The only individual players who should see their earnings negatively impacted by a salary cap/floor are the few superstar players.CCard wrote: ↑22 Feb 2026 09:15 amHere's the thing from the players perspective though. Why would you vote to cap your own earnings. You have finite skills and a finite time to market those skills, why should it fall on you to lay down for the profit of billionaires? They can obviously afford to pay these crazy contracts but it's the players and their livelihoods that everywhere talks about capping. When was the last time you heard someone talk about capping a businesses profits or a billionaires profits (though they should have a wealth based tax in my opinion)? Is it really contingent on the players to save the game from the owners? Most players work their whole lives to get to the point of making enough wealth to set up their families and pay back the people that helped them along the way, they weren't born with a silver spoon as most of the owners were. Maybe there should be a system where it's all divided right down the middle and there is no Dodger extravagance or Miami cheapness. Owners wouldn't go for that I'm sure. I don't know about a ceiling but there definitely needs to be a higher floor.mattmitchl44 wrote: ↑22 Feb 2026 06:21 am 1. As fans, we want to see MLB be a competitive environment where every team (in particular the one we root for) has the opportunity to regularly rise to significance, make the playoffs, and maybe win a World Series.
Seemingly, it makes for a better overall product for the fans to consume when more games are played between teams which are competitive with one another. It makes the quality of regular season and postseason games better.
2. (1.) can only be achieved if it is inherent within baseball for talent to be distributed rather evenly around the league.
Talent is, obviously, the bedrock of being competitive. The more evenly talent can be distributed throughout baseball, the more uniformly competitive the environment will be.
3. Talent is only distributed as evenly as it is today because of the MLB draft, international signings, and the suppression of player salaries through six years of pre-arbitration and arbitration team control.
Because MLB teams, from the Dodgers/Yankees down to the Marlins/Rays, have significantly different resources to draw on, MLB currently enforces some distribution of talent to the small market (and mid-market) teams by ensuring that those teams have access to a somewhat "captive workforce" - the ability to have young talented players who they can pay a minimal amount of money to.
4. As fans, however, we believe that players should be paid justly based on their talent and how much they do to help their teams win.
If we believe in fairness, we should believe that all players should be paid as best possible relative based on their talent and what they contribute to helping their team be successful.
If we believe in these four "truths" or assertions, it starts to explain why the current system is broken and in need of a full reset.
Even if you believe the current system achieves (1.) and (2.) (and given the direction MLB has been going to the last few years and the path it appears to be on into the future, that might be dubious), it can only achieve that through (3.). But (3.) inherently conflicts with (4.).
This is why some of us call for a salary cap/floor system. A salary cap/floor system (with additional revenue sharing among teams if necessary) would help to achieve (2.) (and hence (1.)) without being so dependent on the suppression of money going to that "captive workforce" of young players through the mechanisms of (3.).
If MLB, in particular via a salary floor for small market teams, becomes less dependent on (3.) in order to achieve (2.), the "protections" of (3.) that prop up the competitiveness of small/mid market teams can be rolled back and MLB can do a better job of achieving (4.) where all players can be paid more appropriately based on their talent.
You can ensure that no less money goes to the players, as a whole, by writing a provision into the CBA.
You can raise the ML minimum, you can reduce years of team control to five or four, you can offer ARB to start after only one season of ML time.
You can remake the system to enable more players to achieve "set for life" money - even if that is just $5-$6 million instead of $2-3 million for being in the majors for three years - at the expense of Juan Soto maybe "only" getting to sign a $500+ million contract instead of a $700+ million one.