TAMPA — The MLB Players Association may not have an official leader at the moment, but the players are doubling down on the strength of the union.
Austin Wells, the Yankees player rep, held a meeting with his teammates Wednesday morning to deliver that message and address the fallout of the sudden resignation Tuesday by executive director Tony Clark, which came at a critical time with a labor battle looming next offseason.
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Try it free“It’s a message of strength,” Wells said Wednesday at Steinbrenner Field. “We’re just as strong as we were Friday versus today.
“I think we have a lot of confidence in our executive subcommittee, who did a great job handling all this. They were very informative [Tuesday] in the meeting that we had. [They] explained what was happening to us, and they did a great job handling it. It’s not an easy situation. So on the players’ side of things, we have a lot of confidence in that.”
Wells was on a call Tuesday with all 30 player reps and the executive subcommittee, in which they opted not to vote on an immediate replacement for Clark, who stepped down in the wake of an internal investigation that found he had an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, who was hired by the MLBPA in 2023.
The expectation was that there would be another call later Wednesday after player reps had a chance to talk through things with their respective teams, with the potential to elect an interim leader then.
“[Clark’s resignation] came as a little bit of a surprise,” Wells said. “It’s unfortunate but I think we’re moving in a good direction.”
Wells had been an alternate rep the last two seasons while reliever Scott Effross served as the Yankees’ player rep. But with Effross now in the Tigers organization, after the Yankees non-tendered him in November, Wells stepped into the main role at an interesting time.
“It’s an exciting opportunity, especially this year, coming into probably the biggest negotiation we’re going to have, at least in my short career,” Wells said. “I’m looking forward to that opportunity and just being able to help represent our team.
“We have a ton of guys with experience in here, which has helped a lot.”
Gerrit Cole, for example, was previously on the executive subcommittee, a tenure that coincided with the lockout during the 2021-22 offseason. There is a growing fear around the game that another, potentially lengthier, lockout is coming next winter when the current CBA expires on Dec. 1.
“We don’t want that,” Wells said. “We hope we can get a deal done to have a normal season next year, but we’re prepared to do what we have to.”