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MLB's Rob Manfred on Trump's support for Pete Rose reinstatement; ABS challenge system's future; search for ESPN replacement

Peter Sblendorio, New York Daily News on

Published in Baseball

NEW YORK — There is no shortage of talking points surrounding Major League Baseball.

Amid interest around the potential implementation of the ABS challenge system; ESPN’s expiring TV deal; and a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that ends in 2026; the MLB owners convened in New York City this week for their annual in-season meeting.

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred discussed those hot-button topics, among others, during a press conference Wednesday afternoon.

Here are the biggest takeaways:

Rose reinstatement

Manfred’s decision last month to remove Pete Rose and other deceased former players from MLB’s permanently ineligible list received “mixed” reviews, the commissioner said.

Rose, who died in September at age 83, was banned in 1989 after an MLB investigation found that he bet on the Cincinnati Reds to win while he was the team’s manager. In a letter to Rose’s attorney, Manfred deemed a person “cannot represent a threat to the integrity of the game” after their death.

President Trump was among those who advocated for Rose to be reinstated. Manfred met with Trump at the White House in April.

“The President was one of a number of voices that was supportive of the idea that this was the right decision,” Manfred said Wednesday. “Obviously, I have respect for the office, and the advice that he gave I paid attention to, but I had a lot of other people that were weighing in on the topic as well.”

The National Baseball Hall of Fame has said the decision makes Rose eligible for induction.

ABS latest

The Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system could be implemented in MLB games for the 2026 season.

It still needs to go through a joint-committee process before the rule can be changed, but Manfred says feedback was positive after ABS was tested during spring training.

“I think the teams are really positive about ABS. I do have that unscientific system that I use: my email traffic,” Manfred said.

“My distinct impression is that using ABS in spring training has made people more prone to complain about balls and strike calls via email to me, referencing the need for ABS. That is undoubtedly true.”

ABS would permit players from both teams to challenge a ball or a strike call twice per game.

Even with baseball’s CBA set to end after the 2026 season, Manfred expressed a willingness to make the change before next season — ahead of bargaining.

“We bargained for the right to make these kinds of rule changes. It was a really important part of the deal from our perspective,” Manfred said.

“Everybody understood what the rules of the road were, and unlike the prior provision, there’s actually a process that is involved that you go through, that you have a chance to vet and talk about what should happen with the players. So I’m less reticent about that.”

Manfred said consideration for a check-swing challenge system that is being tested in the Florida State League will not happen at the MLB level before the future of ABS is determined.

ESPN expiration

Manfred hopes to have MLB’s fast-approaching national TV vacancy resolved by next month’s All-Star Game.

ESPN, which broadcasts “Sunday Night Baseball,” opted out of the final three years of its contract and plans to conclude its coverage after this season.

Manfred acknowledged Wednesday that MLB is in discussion with three potential partners but declined to name them. NBC and Apple TV+ have been reported as contenders.

“Each set of conversations involves a different group of content,” Manfred said. “They’re not the same. It’s not like it’s one package that we’re talking to three people about. We’re talking to three people about different packages.”

 

MLB is targeting a three-year contract through 2028 to replace ESPN’s original deal, which was for about $550 million annually. That would line up with MLB’s other national rights contracts, which expire in 2028.

Asked if MLB would prioritize dollars or audience reach from a new partner, Manfred said, “Given that we see the ESPN part of it — what used to be the ESPN part of it — as kind of a bridge to 2028, I would overweight reach on that package. But it’s still a balance.”

Cap conundrum

Manfred was asked Wednesday what the timeframe would be for determining MLB’s position on a salary-cap proposal.

The commissioner pointed to the offseason in the context of determining all proposals.

“We would ordinarily go to the table at the beginning of our season — March, April, whatever — so obviously over the winter, we’re going to have to decide about what is gonna be out there from our perspective,” Manfred said. “But no decisions on that topic so far.”

At the owners’ meetings in February, Manfred said fans have expressed concerns about a lack of a salary cap. Multiple owners have advocated for a salary cap or at least expressed dissatisfaction with baseball’s payroll disparity.

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ $408.7 million payroll, when including the competitive balance tax, is an MLB record — and nearly five times larger than the Athletics’ MLB-low $83.0 million, according to Cot’s Contracts.

“Payroll disparity is such a fact of life among the ownership group that there’s not a lot of need for talking about whether we have it or not,” Manfred said Wednesday. “Everybody kind of gets it. We understand that has become a bigger problem for us, but there has not been a lot of conversation about that particular topic.”

Stadium saga

There is optimism the Tampa Bay Rays will be able to return to Tropicana Field next season.

The Rays are using George M. Steinbrenner Field — the Yankees’ spring-training home — in 2025 after Hurricane Milton caused significant damage to the Trop.

“The repair of the stadium’s moving along,” Manfred said. “We remain optimistic that we will be ready for Opening Day or very shortly thereafter. Obviously, the big contingency is what happens with hurricane season. There’s not much you can do about that other than keep your fingers crossed.”

The A’s, meanwhile, remain confident they will be able to move to Las Vegas for the 2028 season, Manfred said.

Olympic involvement

It remains undecided whether MLB players will participate when baseball debuts at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, but Manfred said the league has made progress “in terms of what it could look like.”

The players, as well as MLBPA head Tony Clark, have been supportive of the idea, according to the commissioner.

“We have some other business partners that we need to talk to about changes that would need to be made in order to accommodate the Olympics,” Manfred said. “I think we’re going to go forward with that process.”

Game growth

MLB is on track for its third consecutive season of increased attendance, with numbers up by 1.6% to this point.

ESPN’s MLB viewership is up by 22% compared to last year, while Fox’s is up by 10%. MLB games in Japan are averaging 2.7 million viewers, despite the time difference.

Factors for that growth, according to Manfred, include the star power of players such as the Yankees’ Aaron Judge and Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani; a youth movement that includes the Kansas City Royals’ Bobby Witt Jr.; a balanced schedule that allows for more premier interleague matchups; and the benefit of having contending teams in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago.

“The product that we’re putting on the field is a better product than it was five years ago,” Manfred said.


©2025 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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