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Players' union expected to respond to MLB offer Wednesday after marathon session

Negotiators for locked-out players and Major League Baseball spent 16 1/2 hours bargaining, then recessed talks until Wednesday morning as commissioner Rob Manfred let his deadline to reach a deal preserving a 162-game season pass.

Shortly after 3 a.m. ET on the 98th day of the lockout, MLB said no additional games had been cancelled and talks will continue.

"The players' association requested to speak to their board early tomorrow before responding to our proposal and will be getting back to us in the morning," an MLB spokesman said in a statement.

A session Tuesday morning at MLB's office across the street from Radio City Music Hall in New York City was followed by an afternoon session at the union's office overlooking Rockefeller Center, about a three-block walk. The sides then switched to talking by telephone from their separate offices.

MLB made moves toward players on the key economic issues of the luxury tax, the amount of a new bonus pool for pre-arbitration-eligible players and minimum salaries. The league also pushed for its long-held goal of an international amateur draft.

Yet, it remained unclear whether this more intensive phase of talks would lead to an agreement or yet another breakdown in oft-strained negotiations that have dragged on for nearly a year.

Manfred originally set a Feb. 28 deadline for preserving opening day on March 31.

After 16 1/2 hours of bargaining in Jupiter, Florida, that began Feb. 28 and ended at 2:30 a.m. the following morning produced progress, Manfred extended that deadline to 5 p.m. the following day.

Talks broke down, and Manfred announced the first two series for each team during the season had been cancelled. Negotiators returned to New York and resumed bargaining on Sunday.

W

Read more on cbc.ca