 to decide whether to cut ties. If the Dodgers jettison Bauer, they would remain responsible for the roughly $22.6 million he is owed next season and he would be free to sign with any club.

    “We have just been informed of the arbitrator’s ruling and will comment as soon as practical,” the Dodgers said in a statement.

    The money not paid to Bauer will be reflected on the Dodgers’ luxury tax payroll, cutting the amount of tax they must pay this year and are projected to pay in 2023.

    After winning his first Cy Young with the Cincinnati Reds in 2020, Bauer agreed to join his hometown Dodgers. He did not pitch after June 29 in 2021 and finished with an 8-2 record and a 2.59 ERA in 17 appearances.

    Bauer was placed on administrative leave on July 2, 2021, under the domestic violence policy, a leave extended 13 times.

    Among 15 players previously disciplined under the policy, the longest suspension was a full season and postseason for free agent pitcher Sam Dyson in 2021. None of the players previously disciplined under the policy appear to have challenged the penalty before an arbitrator.

    Bauer’s suspension was the longest of any MLB player since pitcher Jenrry Mejia was given a lifetime ban in 2016 for a third violation of the drug agreement. Mejia was reinstated for 2019 and returned in the minor leagues.

    ———

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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