Free Agents Draft
One Special Case
NEW YORK (AP) There were three major classifications in today’s free agent baseball draft option playouts, six-year veterans and certain minor leaguers whose eligibility depended on contract assignment during the 1977 season.

In baseball
Braves’ rookie has sharp agent
By Milton Richman UPI Sports Editor NEW YORK A couple of nights ago, Phil Niekro, Atlanta’s tough luck pitcher and elder statesman, was watching Junior Moore hit and could hardly take his eyes off him. He was fascinated. When he had the chance, Niekro went over to the Braves’ rookie third baseman and said to him, “there’s no pitcher in the league that can throw the ball by you, as quick as your bat is.” Moore, hitting .329 for Atlanta right now, the same as he did last year for Richmond in the International League, is represented by an agent who is pretty quick upstairs, too. His name is Abdul Jalil, and at 26 he’s only three years older than Moore, but he already has some pretty impressive credentials. Jalil holds a master’s degree in business administration from Stanford along with another business degree from the University of California where he not only graduated with honors but completed the four year course in two years. His *182 (146) I.Q. qualifies him as “near genius,” and he had to be one to think up the kind of contract he got Moore with the Braves. Keep in mind Moore is only a rookie, yet here are the terms of the contract Jalil put together for him: -The Braves were to pay Moore $75,000 this season. That was only his salary. -They also were to pay him a $50,000 bonus and provide him with an additional $50,000 interest-free loan. That’s not bad for openers, but wait, there’s more coming. The imaginative, foresighted Jalil saw to it that three other clauses were written into the Atlanta contract of Alvin “Junior” Moore. The first one gave Moore the option of becoming a free agent simply by notifying the Braves of his intention, which works out to be the same as anytime he choses. Under the present Basic Agreement between the players and the owners, a player becomes a free agent the second year only after he plays for a team without signing a contract the previous year. Another clause allowed Moore to veto any trade the Braves might involve him in, and still a third clause gave him the option of choosing the team he wished to be traded to. What club owner in the world would ever sign a rookie to a contract like that? Ted Turner, the Braves’ owner, would. Not only would he, he did last March 14. Moore’s contract still had to be filed with the National League office and on April 28, Chub Feeney, the National League President, wrote a letter about it to Bill Lucas, the Braves’ Director of Player Personnel. The letter said: “Specific covenants contained in Alvin Moore’s contract are disapproved because it (the contract) contains provisions inconsistent with the reserve system article of the new Basic Agreement. Please be sure the player receives a copy of this letter.” Jalil sees nothing wrong with the contract the way it was originally written. “Ted Turner signed it, and so did Junior,” he says. “The contract does not violate any law. What’s happening now reminds me of what happened to Jim Thorpe. Once he was awarded those medals, how could they take them away from him? “All I want is protection for my ballplayer and a contract providing him with maximum flexibility. Feeney contends Junior Moore’s contract, in essence, bargains away the rights won by management in the Basic Agreement. Our contention is that the Basic Agreement only contains the player’s minimum rights, not his maximum rights.” Next step is a grievance procedure. The Players’ Association has been apprised of Feeney’s disapproval and already has asked for a hearing. Jalil contends Feeney’s action automatically made Moore a free agent, and if he’s right, it will move the present baseball contracts another step toward obsolescence. Pretty soon, there won’t be any contracts at all. Why bother signing them when they’re non-binding? Junior Moore? All he wants to do is play baseball. He gives practically all the money he makes to his mother, but saves some for his car. Originally it was a 1965 Chevrolet Biscayne, and it was so banged up and rotted out, he picked it up for $50. Moore has put a lot of work into it, remodeling it completely with Cadillac El Dorado and Mark IV parts. The car now can accommodate 12 persons and gets 30 miles to the gallon. Moore already has turned down a $2,000 offer for it. The new paint job he gave it catches everybody’s eye. He calls it “money green.”★ ★★
Alvin Moore vs Atlanta Braves
Major League Baseball Arbitration Proceeding MLB-MLBPA Arb. 77-18 (1977) Facts Alvin Moore (plaintiff) signed a one-year contract with the Atlanta Braves. The contract contained a clause that said if Moore was not satisfied with his playing time, the Braves were required to trade him to a team approved by Moore. The covenant also stated that if a trade were not completed by the end of the season, Moore was allowed to become a free agent if he so chose. At the time, Moore had less than one year of service in Major League Baseball (MLB). The league president (defendant) disapproved of this covenant. The president believed that the covenant was inconsistent with the collective-bargaining agreement agreed to by the league and the players’ union. This agreement required players to have a minimum of five years of service in MLB before they could become eligible for free agency. The players’ union filed a grievance on Moore’s behalf. The union cited the collective-bargaining agreement’s clause permitting special covenants that benefit players. The union maintained that the president could disapprove of a special covenant only if the covenant did not benefit the player. The league countered that this covenant effectively created an entirely new reserve system, contrary to what the league and players had previously agreed to. According to the league, the reserve system created by the collective-bargaining agreement was created to provide for an even and equitable distribution of players among all of the teams. Additionally, the collective-bargaining agreement contained a free agent re-entry procedure. By giving Moore the ability to determine his own free agency, the league argued, the covenant contravened the agreed-upon system. The league contended that a covenant that violated the collective-bargaining agreement and the rights of the other 25 MLB teams could not be permitted to stand simply because it benefited a player. The issue was brought before an arbitrator.PRESS ROW


★ ★★

★ ★★
BENCH STRENGTH: A major league baseball player who languishes on the bench not longer has to sit and take it, according to Abdul Jalil (former Cal trackman Randy Wallace), who runs Super Star Management in Oakland. One of Jalil’s clients, third baseman Alvin “Junior” Moore of Richmond, has signed an Atlanta Braves’ contract which may be unique. “If Moore is dissatisfied with his playing time,” said Jalil, “it’s in his contract that he can submit a letter to the Braves, who then must initiate a trade to the team of Moore’s choice, which can only be consummated with his consent. If there is no trade by the end of the season, the contract is voided and he becomes a free agent.” Who said baseball still is in the hands of its owners?★ ★★
Alvin “Junior” Moore played five seasons in the major leagues with the Atlanta Braves and Chicago White Sox. He is listed as the regular third baseman with the Braves in 1977. Moore hit for a decent .264 batting average in the big leagues, although he had little power and didn’t steal many bases. Moore was born in Waskom, TX and attended high school in Richmond, CA. Drafted in the 11th round of the 1971 Amateur Draft, he was in the minors with the Braves organization from 1971 to 1976, several times hitting .300+. His first shot at the majors was in August of 1976, and he stayed up all of 1977 with the Braves. After the season he became a free agent and signed with the White Sox. Moore was in the minors for part of 1978 but not in 1979. In 1980 he was again in the minors part of the year for his last season there. Then he spent five years playing in Mexico. Under his given name of Alvin Moore, Junior Moore later coached college baseball at both Patten University in Oakland, CA and Bethany College in Scotts Valley, CA. Moore was also a very popular player and manager in the Mexican minor leagues after completing his big league career.
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