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Major League Soccer will lock out players on Feb. 4 if there’s no new collective bargaining agreement

The league said its labor committee "has voted unanimously to authorize the league to terminate the CBA and institute a lockout" if the players don't give up on negotiations.

Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber.
Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber.Read moreRichard Drew / AP

Major League Soccer has extended its deadline for negotiating adjustments to the existing collective bargaining agreement until Feb. 4 and warned it is prepared to lock out players if a deal isn’t reached by then.

“Given the impact of COVID-19 on how clubs will need to operate during preseason, we must finalize an agreement in the coming days in order to provide teams and players adequate time to prepare for the opening of training camps,” the league said in a statement Friday. “If we are unable to finalize a new CBA by 11:59 p.m. ET on February 4, the MLS Labor Committee has voted unanimously to authorize the league to terminate the CBA and institute a lockout.”

The league set the new deadline after the Major League Soccer Players Association submitted a proposal just hours ahead of the original deadline. The union proposed extending the current collective bargaining agreement with the league through the 2026 season.

The league’s proposal includes playing players their full salaries in 2021 in exchange for an extension through the 2027 season. Friday’s statement also said the league “will continue to pay the health insurance premiums for players and their families in the event of a lockout” because of the ongoing pandemic.

“In our discussions with the MLSPA, we have emphasized the importance of the two-year extension to allow the league and clubs to recover a portion of the losses incurred in 2021 as a result of the pandemic while protecting the long-term health of the League by providing stability which promotes ongoing investment,” the league said.

MLS has said it lost nearly $1 billion last season due to the pandemic as it played in mostly empty stadiums and with increased costs for testing and charter flights. The league invoked a force majeure clause last month to reopen negotiations over the CBA, citing ongoing uncertainty because of the COVID-19 crisis.

The league’s new season is set to open April 3 with preseason training camps allowed to begin on Feb. 22.

The union has said it hopes to avoid a lockout.

“It is our sincere hope that it can be avoided,” the MLSPA said in a statement. “Players are ready to play.”

The league and the union had two difficult negotiations last year — one in February before the start of the season and a second in June when players took a pay cut in order to resume the 2020 season.

The MLSPA noted the players have already faced health risks as have their families and team staffs because of the coronavirus pandemic. But it also noted the economic hit on clubs, and said any work stoppage would be “catastrophic for the standing of MLS, both domestically and internationally.”