Change was afoot in Major League Baseball as the 1980s were getting underway. 1980 saw the Philadelphia Phillies win their first World Series. Heading in to 1981, new ownership took over on the south side of Chicago, while the Cubs would be sold mid-season. On the field, things looked good, as Fernando Valenzuela took Los Angeles, and the rest of the nation, by storm, Dave Winfield headed to New York, and Carlton Fisk changed the color of his socks from Red to White. Behind the scenes, though, the owners and the players were headed for a seemingly unnecessary strike, one which would stop baseball for 2 months in the middle of the season, the first in-season work stoppage.
Jeff Katz brings all of the details that led to the 1981 strike, causing the 1981 season to be split into 2 halves and adding a division playoff for the first time. The owners, along with commissioner Bowie Kuhn, wanted to turn back the clock and punish teams for signing free agents. The players, behind union head Marvin Miller, would have none of it and, despite what the owners were led to believe, were willing and able to stick together.
Baseball resumed in August, after 713 games were lost, and the season ended with the Dodgers topping the Yankees in the fall classic. A revised version of the free agent compensation that the owners fought for was put in place, and was scrapped in the next round of negotiations when it backfired, just as the union claimed it would.