It is easier to win with a bigger budget, obviously. But some small-market teams deserve to be doormats because of bad decisions. Nobody forced the Pittsburgh Pirates to trade three dynamic young players to Tampa Bay for Chris Archer. Nobody forced the Baltimore Orioles to gut their budget for international talent so they could build around Chris Davis.
The union wanted the luxury-tax thresholds to start at $238 million in 2022 and rise to $263 million by 2026. With franchise values soaring and lucrative cable and streaming contracts, that hardly seems like an outrageous ask. Yet the league’s proposal peaked at $230 million in 2026. Not even close.
Manfred is charged with steering the 30 club owners, each with his own agenda, toward a common vision. Then he must forge a bond with the union, whose goal is to get more money from his bosses. If he is too cozy with the players, he loses clout with the owners.
Consider Fay Vincent, the last commissioner to preside over a March lockout, which came in 1990. Vincent understood that the union did not trust his office, with good reason — the owners had illegally colluded against the players to suppress free agency in the 1980s. Vincent needed a deputy who could effectively engage with the union’s executive director, Donald Fehr, and he hired Steve Greenberg, whom Fehr deeply respected.