Baseball America

MINOR LEAGUES, MAJOR CHANGES

On the second Wednesday in December, Major League Baseball took yet another step toward completing the most dramatic change in the minor leagues in at least half a century.

On Dec. 9, MLB invited 120 minor league teams to join its Professional Development Leagues. While there had been talks between negotiating teams from Minor League Baseball and MLB for many months, this pivotal moment, which will shape the structure of the minor leagues, was a unilateral decision. MiLB had no significant input into which teams were invited to be affiliates and which ones were not.

That appears to be by design. After months of talks, MLB made it clear it is setting up its own system. Based on feedback from minor league clubs, MLB has been willing to tweak aspects of the rules and guidelines it will use, but the structure has been set up by MLB and MLB alone.

As 2020 ended, there was no certainty that the 120 teams MLB invited would be the same 120 that take the field in 2021. To join MLB’s system, minor league teams will have to agree to sign a 10-year Professional Development License. They will also have to waive any right to sue MLB.

It’s possible some teams will balk, either by simply refusing to sign individually or by banding together as a group to attempt to get some aspects of the PDLs altered.

But nobody Baseball America talked to in the lead-up to or

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Baseball America

Baseball America5 min read
Nl West
We asked scouts and executives to weigh in on a number of topics. They were granted anonymity to speak freely. Quotes are lightly edited for clarity. “The Dodgers got Shohei Ohtani and reshaped their rotation. They didn’t block out any of their nearl
Baseball America1 min read
American league
The Yankees ranked next-to-last in the American League in home runs hit by lefthanded hitters last season. That is an astonishing feat for a team that plays half its games in Yankee Stadium. New York struck early last offseason to address this lineup
Baseball America4 min read
In Memoriam
Mike Martin, the winningest coach in college sports history, died on Jan. 31 after a battle with Lewy body dementia. He was 79. Martin was the head coach of Florida State, his alma mater, for 40 years before retiring in 2019. In all 40 of those seaso

Related Books & Audiobooks