The union’s proposals
Major League Baseball players presented a set of modifications to the labor regulations during a negotiation with the league. They seek to reduce optional assignments per season to minor leagues from five to three. The intention is to stop the constant rotation that teams apply in bullpens, where relievers pitch more and more innings.
The union requested that active rosters increase to 28 players during the first 15 days of each season, with a maximum of 14 pitchers — one more than the current limit of 13. In addition, they propose moving up the opening of the 60-day injured list to the tender deadline, rather than waiting for the start of spring training. This would allow teams to protect more players from the Rule 5 draft during the winter meetings, since those on that list do not count toward the 40 roster limit.
Another request: that MLB expedite eligibility for the Rule 5 draft and ensure it takes place this year, even if the administration imposes a lockout after the current labor agreement expires on December 1. They also want pitchers to be credited with major league service time if they are optioned to the minors during the All-Star break or after a game with certain performance thresholds.
Players also demand guaranteed access to teams’ non-proprietary video and performance data.
The fight for the salary cap
The owners have proposed a salary cap for the first time since the 1994-95 strike, which canceled the World Series after 90 years. Although a lockout is expected next winter, talks will intensify toward late February or early March 2027, as the risk of losing regular-season games and revenue looms. If matches are cancelled, the negotiation will become a battle over which party tolerates the greatest economic loss.




