4 min read

CARLSBAD, Calif. — A looming lockout at the expiration of baseball’s collective bargaining agreement Dec. 1 didn’t change much at the general manager’s meetings this week.

“I’m not part of the negotiating team, so I mean, business as usual for us,” Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman said.

“Business as usual,” Indians baseball boss Chris Antonetti echoed. Credit the same quote to Seattle’s Jerry DiPoto, Houston’s James Click and Chicago White Sox GM Rick Hahn, among others.

“Same thing we say every year,” the Cubs’ Jed Hoyer said.

Despite an offseason that figures to be different than any since baseball’s last labor stoppage in 1994-95, the GM meetings went on as planned in Southern California.

Heads of baseball operations departments sat for presentations from league officials on the progress of rules experiments in the minor leagues, were pitched by Players Alliance reps – including former players CC Sabathia and Curtis Granderson – on ways to help diversity efforts, and laid the groundwork for deals that might be struck later this winter.

Advertisement

Agents roamed the premise as usual, too. Scott Boras said he was meeting with teams until 3 a.m. most nights, and of course, he came ready with his usual quips for his scrum with reporters. Given that next month’s winter meetings may be impacted by a lockout, this might have been his only chance for a high-profile news conference.

Just four roster moves were made during the two-day meetings – the Dodgers finalized a deal for left-hander Andrew Heaney, the Yankees brought back lefty Joely Rodríguez, the Rays released lefty Adam Conley, and righty Drew Carlton was assigned outright to Triple-A by Detroit.

Of course, the GM meetings aren’t usually where deals are finished.

“It’s the same,” Cashman said. “You try to connect, try to get as much information usually at the beginning of the process.”

The Yankees are searching for a shortstop, and there are five prominent ones on the open market – Carlos Correa, Corey Seager, Trevor Story, Javier Báez and Marcus Semien. Cashman said he’s met with reps for most of them and will soon get to the rest.

”I don’t think anybody ever tells me at the outset, you never hear, ‘I don’t want to come to New York,'” Cashman said.

Advertisement

Unless, it seems, if you’re the Mets. Team President Sandy Alderson departed Wednesday night with the club still mired in a search for a head of baseball operations.

Several candidates have been unable to get permission from their current teams to interview, and others have declined because they are too comfortable personally or professionally where they are. Alderson claimed most of the hesitation has been due to the New York market.

“It’s a big stage and some people would just prefer to be elsewhere,” he said Tuesday.

The most crucial meetings happened without the GMs. League and union officials bargained Tuesday and Wednesday, and indications are a deal is not anywhere close.

Next up on the baseball calendar is the owners’ meetings in Chicago next week. After that comes the Nov. 19 deadline to add players to 40-man rosters and protect them from the winter meeting draft. The winter meetings are still slated for Dec. 6 in Orlando, Florida, but those are in jeopardy without a new CBA in place.

Business as usual, as they say, at least until it’s not.

Advertisement

“They’ll obviously come to a resolution at some point,” Cashman said. “We’ll find commond ground. They’ve always done it in the past, mostly. So at some point, optimistic they’ll do that again. Otherwise, I just do what I gotta do.”

BREWERS: Milwaukee will go with multiple hitting coaches next season after hiring Ozzie Timmons and Connor Dawson to replace the fired Andy Haines.

Milwaukee scored a total of six runs in a four-game NL Division Series loss to the eventual World Series champion Atlanta Braves after ranking 12th out of 30 major league teams in scoring, 20th in OPS and 27th in batting average during the regular season.

Timmons, 51, was Tampa Bay’s first-base coach and assistant hitting coach from 2017-21. Dawson, 28, had worked in the Seattle Mariners organization since 2019 and was their minor league hitting coordinator this season.

ROYALS: Longtime scout Art Stewart, who began his career with the New York Yankees in the 1950s before becoming the longest-tenured member of the Kansas City Royals organization, died Thursday. He was 94.

The Royals announced the death of Stewart, who just completed his 52nd year with them. No cause was given.

Stewart scouted more than 70 players who reached the big leagues, including Bo Jackson, Kevin Appier, Mike Sweeney, Johnny Damon and Carlos Beltran. He was instrumental in helping sign the talent that led the Royals to the 1985 World Series title, and Stewart was still part of the front office when they won their second World Series title 30 years later.

Comments are not available on this story. Read more about why we allow commenting on some stories and not on others.