TAMPA, Fla. — Tony Clark resigned as head of the Major League Baseball Players Association, the union announced Tuesday, as a possible salary cap fight looms during a federal investigation of its finances.
“The full executive board of player representatives met this afternoon with MLBPA staff and outside counsel to discuss next steps,” the union said in a statement. “As always, the players remain focused on their ongoing preparations for collective bargaining this year.”
Clark was asked to resign by the eight-man executive subcommittee of the players' association after an investigation by the union's outside counsel discovered evidence that Clark had an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, a union employee since 2023, a person familiar with the union's deliberations told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because that was not announced.
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Clark’s departure took place during a probe by the U.S. Attorney in Brooklyn, New York, into OneTeam Partners, a licensing company founded by the union, the NFL Players Association and RedBird Capital Partners in 2019.
Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Tony Clark answers a question during a news conference in New York on March 11, 2022.
“A lot of people have known that the investigation has been going on,” said the New York Mets' Marcus Semien, a member of the subcommittee. “I think that this happening during the investigation is not like, as a subcommittee, is not like overly surprising, but it still hurts and it's still something I'm processing.”
The union's executive board, which includes the subcommittee and the player representatives of the 30 teams, did not make any decisions about a successor during Tuesday's meeting, the person told the AP.
Deputy executive director Bruce Meyer is set to be the primary negotiator in the upcoming labor talks, as he was in 2021-22. After Clark and Rick Shapiro led the 2016 negotiations, Meyer was hired in August 2018 as senior director of collective bargaining and legal and was promoted to his current role in July 2022.
Semien said he believes Clark is leaving to deal with the probe.
“I think so," he said, "because up to this point, before any investigations, I’ve had the ultimate confidence in Tony Clark to lead this player group. I've had the ultimate confidence in Bruce Meyer to be the lead negotiator for this player group.”
The decision was made ahead of an expected start of collective bargaining in April for an agreement to replace the five-year labor contract that expires Dec. 1. Management appears on track to propose a salary cap, which possibly could lead to a work stoppage that causes regular-season games to be canceled for the first time since 1995.
Adam L. Braverman, a former U.S. associate deputy attorney general and U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, was hired by the union's executive subcommittee as outside counsel, two people familiar with the group's action told the AP. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the union hadn't announced that.
The union on Monday canceled Tuesday’s scheduled start of the staff’s annual tour of the 30 spring training camps, which was to have begun with the Cleveland Guardians in the morning and the Chicago White Sox in the afternoon.
Clark, 53, is a former All-Star first baseman who became the first player to head the union.
He played from 1995-2009, becoming a union leader shortly after going to his first executive board meeting in 1999.
Clark was hired as the union's director of player relations in 2010 and was promoted to deputy executive director in July 2013, when union head Michael Weiner's health declined because of a brain tumor. Weiner died that November and Clark was elevated to executive director, following Marvin Miller, Kenneth Moffett, Donald Fehr and Wiener as union head.
Clark led players through negotiations that led to an agreement in December 2016, about 3 1/2 hours before the prior deal was set to expire, and another in March 2022 after a 99-day lockout.
Meyer, 64, spent 30 years at Weil, Gotshal & Manges before joining the NHL Players Association in 2016 as senior director of collective bargaining, policy and legal.
Three members of the subcommittee, Jack Flaherty, Lucas Giolito and Ian Happ, were among the players who in March 2024 advocated for the ouster of Meyer in an effort led by former union lawyer Harry Marino. Clark backed Meyer, the effort failed and those three players were dropped off the subcommittee that December.
The subcommittee voted 8-0 against approving the 2022 labor contract and Meyer had advocated pushing management for a deal more favorable to the union. Team player representatives, the overall group supervising negotiations, voted 26-4 in favor, leaving the overall ballot at 26-12 for ratification.
In addition to Semien, the current subcommittee includes Chris Bassitt, Jake Cronenworth, Pete Fairbanks, Cedric Mullins, Paul Skenes, Tarik Skubal and Brent Suter.
OneTeam says since its formation that it added, among others, the players' associations of the WNBA, MLS, NWSL and the U.S. women's soccer national team. RedBird sold its stake in 2019 to HPS Investment Partners, Atlantic Park Strategic Capital Fund and Morgan Stanley Tactical Value.
Cities with the oldest baseball franchises
Cities With the Oldest Baseball Franchises
Photo Credit: Andrew Dawes / Shutterstock
The Major League Baseball season is in full swing again. With the NFL season still months away and the NBA and NHL playoffs just concluded, the MLB dominates the summertime calendar for fans of the “Big Four” professional sports leagues.
