MLBPA boss: Yankees president's remarks on Dellin Betances were 'unprofessional'

Major League Baseball Players Association chief Tony Clark labeled as "unprecedented" and "unprofessional" the recent remarks of New York Yankees President Randy Levine regarding the salary arbitration case of Yankees reliever Dellin Betances....

MLBPA boss: Yankees president's remarks on Dellin Betances were 'unprofessional'

Major League Baseball Players Association chief Tony Clark labeled as "unprecedented" and "unprofessional" the recent remarks of New York Yankees President Randy Levine regarding the salary arbitration case of Yankees reliever Dellin Betances. The remarks, Clark said, "shouldn't have happened in the fashion that it did."

Betances, the Yankees' top setup man, lost his arbitration case Friday, with the arbitration panel ruling he should be paid the $3 million salary the Yankees had proposed for 2017, instead of the $5 million he was seeking. On Saturday, Levine invited Yankees reporters on a conference call, in which he ripped Betances for "over-the-top demands" that amounted to his asking to be paid like a closer instead of a setup man.

"It's like me saying, 'I'm not the president of the Yankees. I'm an astronaut,' " Levine said. "I'm not an astronaut, and Dellin Betances is not a closer."

Levine was sharply criticized for the comments by Betances' agent and others in the industry, and on Sunday, Clark added his voice.

While Clark said the players' union respects the decision and the arbitration system, he lamented what he called the "file-and-trial" mentality of some clubs, who, he said, have no intention of settling their cases ahead of a hearing, as the system was designed to encourage.

"That was never the intent of the arbitration system," Clark said, calling the tactic a "philosophical shift."

In a 90-minute session with baseball media, Clark also said the players were not ready to consider any of the various rule changes being floated and proposed by management, including a pitch-clock to speed up pitchers and a proposal being implemented in the low minor leagues where each extra inning would begin with a runner on second base.

"No, no, no," Clark said when asked whether the players would support the extra-innings rule change in the majors.

The one exception, he said, is a proposal to eliminate the four-pitch intentional walk and replace it with a rule allowing the pitcher to simply signal to the umpire that he would like to put the batter on first base automatically. It is possible that rule change could be implemented as soon as this season.

Asked about some agents complaining privately that teams have been colluding against free agents this winter, Clark did not outright dismiss those claims and acknowledged he has had those discussions with some agents.

"Having concerns is one thing," Clark said. "Taking whatever can be deciphered as fact and making a determination from there can be another."

Clark also said MLB and the players' association are monitoring the arrivals of international players to spring training camps with added interest this spring, in light of President Donald Trump's stricter immigration proposals, but had yet to notice any uptick in visa issues.

"There are a lot of concerns," Clark said. "There have always been a lot of concerns. We have challenges every offseason with guys who are looking to obtain a visa to come back and play after being home. Admittedly, the climate is even more different now than it has been in the past. We don't know to the extent that it's going to affect our guys."

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