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WILLIAM GOLDMAN 10/4/2011

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CLUBHOUSE CONTROVERSY: A STUDY OF DISPUTE..., 16 Harv. Negot. L....








16 Harv. Negot. L. Rev. 31

Harvard Negotiation Law Review

Spring 2011

Article

CLUBHOUSE CONTROVERSY: A STUDY OF DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCESSES BETWEEN TEAMMATES IN MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Josh Chetwynda1

Copyright (c) 2011 Harvard Negotiation Law Review; Josh Chetwynd

Contents



I.

Introduction

31

II.

The Arena

33

III.

Identifying Causes of Conflict

36




A. On-field Play

37




B. Clubhouse Etiquette - Music

40




C. Hazing

42




D. Discussing Team Affairs with the Media

44

IV.

Typologies of Response to Disputes

46




A. Avoidance and ‘Lumping it’

46




B. Physical Altercations / Self-help

48




C. Negotiation

51




D. Mediation

53




E. Adjudication/Umpiring

58

V.

Comparing Baseball’s Dispute Resolution Mechanisms with Other Approaches

59

VI.

Conclusion

62

I. Introduction

It is an article of faith that societies experience conflict.1 While professional athletes get their fair share of ritualized conflict at a *32 variety of fan-packed venues worldwide, they also experience real interpersonal disputes behind closed doors. In baseball, off-the-field interaction can be intense. Teams competing in the world’s top professional baseball circuit, Major League Baseball,2 begin practicing in February for a 162-game campaign that typically runs from April through September. During the regular season, teams generally engage in five or six games every seven days.3 Moreover, there is extensive travel. It is conceivable that a team can compete in Seattle, Washington, one day and then travel 2,530 miles for a contest in Tampa Bay, Florida, the next. For the league’s best clubs, the playoffs continue until the end of October (or, in some years, the beginning of November). According to author Ross Bernstein, baseball players are “[t]ogether for up to nine months in a row, [and] actually see more of each other than they do of their own families. They eat together, travel together, live together, socialize together, and work together. With that, like in every family dynamic, there are going to be stresses, squabbles, and disagreements along the way.”4 Add the fact that players must handle these tensions under the watchful eye of journalists who cover the teams makes Major League Baseball a challenging environment for dispute resolution.

For some noted thinkers the idea of baseball players - or any professional athletes - successfully resolving the typical type of teammate conflict that occurs during the course of a season would be unfathomable. After all, Thomas Jefferson once wrote a nephew warning the young man to avoid ball games because “[g]ames played with the ball and others of that nature, are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind.”5 Nearly two centuries later, George Orwell offered his own jaundiced take on professional athletes: *33 “Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. . . . It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, disregard of all rules and sadistic pleasure in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting.”6

So do the words of these accomplished men offer a valuable indication of the difficulties today’s athletes endure when attempting to solve disputes? This paper addresses that question in the context of Major League Baseball (“MLB”). The first part identifies and discusses the arena in which players deal with both conflict and dispute resolution. Then the various types of conflict players confront are analyzed, followed by an examination of the typologies of resolution that players utilize. Finally, the paper considers the approaches taken by Major Leaguers7 in comparison to both Western societies and other cultures. Superficially, the biting words of Jefferson and Orwell relate to conflict resolution in the Major Leagues. Physical confrontation is a popular form of dispute resolution. Yet this paper also identifies more in-depth and nuanced forms of resolution used by teammates, suggesting that the great thinkers’ words may not be wholly appropriate when discussing today’s baseball players.

II. The Arena

The starting point for conflict resolution is usually a choice of arena. “The ‘arena of negotiations’ may, but need not, consist of a physical location within which face-to-face meetings take place,” but, generally speaking, “an arena is constituted whenever messages pass between the parties, receive attention and elicit responses.”8

In the case of Major League Baseball, the typical arena for conflict resolution is known as the clubhouse. The clubhouse is part locker room and part relaxation area.9 Every Major League stadium has permanent areas for both the home and visiting teams. The size, shape, and dimension of these locations have changed dramatically over the *34 years. For example, in 1959, a player named Jim Brosnan described the home team’s clubhouse on a sweltering late June day as physically unbearable. “Life in the Cincinnati clubhouse in midsummer is lived in the raw. Pregame uniform is jock strap and shower clogs,” wrote Brosnan in his autobiography The Long Season.10 “The thought of putting on a flannel uniform over woolen socks and undershirt starts the sweat rolling. ‘How many electric fans you got in here, Chesty?’ I asked the clubhouse man. ‘Not enough,’ he said.”’11 Beyond the poor air circulation, team ownership did not encourage lounging around in this space. There were three-legged stools for each player, fold-up chairs for a limited number of visitors, and little in the way of food and drink options. Former player and manager Jeff Torborg said that when he first made it to the Major Leagues with the Los Angeles Dodgers, “the only food in the clubhouse was crackers and a wheel of cheese. Sodas were available, but the player was expected to put a stroke next to his name on a board each time he took one so that the Dodgers could deduct the cost from his paycheck.”12

