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Sports

MLB owners make salary cap proposal as fears grow over potential 2027 season strike

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Major League Baseball owners have formally presented a salary cap proposal to the players’ association, a system the union has consistently vowed to reject.

This move sets the stage for a significant confrontation that could jeopardize the 2027 season and potentially beyond.

The last time baseball owners put forward a firm cap was in 1994, an initiative that triggered a 7 1/2-month strike and led to the cancellation of the World Series for the first time in 90 years.

The proposal would cap spending in 2027 at $245.3 million, with a salary floor of $171.2 million.

MLB spokesman Glen Caplin stated: “Our salary cap and floor proposal levels the playing field while sharing baseball revenue with the players 50/50 as we grow the game together. Further, by sharing media revenue equally as part of our proposal, we can address another top fan concern of local TV blackouts.”

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Juan Soto has a lucrative contract with the Mets
Juan Soto has a lucrative contract with the Mets (Getty)

Management argues that a cap is essential to enhance competitive balance and prevent affluent teams, such as the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets, from assembling rosters significantly more star-studded than their smaller-market counterparts.

However, players are advocating for expanded free agency and salary arbitration rights, a near-doubling of the major league minimum wage, increased revenue sharing among high-earning and less wealthy clubs, and penalties for teams that fall below payroll floors.

They contend that a cap would primarily benefit owners at their expense, and they remain steadfast in their refusal to accept one. Without a cap, MLB stars have secured lucrative, guaranteed contracts that often surpass those of top athletes in other US sports.

Juan Soto’s $765 million, 15-year contract with the Mets is believed to be the biggest ever in team sports and is far greater than the largest deals in the NFL (Patrick Mahomes at $450 million over 10 years) and NBA (Jayson Tatum at $314 million over five years).

The Dodgers, for instance, shattered MLB’s spending record with a combined $515 million in payroll and luxury tax last year en route to their second straight World Series title.

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Los Angeles’ total was seven times the $68.7 million payroll of the Miami Marlins, the lowest-spending team, and more than the payrolls of the bottom six clubs combined.

Other major US sports leagues operate under a salary cap. The NBA introduced a modern version in 1984-85, NFL players and owners adopted one for the 1994 season, and the NHL followed suit in 2005-06 after a lockout cancelled an entire season.

Baseball’s current five-year agreement, finalized in March 2022 after a 99-day lockout, is set to expire on 2 December. While a lockout next winter is widely anticipated, intensive negotiations are not expected until late February or early March 2027, when the prospect of losing regular-season games and revenue becomes imminent.

Should regular-season games be forfeited, the dispute could devolve into a test of endurance, with each side gauging its tolerance for economic loss.

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The 1994 MLB salary cap proposal also offered a 50-50 revenue split, requiring teams to maintain payrolls between 84-110% of the average. It aimed to eliminate salary arbitration and reduce the free agency threshold from six years of major league service to four, with a provision allowing a player’s former club to match any offer until they reached six years.

That offer was made on 14 June, leading to the players’ strike on 12 August. MLB eventually withdrew the proposal on 6 February the following year under pressure from the National Labour Relations Board.

The strike concluded on 31 March after US District Judge Sonia Sotomayor – now a Supreme Court Justice – issued an injunction reinstating the expired labour contract’s work rules. Owners accepted the union’s offer to return to work without an agreement two days later, with a deal not being reached until 1997.

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I hope Liverpool regret not getting him

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Chelsea legend John Terry has made a prediction about Xabi Alonso’s upcoming tenure as the Blues’ boss. The Englishman said that he hopes Liverpool, who were also in the race for the Spanish tactician’s signature, ‘regret not getting him’.

After an invincible Bundesliga campaign with Bayer Leverkusen in the 2023-24 campaign, Alonso became the talk of the town among top European sides. His former side Liverpool, for whom he made 210 appearances between 2004 and 2009, were interested, but ended up signing Arne Slot from Feyenoord.

Another one of Alonso’s former sides, Real Madrid, eventually hired him as Carlo Ancelotti’s replacement in the summer of 2025. With 236 games for Los Blancos, the most he played for any club during his playing career, he was expected to settle in easily and continue Real’s dominance.

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However, he endured a tough tenure at the Bernabeu, taking charge of just 34 games before parting ways with the club in January 2026. In May, Chelsea announced the signing of the Spaniard, bringing him in on a four-year contract starting in July.

During a virtual roundtable hosted by SuperSport, Terry responded to ESPN’s question about the Spaniard’s upcoming term at Stamford Bridge. The 45-year-old was confident that Alonso could put his allegiance with the Reds aside while in charge of the Blues.

He said (via ESPN):

“I don’t think he’ll struggle at all. I think he’ll come in the building on day one and have respect as a player and as a manager. To go on and do what he’s done in such a short career as a manager (has earned it for him)… I hope Liverpool regret not getting him, because that would mean Chelsea have then been successful.”

Despite entering the race to sign Alonso again last season, Liverpool did not make a move to sign the Spaniard. Just weeks after the Blues’ announcement, the Reds parted ways with Slot and named ex-Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola as his replacement.

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Liverpool beat four other clubs to sign Andoni Iraola, reason for Chelsea snub revealed – Reports

According to The Athletic (via This Is Anfield), Premier League giants Liverpool beat out four other clubs to sign Andoni Iraola from Bournemouth.

The Spanish tactician grabbed eyeballs around the footballing world with a stellar 2025-26 campaign with the Cherries. He led them to their best-ever Premier League finish (sixth) and their first-ever qualification to the Europa League.

On Thursday (June 4), five days after parting ways with Arne Slot, the Merseysiders announced the signing of Iraola on a two-year deal. The Athletic reports that they beat Chelsea, Crystal Palace, AC Milan and Bayer Leverkusen to his signature.

The report further revealed that the Blues decided against signing the Spaniard due to concerns with his style of play. They believed that it would be a ‘radical departure’ from the methods implemented by previous managers Enzo Maresca and Liam Rosenior.

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Iraola’s first game in charge of Liverpool will be a pre-season friendly against fellow Premier League side Sunderland on July 25.