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Wednesday,
November 28, 2001
On
hold
MLB
antitrust exemption in jeopardy,
while Bud Seligs term extends
By
Ronald Blum
Associated Press
CHICAGO
With contraction on hold and owners focused on extending
Bud Seligs term as commissioner, the House Judiciary
Committee announced Tuesday it will hold a hearing next week
on baseballs antitrust exemption.
Selig,
union head Donald Fehr and Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura are
among the possible witnesses who may testify at the Dec. 6
session in Washington.
Following
the decision by baseball owners to eliminate two teams before
the start of next season, legislation was introduced to strip
baseball of its exemption from antitrust laws, granted by
the U.S. Supreme Court in 1922.
That legislation
has enabled baseball owners to prevent franchise moves, and
no team has relocated since the expansion Washington Senators
became the Texas Rangers after the 1971 season.
Committee
spokeswoman Dena Graziano said the witness list will not be
finalized until later this week.
While
the committee announced the hearing, baseball owners were
gathering for the second time in three weeks.
Selig,
whose family has controlled the Milwaukee Brewers since 1970,
was expected to get at least another three years on his term
as commissioner, according to a high-ranking team official
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Little
or no opposition to the move is expected from owners, many
indebted to Selig for his past assistance with team problems.
He was elected to a five-year term in July 1998.
When owners
voted Nov. 6 to eliminate two teams, they didnt select
them. While the Minnesota Twins and Montreal Expos are the
most likely candidates, according to many owners, contraction
ground to a halt 10 days after the vote when a Minnesota judge
issued a temporary injunction that forced the Twins to fulfill
their lease next season at the Metrodome.
Selig
did not want to ask owners to make any decisions on contraction
at this meeting because the injunction was in place, a high-ranking
baseball official said Monday on the condition he not be identified.
The Twins
and baseball have asked the Minnesota Supreme Court for a
speedy review of their request to lift the injunction, requesting
a hearing no later than Dec. 7. The Metropolitan Sports Facilities
Commission, which operates the Metrodome, must file its response
by Wednesday.
Owners
want to eliminate the Expos, who averaged just 7,648 fans
a game at Olympic Stadium this year.
Twins
owner Carl Pohlad, frustrated at the Minnesota governments
refusal to fund a new ballpark, is willing to have his team
eliminated in exchange for a contraction payment, even though
his team has been profitable in recent years and raised its
average attendance from 13,083 in 2000 to 22,287 this year.
Meanwhile,
no decisions have been made on the possible sales of the Florida
Marlins or Anaheim Angels. Expos owner Jeffrey Loria has talked
to Florida owner John Henry about buying the Marlins, but
has not reached an agreement, the baseball official said.
Henry
has expressed interest in buying the Angels from The Walt
Disney Co., but those talks havent progressed, and Henry
has said he is willing to become a minority investor in Tom
Werners bid to buy control of the Boston Red Sox.
Meanwhile,
the players and owners still were unable to agree on dates
for arbitrator Shyam Das to hear the grievance the union filed
to stop contraction. Players claim the Nov. 6 decision violates
the terms of their expired labor agreement, and that owners
cant eliminate clubs without the unions consent.
Das probably
will have to arbitrate the timing of the arbitration when
he speaks with the sides Wednesday.
Assuming
we havent reached an agreement, were going to
go to him and ask for some help, said Gene Orza, the
unions No. 2 official.
Partly
because of the contraction debate, there has been little negotiation
between owners and players on a labor contract to replace
the one that expired Nov. 7.
Some
Twins fans planned to attend the owners meeting at OHare
International Airport with the intent of giving Selig petitions
with more than 110,000 signatures urging the team be saved.
Paul Ridgeway,
one of the organizers, and former-Twin Frank Quilici said
their caravan planned to stop in Seligs hometown of
Milwaukee.
Heres
a message to you and the owners: Think twice about doing this
to the Minnesota Twins, Quilici said.
Ridgeway
said if Selig refused to meet them in Chicago, theyll
park a motor home outside his office in Milwaukee on Wednesday.
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