NEW YORK — Sports were turned upside down 50 years ago Tuesday by a man who never threw or kicked a ball.
A lawyer with expertise in labor relations struck down Major League Baseball's reserve clause, which had bound players to their teams since the 1870s.
No one could have predicted then that the 65-page decision issued Dec. 23, 1975, by arbitrator Peter Seitz — who later compared baseball owners to ''the French barons of the 12th century'' — would lead to an upheaval that made thousands of players multimillionaires.
''The real floodgates opened after that,'' former pitcher David Cone said. ''Players were finally in all walks of life, in all sports, were finally able to see what, hey, what free agency really looks like. There was all the doom and gloom back then from one side that said: 'This is going to ruin the game. It's not sustainable.' And actually, it was just the opposite. It made the game better."
Baseball's average salary was $44,676 at the time of the decision and climbed to about $5 million this year, a 112-fold increase. Outfielder Juan Soto commanded a record $765 million deal with the New York Mets last December.
Showing how much players' earning power was unleashed, that 1975 average would be $260,909 in current dollars, according to the Consumer Price Index.
Seitz's decision was followed by free agency upheavals in the NFL, NBA, NFL and European soccer.
''The timeframes largely align to suggest that there were indeed synergies between what was happening on the baseball side and what was happening in other sports,'' current baseball players' association head Tony Clark said.