Washington Nationals players will pay the salaries of the organization's minor leaguers. Sam Navarro-USA TODAY Sports

Nationals players pledge to cover minor leaguers' salary cuts

Washington Nationals players are being very generous amid the coronavirus pandemic and the uncertainty of not only the 2020 Major League Baseball season, but their salary instability as well.

The Nationals announced Sunday that they'd be cutting the salary of all minor-league players this month as a result of financial hardships due to COVID-19, but the big-league players have decided to cover the difference on their own, according to MASN's Mark Zuckerman. 

MLB mandated that all clubs pay their minor league players $400 per week through the end of May. Now that it's June, the Nationals will be paying their players $300 per week while some clubs have made the difficult decision to release their minor leaguers altogether. Washington, along with many other clubs, released two-dozen minor-league players last week due to the unforeseen circumstances.

Within hours of the news breaking that the Nats would be cutting salary for their minor-league players, the major leaguers held a video conference call and voted to cover the reductions themselves.

Pitcher Sean Doolittle announced the news via Twitter:

While other clubs are cutting pay, the Kansas City Royals, Houston Astros, Minnesota Twins and Cincinnati Reds have made the decision to pay their minor-league players $400 per week through the entire season. 

The 2020 MiLB season is expected to be canceled. If and when the MLB season begins, teams are expected to have expanded rosters in order to carry minor league players in case someone suffers an injury. 

On Sunday, the MLBPA proposed a 114-game season beginning on June 30 that would end on Oct. 31 and include a two-year playoff expansion from 10 teams to 14 teams, the right for players to opt out of the season and a potential deferral of salaries if the postseason were to be canceled.

The league and Players Association have been struggling to come to an agreement, and players are concerned about health, safety and pay cuts, among other things. Owners made their proposal to the union last week, suggesting a "sliding scale" salary structure, but the players didn't like the suggestion.

MLB is expected to dismiss the counterproposal, according to Passan, but the two sides are going to need to work something out if they plan to have a 2020 season.

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Mavs get good news on Maxi Kleber ahead of Game 4
Patriots exec discusses team's approach to QB competition
Braves to promote No. 3 prospect for MLB debut Wednesday
Diamondbacks release veteran infielder
Packers' former first-round pick planning to make 'monster leap'
NFLPA finalizing proposal for major change to offseason schedule
LeBron James shouts out Jaylen Brown after Celtics advance to NBA Finals
Pacers collapse down the stretch as Celtics sweep ECF
Hall of Famer, beloved broadcaster Bill Walton dead at 71
Jason Robertson leads Stars to comeback win over Oilers in Game 3
Despite recent form, Rafael Nadal's legacy is still gold standard for tennis
Bengals coach offers significant injury update on QB Joe Burrow
MLB officials expect automated ball-strike system to be implemented in 2026
Vikings reportedly considered Justin Jefferson trade during NFL Draft
A matured Kyrie Irving is finally proving to be the star we all knew he could be
Insider: Sixers 'a threat' to sign LeBron James in free agency
Week 14 NASCAR rankings: Larson's no-show shakes up the running order
Three hitters Braves should target after losing Ronald Acuna Jr.
Shohei Ohtani shares major update on his pitching rehab
Status of Pacers' Tyrese Haliburton revealed for Game 4 of ECF

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.