MLB players’ executive subcommittee appears to reject insurgent lawyer Harry Marino

March 25, 2024 GMT
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FILE - Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Tony Clark, right, answers a question at a news conference in their offices in New York, Friday, March 11, 2022, as Bruce Meyer, Senior Director, Collective Bargaining & Legal, sits at left. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)
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FILE - Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Tony Clark, right, answers a question at a news conference in their offices in New York, Friday, March 11, 2022, as Bruce Meyer, Senior Director, Collective Bargaining & Legal, sits at left. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball players’ union head Tony Clark made his first public responses to an effort aimed at ousting his chief negotiator, issuing a statement from the eight-man executive subcommittee appearing to reject insurgent lawyer Harry Marino.

Clark said the subcommittee authorized him to release a statement saying: “We still have issues to discuss, but one thing clear among the MLB executive subcommittee members is that this is no longer a Harry Marino discussion, in any respect.”

The subcommittee, the union’s highest-ranking player body, includes Detroit pitcher Jack Flaherty, Boston pitcher Lucas Giolito, Chicago Cubs outfielder Ian Happ, New York Mets infielder Francisco Lindor, Houston pitcher Lance McCullers Jr., Texas infielder Marcus Semien, San Francisco outfielder Austin Slater and Cincinnati pitcher Brent Suter. The statement did not include the four players with minor league contracts added to the subcommittee.

Clark issued a statement earlier Sunday in response to one from Marino, a former union official who hopes players will remove Major League Baseball Players Association deputy director Bruce Meyer, the union’s chief negotiator of the 2022 collective bargaining agreement.

Marino, a former minor leaguer who headed successful efforts to unionize players with minor league contracts, claimed union members are being bullied and retaliated against for expressing their opinions for change.

“For decades, the bedrock of the MLBPA has been an engaged membership that does not bend to outside agendas,” Clark said in a statement. “It therefore comes as no surprise that a coordinated and covert effort to challenge this foundation has troubled players at all levels of professional baseball.”

After minor leaguers joined the union, it restructured its executive board to include 38 players with major league contracts and 34 with minor league contracts. The executive board makes decisions by majority vote, such as hiring the executive director, and the staff reports to the executive director.

“How hard the players are willing to fight for the changes they want is a decision for the players,” Marino said. ”As a former minor league player who played a key role in bringing 5,500 new members to the union, I will never turn down a request for assistance from any group of major league or minor league players. My sole aim is to serve the players and I will continue to make myself available to do so in whatever way I am asked.”

Clark, a former All-Star first baseman, has headed the union for 11 years and is just its fifth executive director after Marvin Miller (1966-82, ’83), Ken Moffett (1982-83), Donald Fehr (1983-2009) and Michael Weiner (2009-13).

Clark became executive director following Weiner’s death from a brain tumor. In late 2022, the union announced Clark’s contract had been extended five years through 2027. He earned $2.25 million in 2022, according to the union’s financial report.

Meyer, a former partner at Weil, Gotshal & Manges and executive at the NHL Players Association, was hired as senior director of collective bargaining and legal in August 2018 and promoted to deputy executive director in July 2022. He earned $1.36 million in 2022.

Marino earned $68,977 during the portion of 2022 he was on the union staff as an assistant general counsel.

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