In the past half-century, modern edifices complete with comfortable and well-provisioned clubhouses have been built by nearly all of the Major Leagues’ thirty teams. The San Francisco Giants’ home clubhouse at AT&T Park serves as an exemplar. Journalist Michael Farber offered this colorful description:

The modern clubhouse is one Tattoo short of a fantasy island. It features oversized TVs, overstuffed coaches, over-the-top postgame spreads, over-the-rainbow-sized rooms. The Giants’ main dressing space is 2,788 square feet, spacious enough to give the impression it demands a passport and inoculations to travel to the other side. The stalls are made from cherry wood. A cook is at the players’ disposal for many games. Clubhouse manager Mike Murphy’s young assistants wash the players’ cars and fetch their dry cleaning, perks hardly unique to San Francisco.13 *35 These clubhouses have grown so large that there can even be physically determined sub-cultures. In the San Francisco clubhouse in 2002, one side of the clubhouse was comprised of 22 lockers. These spaces were occupied by only African-American and Latino players; there were no Caucasians. According to one player, this was not a source of tension. “If someone came in here who hadn’t been around baseball or didn’t understand what went on in a locker room, he might think it was a race thing,” said Nicaraguan-born player Marvin Benard, who had his locker in the area in question.14 “But it’s not. It’s a comfort thing. Guys feel more comfortable in their own environment.”15

With more comfort and more control for socialization, players today spend increasingly more time in this luxury-laden space. On a late summer day in 2008 at the Texas Rangers’ clubhouse at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, there were approximately a dozen players lounging around a roomy clubhouse some five hours before a game. A handful of players were chatting, others were playing chess, and one was sleeping on a large sofa.16 Echoing the Texas situation, Detroit Tigers General Manger Dave Drombrowski said in 2002, “[p]layers are getting here earlier and earlier, which is good. For a seven o’clock game, many guys are coming in around two. You want your players to be here thinking about baseball, and you want to give them an enjoyable environment.”17 With the modern-day amenities leading to players lingering in the clubhouse for long periods, the clubhouse’s historic role as an arena for dispute resolution has only been enhanced.18

In fact, the clubhouse can be the location where conflict occurs. The reason for this dual role has much to do with the belief among players that the clubhouse is the one safe haven from the media, who are allowed in only at select times, and from the public, who are strictly *36 prohibited. One common message that is put up on the wall in clubhouses is the admonishment: “What is seen in here, What is heard in here, What is said in here. . .stays here.”19

[The clubhouse] was our home and it was sacred,” said former player Tommy John.20 “What happened in there was no different than what happens between any husband and wife in the sanctity of their own home. What happened there stayed there.”21 This sanctity makes players feel comfortable being themselves and allows them to use the clubhouse arena as a place to confront teammates and resolve disputes. “As ballplayers, whether we were 20 years old or 40 years old, we were all kids in there,” explained former player Frank Viola.22 “And kids do stupid stuff. None of us have really grown up . . . As far as we were concerned the clubhouse was fun time and it was our time. It was our sanctuary. What we said in there definitely had to stay in there . . . no questions.”23 While the clubhouse is not the only location for both conflict and resolution - other areas include the “dugout,” where players sit during an actual match, and even the field - the clubhouse arena is the focal point in large part because, as is the case with most traditional conflict resolution locales, it is a “secure area in which the parties can communicate directly with each other.”24

III. Identifying Causes of Conflict

A hallmark of sport is ritualized conflict. In baseball, teams compete against each other in order to win games.25 Journalists and avid supporters will say one club beat the opposing side or, in a particularly lopsided victory, they slaughtered the opponent.26 Yet, this *37 competitiveness rarely leads to actual conflict between teams. While financial livelihoods may be at stake based on performance, there are only limited examples of either intentional or unintentional physical violence - such as inter-team fights referred to as “bench-clearing brawls.”27 In contrast, the typical interaction is a friendly one between athletes on different squads. “Anyone who shows up early before a baseball game today knows that fraternizing is a common practice between opposing players these days,” according to a respected website that covers American sports.28 “Baseball is a large fraternity, made up of managers, coaches and players who will hook up with numerous organizations over their career.”29 As a result, the most common form of actual conflict in baseball occurs internally, between teammates. Players spending so much time together in close proximity - on the field and in the clubhouse - inevitably clash with varying degrees of intensity. While no two situations are alike, there are some trends in the type of “sharp disagreement or opposition”30 that occurs. The most common points for dispute are on-field play, clubhouse etiquette, hazing teammates, and statements in the media.

