Bruce Meyer elevated to baseball
players' association interim executive director
[February 19, 2026]
By RONALD BLUM and DAVID BRANDT
SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — Bruce Meyer was promoted to interim executive
director of the baseball players’ association on Wednesday, a day
after Tony Clark’s forced resignation.
It was a move for continuity ahead of the likely start in April of
what figures to be contentious collective bargaining with team
owners.
Matt Nussbaum was promoted to interim deputy executive director from
general counsel.
The decisions were made by the Major League Baseball Players
Association executive board during an online meeting. Both votes
were unanimous.
“Bruce and Matt are talented and experienced and respected by
players,” said Scott Boras, an agent for many top stars. “Players
trust their leadership to continue to advance to advance the
longstanding positions of the MLBPA.”
A 64-year-old veteran labor lawyer, Meyer joined the union staff in
2018 and led negotiations through a 99-day lockout that led to a
five-year agreement in March 2022. The deal barely avoided what
would have been the first loss of regular-season games since 1995.
He was promoted to deputy executive director in July 2022.
Meyer spent 30 years at Weil, Gotshal & Manges before joining the
NHL Players Association in 2016 as senior director of collective
bargaining, policy and legal.
Three members of the union’s eight-man executive subcommittee, Jack
Flaherty, Lucas Giolito and Ian Happ, were among the players who in
March 2024 advocated for the ouster of Meyer in an effort led by
former union lawyer Harry Marino. Clark backed Meyer, the effort
failed and those three players were dropped off the subcommittee
that December.

The subcommittee voted 8-0 against approving the 2022 labor contract
and Meyer had advocated pushing management for a deal more favorable
to the union. Team player representatives, the overall group
supervising negotiations, voted 26-4 in favor, leaving the overall
ballot at 26-12 for ratification.
The current subcommittee includes Chris Bassitt, Jake Cronenworth,
Pete Fairbanks, Cedric Mullins, Marcus Semien, Paul Skenes, Tarik
Skubal and Brent Suter.
A former All-Star first baseman who headed the union since 2013,
Clark resigned Tuesday just months ahead of the expected start of
bargaining for a labor contract to replace the deal that expires
Dec. 1.
He was asked to resign by the union’s eight-man executive
subcommittee after an investigation by the union’s outside counsel
discovered evidence Clark had an inappropriate relationship with his
sister-in-law, a union employee since 2023, a person familiar with
the union’s deliberations told The Associated Press. The person
spoke on condition of anonymity because that detail was not
announced.
“The information that really led to this came out within the last
... 72 hours or so,” Meyer said earlier Wednesday. “So this is not
something that has been kind of sat on. When the information came
out, the players on the subcommittee made their feelings known. And
Tony, to his credit, he’s always been about the players first and
Tony decided to take the action he did in the interest of the
players.”
Clark did not respond to a text message seeking comment.
The start of the annual tour of spring training camps by union
officials was pushed back a day and began Wednesday with the Kansas
City Royals.
“Just on a personal level I think we’re all fairly devastated by
things that have happened in the last 48, 72 hours,” Meyer said.
“I’m not going to go beyond that in terms of personal feelings, but
it’s fair to say that we were all personally upset, concerned about
Tony. But I think this was something that the players determined had
to happen at this particular point in time.”
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Major League Baseball Players Association Senior Director,
Collective Bargaining & Legal, Bruce Meyer answers a question at a
news conference in their offices in New York, March 11, 2022. (AP
Photo/Richard Drew, File)

Meyer, hired by Clark in 2018, headed the 2021-22
negotiations that led to an agreement on March 10 that ended a
99-day lockout. Meyer was promoted to deputy executive director in
July 2022.
“I don’t anticipate that anybody’s going to be leading negotiations
other than me,” Meyer said.
Clark’s departure took place during a probe by the U.S. Attorney in
Brooklyn, New York, into the union's relationship with OneTeam
Partners, a licensing company founded by the union, the NFL Players
Association and RedBird Capital Partners in 2019.
“There have been some issues hanging over, as you know, and in some
respects it’s good to get them out of the way sooner rather than
later,” Meyer said.
“OneTeam and its employees are not, and have never been, targets of
the Eastern District of New York’s investigation and have been fully
cooperative,” the company said in a statement. “Any reporting that
characterizes the EDNY investigation as targeting OneTeam is
inaccurate.”
Meyer said the union’s entire executive board of 72 players was
eligible to vote for executive director: the executive subcommittee,
30 major league team player representatives and 34 minor leaguers,
who have been represented by the union since 2022.
MLB appears on track to propose a salary cap, which possibly could
lead to a work stoppage that causes regular-season games to be
canceled for the first time since 1995.
“We don’t expect anything to change in terms of bargaining,” Meyer
said. “We’ve been preparing for bargaining for years. Players have
been preparing. Players know what’s coming. At the end of the day
leadership is important and leadership comes and goes, but what
remains is the players. At the end of the day, it’s the players who
determine the direction of the union. At the end of the day, it’s
the players who determine our priorities and bargaining. Those
priorities obviously have not changed and will not change.”
The union said it will resist a salary cap.
“Our position and the historic position of this union for decades on
a salary cap is well known,” Meyer said. “It’s the ultimate
restriction. It’s something that owners in all the sports have
wanted more than anything and in baseball in particular there’s a
reason for that, because it’s good for them and not good for
players.”

Meyer spent 30 years at Weil, Gotshal & Manges before joining the
NHL Players Association in 2016 as senior director of collective
bargaining, policy and legal.
He wouldn’t directly address whether the union intends to restrict
the hiring of family members.
“I think it’s fair to say there are issues that will be addressed,”
Meyer said. “There are various issues that will be evaluated,
re-evaluated with the advice of counsel and, as always, at the
direction of players.”
Nussbaum, 47, succeeded Ian Penny as general counsel in July 2022.
He was hired by the union in 2011 as staff counsel.
___
Blum reported from New York.
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