While baseball has the summer months to itself, in recent years sports pundits have noted signs that overall interest in the game is in decline. These commentators often cite declining television ratings for national broadcasts as a signal of baseball’s receding position in American life. By this measure, baseball pales in comparison to the NFL’s ratings dominance and the NBA’s growing popularity with younger viewers.
But worries about baseball’s status as the national pastime miss the fact that baseball remains highly popular in local markets. MLB has far higher total in-person attendance than any other sports league due to its longer season, regularly drawing more than 70 million fans per year, and it remains a strong draw for regional TV broadcasts. Perhaps more importantly, baseball’s long history as the oldest professional sport in the U.S. has made MLB franchises an important part of many U.S. cities’ social and cultural life. In baseball-obsessed places like Boston or St. Louis, the local team and the town can feel nearly synonymous.
Most active teams have stayed put over the nearly 150 years of professional baseball
Professional baseball in the U.S. dates back nearly 150 years, to the founding of the National League in 1876. Many major cities in the U.S. have hosted one or more franchises for much of that span, and teams that are founded in one city have tended to stay there. Of the MLB’s 30 active teams, more than two-thirds originated in the city where they now play. And even the group of franchises that have relocated include teams with long histories in their current markets, like the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants.
16 of the 30 active MLB franchises are at least 120 years old
The deep ties between baseball franchises and the cities that host them are also a product of how long teams have been around. More than half of the MLB’s active franchises have existed for more than 120 years, whether in their current market or elsewhere, and only six teams are less than 50 years old. In total, nine U.S. cities host a franchise that is both more than a century old and has remained in the same location since its founding.
To find the cities with the oldest baseball franchises, researchers at HotDog.com ranked U.S. and Canadian cities according to the age of each location’s active professional baseball franchises. All professional baseball seasons since the founding of the National League in 1876 through 2022 were considered. In the event of a tie, the location with the franchise that has accumulated more years in its current city was ranked higher. Further ties were broken by total games played, and then all-time winning percentage. The data was sourced from baseball-reference.com.
Here are the cities with the oldest baseball franchises.
15. Oakland, CA
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- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Oakland Athletics
- Year established: 1901 (Philadelphia Athletics)
- Years in current city: 55
14. Minneapolis, MN
Photo Credit: IVY PHOTOS / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Minnesota Twins
- Year established: 1901 (Washington Senators)
- Years in current city: 62
13. Baltimore, MD
Photo Credit: Olivier Le Queinec / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Baltimore Orioles
- Year established: 1901 (Milwaukee Brewers)
- Years in current city: 69
12. Boston, MA
Photo Credit: Songquan Deng / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Boston Red Sox
- Year established: 1901 (Boston Americans)
- Years in current city: 122
11. Chicago, IL
Photo Credit: marchello74 / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Chicago White Sox
- Year established: 1901 (Chicago White Sox)
- Years in current city: 122
10. Cleveland, OH
Photo Credit: Rudy Balasko / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Cleveland Guardians
- Year established: 1901 (Cleveland Blues)
- Years in current city: 122
9. Detroit, MI
Photo Credit: Studio Specialty / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 122
- Team: Detroit Tigers
- Year established: 1901 (Detroit Tigers)
- Years in current city: 122
8. Los Angeles, CA
Photo Credit: Eric Urquhart / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 139
- Team: Los Angeles Dodgers
- Year established: 1884 (Brooklyn Atlantics)
- Years in current city: 65
7. San Francisco, CA
Photo Credit: GagliardiPhotography / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 140
- Team: San Francisco Giants
- Year established: 1883 (New York Gothams)
- Years in current city: 65
6. Philadelphia, PA
Photo Credit: Gang Liu / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 140
- Team: Philadelphia Phillies
- Year established: 1883 (Philadelphia Quakers)
- Years in current city: 140
5. Pittsburgh, PA
Photo Credit: rfphotography / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 141
- Team: Pittsburgh Pirates
- Year established: 1882 (Pittsburgh Alleghenys)
- Years in current city: 141
4. Cincinnati, OH
Photo Credit: Smart Pro Imaging / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 141
- Team: Cincinnati Reds
- Year established: 1882 (Cincinnati Red Stockings)
- Years in current city: 141
3. St. Louis, MO
Photo Credit: CE Photography / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 141
- Team: St. Louis Cardinals
- Year established: 1882 (St. Louis Brown Stockings)
- Years in current city: 141
2. Atlanta, GA
Photo Credit: ESB Professional / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 147
- Team: Atlanta Braves
- Year established: 1876 (Boston Red Stockings)
- Years in current city: 57
1. Chicago, IL
Photo Credit: Felix Mizioznikov / Shutterstock
- Franchise age (years): 147
- Team: Chicago Cubs
- Year established: 1876 (Chicago White Stockings)
- Years in current city: 147