A. On-field Play

While physical conflict is limited on the baseball field, that does not mean players do not take their sport seriously. “If there is a dispute,” explained former player Bert Blyleven, “it’s usually about what is happening on the field during a game.”31 The most common disagreement unfolds when “somebody is not playing the game well or *38 dogging it [not giving a complete effort],” according to longtime pitcher Bruce Hurst.32 “Simple things like not running hard to first [base] or not being out there for stretch[ing] early enough” are causes for conflict, former player Lance Painter said.33 “The other problem that you see is when guys seem to think a [teammate] dogged a play. He didn’t go after a ball because he didn’t want to dive. You expect big leaguers to make every play they can, but sometimes it doesn’t happen.”

In his book The Bronx Zoo, pitcher Sparky Lyle recounted an incident that typifies this type of conflict. Outfielder Lou Piniella was displeased with the performance of fellow outfielder Mickey Rivers:

Piniella went to Mickey and told him it didn’t look like he was giving a hundred percent. Mickey told him, “When I go out there, I play the best I can. I don’t give a damn what you think.” Lou said, “I’m just telling you how it looks from where I’m at.” Mickey said, “I don’t care how it looks. I’m telling you I’m playing the best I can. My leg hurts.”34

As illustrated by the Piniella-Rivers exchange, this form of dispute invariably includes one player criticizing the performance of a teammate. In Jim Brosnan’s first-person account of his 1959 Major League season, he described a disagreement between two players on his team, the St. Louis Cardinals. In discussing how to pitch an opposing player named Smokey Burgess, pitcher Larry Jackson and outfielder Gino Cimoli had a dispute over Jackson’s performance. Cimoli said Jackson needed to throw pitches to Burgess in one location, and Jackson disagreed. In an effort to diffuse the situation, Jackson said, “Listen, Gino, you let me do the pitching, and you chase my mistakes.”35 Cimoli’s retort was “[t]hat’s all I been doin’,” suggesting that Jackson had been error-prone.36 Cimoli’s comment created so *39 much discord, wrote Brosnan, that it caused “the fight to break out in the mind of every pitcher on the bus.”37

Sometimes conflict will arise indirectly from on-field play. If a player does not handle his on-field performance once he gets off-field in a way a teammate believes is appropriate, disputes can ensue. For example, former Boston Red Sox teammates Kevin Youkilis and Manny Ramirez argued because “Ramirez was bothered by Youkilis’ habit of angrily throwing equipment in the dugout” when Youkilis was disappointed with his on-field results.38 In 2005, Minnesota Twins teammates Justin Morneau and Torii Hunter got into a fight when “Morneau objected to Hunter joking on the bench. And Hunter objected to Morneau unable to take a joke.”39 The crux of the problem was Morneau did not believe that Hunter was taking the competition seriously enough.

In some instances, these conflicts over on-field play have less to do with the team’s overall success and more with the effect one player’s performance can have on a teammate’s career. White Sox pitcher Tom Fordham had a dispute of that nature with his team’s catcher during pre-season training in the late 1990s.40 Usually, the catcher plays an essential role in making a pitcher look good by performing well on defense, but Fordham claimed his catcher was not working hard enough, according to journalist Teddy Greenstein, who discussed the situation with Fordham. “[The] catcher . . . did a poor job of blocking *40 pitches in a game [and Fordham] felt the catcher’s weak attempts had hurt his chances to make the team,” Greenstein recounted.41 As the pitcher lasted just two seasons in the Major Leagues, there might have been something to his gripe. Alternatively, maybe Fordham’s talents simply did not merit inclusion on a Major League roster. Regardless, the situation suggests that, at the least, player conflict can arise based on to how one player perceives the impact another’s performance might have on his career.

Fordham’s concerns make sense. The inter-connected team nature of baseball means one player’s disappointing results can directly impact the success of his teammates. Moreover, as winning is a team’s primary objective, strong performances from all of the athletes on a club’s roster are required. As a result, it is not surprising that a player’s subpar performance - whether it reflects poorly on the club as a whole or a single teammate - can cause disputes.



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