Baseball awaits contraction ruling

Decision could come today

? An arbitrator’s decision on whether baseball owners could fold franchises might be known as early as today, according to a management lawyer, but a top union official thought it might be delayed again.

Rob Manfred, baseball’s top labor lawyer, said he thought arbitrator Shyam Das’s contraction decision was imminent. Das originally said he would try to rule by July 15, then asked for a delay until Aug. 1.

Donald Fehr, executive Director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, responds to questions from the media. Fehr was in Texas on Wednesday at the Ballpark in Arlington to meet with players from the New York Yankees and Texas Rangers.

But Gene Orza, second in command of the players’ association, said he wasn’t sure when Das would rule.

“My sense is that in an absence of a call from the arbitrator today, the decision will not be issued tomorrow,” Orza said Wednesday. “He was told to use his best efforts to issue a decision on or about Aug. 1. He isn’t duty bound by it.”

Players filed a grievance, claiming the Nov. 6 decision by owners to fold two franchises later identified by management lawyers as Montreal and Minnesota violated the rules of the previous labor contract, which remains in force.

Owners said they had the right to shut down teams and needed to bargain with players only on the effects of contraction, such as a dispersal draft.

Negotiators for players and owners met for about an hour Wednesday to discuss benefits and minimum salaries, and both sides said they were close to agreements on those topics.

While players and owners remain far apart on the key issues of revenue sharing and a luxury tax, but they are making slow progress during negotiations in recent weeks. That is a sharp contrast from 1994, when the sides didn’t hold any substantive negotiations until three months after players struck on Aug. 12.

The players’ executive board could set a strike date as soon as next week, after union head Donald Fehr completes his round of meetings with players throughout the leagues. He met Wednesday with the New York Yankees and Texas Rangers; the Chicago Cubs are on his schedule for Thursday. After that, only one team is left Boston.

“We hope we don’t have to set a date. It has not yet been considered by the board. The greatest hope is that it gets settled before we get to that point,” Fehr said. “I’m hopeful that we’ll find a way to get a deal.”

Players seem reluctant to establish a deadline but the union is convinced that without a deal, owners would lock them out or change work rules after the postseason. Players prefer to have a work stoppage now than during the offseason and spring when it would hurt owners less. The union has considered dates from mid-August to mid-September for a walkout.