PHOENIX - Baseball might be willing to give Washington a third chance. <br>
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The city that twice lost the Senators got an unexpected boost Thursday when baseball commissioner Bud Selig said Washington was the ``prime candidate'' to get a team through relocation. <br>
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After players union head Donald Fehr spoke directly to all owners for the first time, Selig made the biggest news. <br>
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``There's no doubt in my mind that relocation is coming,'' he said. ``It's just a question of when. I've always said that we need to solve the basic problems, and when we solve the basic problems, we can then turn our attention to relocation.'' <br>
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Washington has been without a major league team since the expansion Senators became the Texas Rangers after the 1971 season. For at least a decade, groups have tried to obtain a team for either RFK Stadium or Northern Virginia. <br>
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Washington-Northern Virginia has been the most aggressive region in seeking a franchise. <br>
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``I'd have to say that given the demographics of the area, and the number of people who want it, I would say it's the prime candidate,''' Selig said.<br>
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Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief legal counsel, said no team will move this year. He said it was too early to tell if a team could relocate for 2003. <br>
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After Fehr spoke to owners, he briefed players on the status of negotiations for a new labor contract. Arizona pitcher Curt Schilling blamed Selig for the tumultuous offseason, dominated by talk of contraction and franchise sales. <br>
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``As a group, I think players are deeply disappointed the commissioner chose two days after the World Series to make the announcement he made,'' Schilling said. <br>
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Schilling's Diamondbacks capped one of the best World Series ever by rallying in the bottom of the ninth to beat the New York Yankees in Game 7 on Nov. 4. Two days later, owners voted to eliminate two teams, plunging baseball into an offseason of uncertainty. <br>
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The contraction plan has been halted by a Minnesota court, and owners are in the midst of unprecedented franchise swapping. On Wednesday, a group headed by Florida Marlins owner John Henry was given approval to buy the Boston Red Sox in a record $660 million deal. <br>
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Owners vow to quickly approve a $158 million sale of the Marlins to Montreal Expos owner Jeffrey Loria and a $120 million sale of the Expos to the commissioner's office. It would operate the team this season unless contraction goes through and the Expos are folded. <br>
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Schilling said the uncertainty has hurt baseball's finances. <br>
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``The game should be going through the roof publicity-wise,'' he said. ``Owners have killed season-ticket sales for some franchises.'' <br>
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Relocation for 2003 could wind up being linked with a failure to eliminate teams this year. An injunction forces the Twins - the original Senators before they moved in 1961 - to honor their 2002 lease at the Metrodome. Selig and the team are awaiting word from the Minnesota Court of Appeals on their attempt to lift the order. <br>
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Selig said if the commissioner's office buys the Expos, an independent person would be put in charge. The commissioner's office intends to operate the Expos for one season at most. <br>
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``I'd be shocked if it was for more than one year,'' DuPuy said. <br>
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An option remains to eliminate two teams in 2003, including the Expos, and move another franchise. Anaheim, Oakland and Tampa Bay have been mentioned as possibilities by owners. <br>
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Both Fehr and Selig gave hope that the 2002 season will not be interrupted by a work stoppage, which would be baseball's ninth in three decades. The union hasn't considered striking, and owners haven't considered a lockout. <br>
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Bargaining is to resume next week on a labor contract to replace the one that expired Nov. 7. Teams proposed last week to increase the amount of shared locally generated revenue from 20 percent to 50 percent, after a deduction for ballpark expenses. The union worries that it would drain money from high-revenue teams that would otherwise spend it on players. <br>
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Owners also asked for a 50 percent luxury tax on the portions of payrolls above $98 million. <br>
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``Our view is that players aren't luxuries,'' Fehr said. ``That's a difficult issue for us to contend with.'' <br>
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Fehr, who had Selig speak to players last week, was accompanied by three players - Rich Aurilia, Tony Clark and Mark Loretta - along with union lawyers Gene Orza and Steve Fehr, the union head's brother. <br>
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Donald Fehr was pleased to have received the invitation and spoke for nearly two hours, including questions and answers. He did not publicly detail his remarks to owners, but gave a general assessment of the offseason turmoil. <br>
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``We have had since the end of the World Series a number of developments, which have necessitated an extended period of press coverage that hasn't been all that happy for baseball,'' Fehr said.
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