Ok, here is the latest (cutting out the rhetoric) and I'll explain - but it ain't gonna be a paragraph
:
The union rejected MLB's latest proposal for a 76-game season at 75 percent prorated pay and countered with an 89-game campaign that would include full prorated salary shares. The owners are expected to "swiftly reject" that idea, per Nightengale, and it doesn't seem like there is much willingness to budge on either side. It's about a $900 million gap, all told.
So the problem is, back a pretty good while ago the union and team owners agreed to pro-rate salaries on a per game basis.
But now that it's obvious there will be little or no fans - the owners don't want that. They want more. Hence you see the "76 game season at 75 percent prorated pay".
If the owners had said 76 game season with prorated pay, the union would accept. But the owners do not want full prorated pay. Back awhile ago the union proposed lots of games (114 at full prorated pay) to make up that money to the owners that way with the players getting full prorated pay - but the owners said no (they are afraid that they would end up not being able to get that many in).
Hey, I think I did pretty good keeping it THIS short.
"I've suffered a great many tragedies in my life....most of them never happened". Mark Twain