June As negotiations continued to heat up, the owners decided to withhold $7.8 million that they were required to pay per previous agreement into the players' pension and benefit plans. The final straw came on June 23 when the
Senate Judiciary Committee failed to approve an
antitrust legislation by a vote of 10–7. According to Fehr, the action left the players with little choice but to strike. "We felt in '94 we were pushed into it," he said. "I still think that's a justified conclusion."
July–August On July 28, the Players Association executive board set August 12, 1994, as a strike date. When that day came, the players went ahead with their threat to walk off the job. The last games of that baseball season were played on August 11, 1994. pitching for the
Atlanta Braves at
Mile High Stadium in what would become the final game of the 1994 season On August 31, three-and-a-half hours of negotiations with federal mediators produced no progress in the strike, and no further talks were scheduled as the strike went into its 4th week. According to then-acting
commissioner Bud Selig, September 9 was the tentative deadline for canceling the rest of the season if no agreement was reached between the owners and players. The MLBPA offered a counterproposal to ownership on September 8 calling for a two-percent tax on the 16 franchises with the highest payrolls to be divided among the other 12 clubs. Teams in both leagues would share 25% of all gate receipts under the MLBPA's plan. The owners responded by claiming that the measures wouldn't meet the cost. The rest of the season, including the
World Series, was called off by Selig on September 14. Selig acknowledged that the strike had torn an irreparable hole in the game's fabric. The move to cancel the rest of the season meant the loss of $580 million in ownership revenue and $230 million in player salaries. In 1994, the average MLB salary was an estimated $1.2 million.
Repercussions The
Montreal Expos were enjoying the best season in their history at the time of the strike. The Expos had the best record in baseball, 74–40, and were six games ahead of the
Atlanta Braves in the
NL East despite having the second-lowest payroll in MLB. Most baseball writers considered the
Expos to be World Series contenders. Coincidentally, the only time that the
Expos had made it to the postseason was in
1981, That year, Montreal had qualified by winning the second half of the season.
Chicago White Sox star
Frank Thomas, who wound up winning the
American League's
Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award for the second year in a row in 1994, said "I've had a career year, but I'm not going to finish it."
Tony Gwynn had a chance to be the first hitter to finish a season with a batting average at .400 or better since
Ted Williams did so in
1941, as he was batting .394 at the time of the strike. The strike also cost
Matt Williams of the
San Francisco Giants a chance to beat
Roger Maris' single season home run record. When the strike forced the cancellation of the remaining 47 games of the season, Williams had already hit 43 home runs, on pace to match Maris' single season record of 61 home runs.
Cleveland Indians second baseman
Carlos Baerga was unable to extend his record two-year streak of 20 home runs, 200 hits, and 100 RBIs by a second baseman because of the strike.
Seattle Mariners star
Ken Griffey Jr., who led the American League with 40 home runs at the time of the strike, summed it up by saying, "We picked a bad season to have a good year."
Kevin Mitchell of the
Cincinnati Reds,
Julio Franco of the Chicago White Sox, and
Shane Mack of the
Minnesota Twins opted during the strike to play in
Japan in 1995. By the third day of the strike, Cleveland Indians owner
Richard Jacobs directed that all souvenirs being sold at the Indians' gift shop carrying the words "inaugural season at
Jacobs Field" be sold at half price. The
Colorado Rockies were completing their last season at
Mile High Stadium with an attendance of 3,281,511 through 57 home games for an average of 57,570 per game. At that pace, the team would have had a good chance of drawing over 4.6 million fans in their 81 home games if the season had continued. This would have eclipsed the major league season attendance record of 4,483,350 fans set by the Rockies only the season before. The strike meant that fans would not witness what was described as "one of the worst division races in history." The National League's MVP award was given to
Jeff Bagwell. His hand was broken by a pitch on August 10, just before the players' strike began; had the season continued, he would likely have missed the remainder of the year and might not have won the MVP. But because of the timing of his "lucky break", Bagwell became just the fourth player in National League history to win the award unanimously. The strike caused a transaction to take an absurd turn. The
Minnesota Twins traded
Dave Winfield to the
Cleveland Indians for a
player to be named later. Since the strike led to the season being canceled, no further transactions could be made until it was settled. The Twins would officially be listed as having sold Winfield to the Indians, but the actual transaction was conducted much differently. Instead of the Indians buying the contract outright, team management went out for a meal with Twins management and the Indians paid the tab; this essentially meant that Winfield had been traded for dinner. Arguably, the biggest storyline of the strike was the
New York Yankees. the strike cost their captain,
Don Mattingly, a chance at making the postseason for the first time in his 13-year career. The Yankees had not been in the postseason since . news media reported on the parallels between the two Yankee teams (1981 and 1994), both of which had division leads taken away by strike actions.
