NEW YORK - Paychecks won't be bouncing to baseball players next week like so many wild pitches heading to the backstop. <br>
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A day after commissioner Bud Selig said a team was in danger of not making payroll next week, his top aide insisted any financial problems had passed. <br>
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Selig did not identify the team during a Wednesday interview with several newspapers, and also said a second unidentified club had so much debt it might not be able to finish the season. <br>
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A top official of a major league team, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Thursday the Detroit Tigers and Tampa Bay Devil Rays had cash-flow problems earlier this year, but both teams denied any financial difficulties. <br>
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``There are teams that are continuing to work very hard to meet all of their expenses that come due,'' Bob DuPuy, baseball's chief operating officer, said Thursday. ``Whatever immediate issues there were with one or two clubs have been resolved in the short term.'' <br>
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Baseball teams can borrow up to $72 million each through a line of credit backed by the sport's central fund, which collects money from national broadcasting and licensing contracts. <br>
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A high-ranking baseball official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said that before the June 15 payroll, a team was having financial difficulty. The team, which the official didn't identify, secured additional credit from its bank after baseball provided a letter stating that a payment from the central fund would be made to the team in July, the official said. <br>
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``As far as I know, as far as I'm concerned, it's not the Devil Rays,'' Tampa Bay general manager Chuck LaMar said. ``All I know is I'm not aware of any type of loan or bailout from major league baseball.'' <br>
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Tigers president Dave Dombrowski refused to say if baseball had provided any specific assurances to the team's bank, saying, ``We don't get into our personal finances at all.'' <br>
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Dombrowski said the Tigers were not in danger of failing to have enough cash to pay players next week. <br>
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``We're going to meet our payroll,'' he said. ``I can assure that they'll get paid on the 15th.'' <br>
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Selig, trying to gain concessions from the players' association, has spent more than 1 1/2 years saying that baseball has widespread financial difficulties. Union head Donald Fehr seemed surprised by Selig's remarks. <br>
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``It was sort of an odd thing to see said publicly,'' Fehr said. ``And, hopefully, it's an issue that's behind us at this point.'' <br>
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Bargaining for a new labor contract, recessed since June 27, was to have resumed Thursday in New York, but the sides agreed to scrap the session and meet Friday. <br>
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The sides are far apart on increased revenue sharing among teams, the owners' proposal for a luxury tax to slow payroll growth, random testing for steroids and other drugs, extending the amateur draft worldwide, and management's attempt to change salary arbitration rules and eligibility. <br>
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Players fear owners might try to unilaterally change work rules this fall. While the union hasn't set a strike date, the players are expected to call for a walkout in August or September if there is no progress in talks. It would be baseball's ninth work stoppage and first since 1994-95. <br>
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``It's hard to quantify progress in bargaining. I think we could say we've got a long way to go,'' Fehr said. ``But what typically happens in collective bargaining is that you talk for a long time and then somehow, someway - usually in a way you don't anticipate - a breakthrough happens and then a lot of things sort of dovetail. <br>
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``We aren't at the point yet, and the object is to stay at it until we are.''
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