MLB has a “Steve Cohen tax,” but what it really needs is one nicknamed for Bob Nutting or John Fisher.
The MLBPA went into bargaining demanding pre-arbitration players to be paid more, and this is one area where they were able to achieve their goal, even if it does come with caveats.
It goes for a more stylized look than most baseball games, but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth your time.
No one knows just how long the lockout is going to go on, or how short the 2022 season will end up being.
On the eve of the first MLB games lost to a labor dispute in decades, we need to look back to that moment to understand what’s happening now.
There is another challenge to MLB’s antitrust suit, so let’s look at what that might actually mean.
MLB has problems that need fixing, many of them of their own making, which makes it impossible to trust that they can actually fix those issues.
MLB is never honest about their money, and the recent concerns that the RSN gold mine will run dry is just another example of the league hoping to foist risk off on the players.