December On December 5, it was announced
Richard Ravitch would step down as negotiator for the owners on December 31, 1994. Ravitch instead resigned on December 6, 1994. On December 14, labor talks headed by federal mediator
William Usery broke down. The next day, the owners approved a salary cap plan by a vote of 25–3, but agreed to delay implementing it so that another round of talks with the players could be held. On December 23, with negotiations at a standstill, the owners unilaterally implemented a salary cap.
January 1995 On January 4, 1995, five bills aimed at ending the baseball strike were introduced into
Congress. The next day, Fehr declared all 895 unsigned Major League players to be free agents in response to unilateral contract changes made by the owners. On January 10,
arbitrator Thomas Roberts awarded 11 players a total of almost $10 million as a result of
collusion charges brought against the owners. On January 26, both players and owners were ordered by
President Bill Clinton to resume bargaining and reach an agreement by February 6. Unfortunately, President Clinton's deadline came and went with no resolution of the strike. Just five days earlier, the owners agreed to revoke the salary cap and return to the old agreement.
Replacement players had no Major League experience before becoming a replacement player After the deadline passed with no compromises, the use of
replacement players for spring training and regular season games was approved by baseball's executive council on January 13. Replacement players were guaranteed $5,000 for reporting to spring training and another $5,000 if they made the Opening Day roster. Selig declared that, "We are committed to playing the 1995 season and will do so with the best players willing to play." On March 14, the players' union announced that it would not settle the strike if replacement players were used in regular season games, and if results were not voided.
Detroit Tigers manager
Sparky Anderson was put on an involuntary leave of absence as he refused to manage replacement players. He retired soon after the 1995 season ended, disillusioned with the state of the sport. Replacement players created major issues for two American League teams. The
Toronto Blue Jays could not play games with replacement players or umpires in Ontario, due to labour code amendments passed by the Ontarian Government that prohibited replacement workers. Manager
Cito Gaston and his coaching staff were sent to work with minor league players, and the team announced that games featuring replacement workers would be played at their spring training facility in
Dunedin, Florida. On March 20, the Orioles canceled the remainder of their spring training games. On March 28, Maryland governor
Parris Glendening signed a law barring teams playing at
Camden Yards from using replacement players. On March 24, Atlanta Braves replacement pitcher Dave Shotkoski was shot and killed near the team hotel in West Palm Beach, Florida. Fellow replacement player Terry Blocker assisted police in locating the suspect, who was later convicted of second-degree murder. On March 26, MLB announced that the
1995 season would be reduced from 162 games per team to 144 games per team as a result of the use of replacement players.
Television deal collapses Following the end of the 1993 season,
CBS Sports lost the rights to broadcast baseball games on television. Production of nationally televised games was taken over by MLB itself, which sold the games as
brokered programming to
ABC and
NBC as part of a
joint venture that was referred to as
The Baseball Network. Originally, the idea was for ABC and NBC to share a slate of games aired in prime time during the week, with the two networks alternating coverage of the
All-Star Game and
World Series and splitting the Division and League Championship Series between them. The agreement was to run for six seasons and end in 1999, with ABC and NBC airing the World Series and All-Star Game three times each; NBC would air the All-Star Game in even numbered years while ABC would do so in odd numbered years, and the network that did not air the All-Star Game would instead carry the World Series. The strike, however, resulted in ABC losing out on two weeks of coverage and the World Series and NBC losing out on all of its allotted regular season games. MLB and the local NBC and ABC stations lost a combined $595 million in advertising revenue, and both networks announced that they would be opting out of the deal after the shortened 1995 season. Both networks would share coverage of the World Series that year, with ABC airing the odd numbered games and NBC the even numbered games.
Fox became the new broadcast partner for MLB in 1996 and has remained as such since. NBC did elect to retain some broadcast rights; however, it continued to air the All-Star Game in even numbered years and retained its rights to air the World Series in odd numbered years until Fox gained exclusive rights to national MLB broadcasts in 2001. ==Strike ends==