MLB proposes separate domestic and international drafts

Major League Baseball has proposed major changes to its amateur player acquisition system during collective bargaining talks with the MLB Players Association. The proposals include separate domestic and international drafts with new eligibility rules and a hard $200 million signing bonus pool for each.

The proposals were extended on Thursday in the latest bargaining meeting. They call for a hard-slotted 12-round draft structure, trading limits on selections, and mandatory medical evaluations at a combine. High school players would no longer be eligible for the domestic draft, while college players could be selected one year earlier.

MLB stated that the changes aim to strengthen college baseball and address issues in the international system such as verbal agreements and performance-enhancing substances. International players would need to be 18 by Sept. 1 of their draft year, with an expanded scouting league and combine also proposed.

The MLB Players Association responded that the proposals would eliminate over a billion dollars in player compensation over five years and bar players under age 20 from the domestic draft. The union said the league's ideas fall woefully short and pledged to continue bargaining in good faith.

The current collective bargaining agreement expires at 11:59 p.m. ET on Dec. 1.

مقالات ذات صلة

Major League Baseball presented its first economic proposal for a new collective bargaining agreement to the MLB Players Association on Thursday. The offer includes a salary cap and floor starting in 2027 along with a 50-50 revenue split.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The list of expected attendees for the 2026 MLB Draft Combine was released on Monday. A total of 334 draft-eligible players will participate in the three-day event at Chase Field in Phoenix.

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