Sun | Dec 1, 2024

MLS to lock out referees

Published:Sunday | February 18, 2024 | 12:15 AM

Referee Tori Penso (second from right); fourth official Felisha Mariscal (second from left); and assistant referees Brooke Mayo (left), and Corey Rockwell (right), walk onto the field before the Vancouver Whitecaps and Colorado Rapids played in an MLS foo
Referee Tori Penso (second from right); fourth official Felisha Mariscal (second from left); and assistant referees Brooke Mayo (left), and Corey Rockwell (right), walk onto the field before the Vancouver Whitecaps and Colorado Rapids played in an MLS football match on April 29, 2023, in Vancouver, British Columbia.

AP:

MAJOR LEAGUE Soccer (MLS) will lock out referees after its union rejected a tentative contract, putting Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami on track to open the season next week with replacement officials.

The Professional Soccer Referees Association (PSRA) said on Saturday that 95.8 per cent voted against a tentative agreement with the Professional Referee Organisation (PRO), which supplies match officials to MLS, the NWSL and some lower-tier leagues. The union said 97.8 per cent of eligible members voted.

Their previous five-year agreement had been set to expire on January 15, and a pair of brief extensions ended on Monday. PRO will lock out the union at 12:01 a.m. EST today.

“We are left with no choice but to institute a lockout and use qualified non-bargaining unit officials so that games can go ahead as scheduled,” Mark Geiger, the former referee who became PRO’s general manager in February 2023, said in a statement.

Messi and Miami play the MLS opener at home against Real Salt Lake on Wednesday.

The PSRA, which has about 260 members, said the tentative agreement lacked a sufficient economic package and quality-of-life improvements.

“The skyrocketing growth of MLS has significantly increased demands on officials mentally and physically, and as such has increased demands on both our professional and personal time,” union president Peter Manikowski said in a statement.

“Our members are asking not only for fair compensation at a time when the league is reporting record growth, but also for the ability to take care of themselves on the road and at home to continue officiating at the highest level that this sport demands.”

MLS said PRO’s proposal for wages, benefits and travel was a 25 per cent improvement from last year.

PRO said the tentative five-year agreement included guaranteed pay increases this year of 10-33 per cent for referees, 75-104 per cent raises for assistant referees and 15-100 per cent for video match officials along with increased match fees. Salaries and match fees would have increased 7 per cent in 2027 and 3 per cent in other years.

First-class or business-class air travel would be added for the postseason and for the final day of the regular season in 2028.

MLS used replacement officials for the first two weeks of its 2014 season before reaching a five-year contract after the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service entered talks.

League executive vice president Nelson Rodriguez said the union rejected a no strike-no lockout proposal. He said in a statement that PRO would use “experienced professional match referees supported by veteran VAR officials,” a reference to the video assistant referees.

PRO had 66 officials committed to work during a lockout, according to information provided to The Associated Press. Among that group, 26 could be referees or fourth officials and six referees, assistant referees or fourth officials. Five could be fourth officials or video assistant referees and 29 could be assistant referees.

Eleven of the referees have past experience at FIFA events or first-, second- and third-tier professional leagues.

PRO managers, who have been certified for VAR in the past, will be available for video referee work.