DUNEDIN, Fla. — At a moment when uncertainty is creeping back into baseball’s labor landscape, the message from inside the Toronto Blue Jays clubhouse was surprisingly firm: there is trust in the new voice at the top. And that voice now belongs to Bruce Meyer.
On Wednesday night, the Major League Baseball Players Association’s 72-member executive board unanimously elected Meyer as its new head, elevating him from deputy executive director into the most powerful labor position in the sport. By Thursday morning in Dunedin, as the Blue Jays prepared for the rhythm of spring training, centre fielder Daulton Varsho was already speaking with conviction about the transition.
“He’s great. I think he’s going to do a great job of leading us,” Varsho said. “He was very humble last night when we elected him. I think he’s going to do a great job.”
The tone was calm. The stakes are anything but.

Meyer steps into the role at a volatile juncture. The current collective bargaining agreement, which he helped negotiate in 2022, is set to expire after this season. Around the league, executives privately anticipate that owners could initiate a lockout on Dec. 1 if negotiations stall, particularly as calls for a salary cap are expected to surface again. The potential for confrontation is real. The memory of the last lockout remains fresh.
In that environment, leadership style matters as much as legal strategy. Meyer is not an outsider parachuting in. As deputy executive director, he was deeply involved in the 2022 CBA talks, serving as chief negotiator during some of the most tense stretches between players and ownership. His promotion signals continuity — but also signals that the players are preparing for another fight if necessary.
For the Blue Jays, the transition carried added immediacy. With veteran right-hander Chris Bassitt — a member of the union’s executive subcommittee — no longer serving as the club’s primary player representative, Varsho temporarily stepped into the role to lodge Toronto’s vote. Teammate Davis Schneider also participated in the process, ensuring the club’s voice was accounted for.
Varsho described the internal meeting among Blue Jays players as open and inquisitive rather than chaotic. “I told everybody, ‘Hey, this is what the plan is and if anybody has objections, just come talk to me and we’ll try to talk it out,’” he said. “Nobody seemed to have any objections, but obviously had some questions from certain guys, which were great questions. I answered them as best as I could because, honestly, I don’t know all the specific information.”
The curiosity, he noted, often came from younger players — particularly those mindful of how negotiations could ripple down to minor leaguers. While the major league CBA expires first, the minor-league agreement follows two years later, adding another layer of complexity to long-term strategy. “There were good questions from some of the younger guys, wondering what’s going on,” Varsho said. “Overall it was a good talk.”
The subtext of those conversations is unmistakable: players are bracing for turbulence.
Meyer’s ascent follows the abrupt resignation of longtime union leader Tony Clark earlier this week, a development that caught many players off guard. The executive board’s unanimous vote for Meyer suggests a desire for steadiness rather than reinvention. His reputation inside the union is that of a meticulous legal mind, measured in tone but firm in principle.
Meanwhile, Matt Nussbaum — who joined the MLBPA in 2011 after time with the NHLPA — steps in as interim deputy executive director. Having served as general counsel for the past three years, Nussbaum brings his own labor expertise to the table. The pairing of Meyer and Nussbaum signals that the union is consolidating experience rather than experimenting.

Back in Dunedin, the business of baseball continues outwardly unchanged. The Blue Jays are set to open spring training against the Philadelphia Phillies, and on the field, roster battles and pitching rotations dominate daily headlines. Yet beneath the Florida sun, the sport’s broader economic chess match is quietly taking shape.
Varsho acknowledged that stepping into the representative role, even temporarily, offered a rare window into the league’s inner workings. “A lot of information to digest and go through,” he said. “I was leaning heavily on Bassitt because he’s been through everything and I trust his judgment. It was nice being able to be on those calls, be in tune with what’s going on and who’s all talking. It was good.”
That exposure may prove invaluable. Whether Toronto ultimately selects a new full-time player representative — with names like Tyler Heineman and Trey Yesavage floated as possibilities — the clubhouse understands that the next several months could define more than just standings.
If owners push aggressively for structural changes such as a salary cap, the resistance from players is expected to be equally forceful. Meyer will stand at the center of that storm. His humility, as described by Varsho, may help steady nerves internally. His negotiating resolve will be tested externally.
For now, the message from Toronto is one of guarded confidence. The Blue Jays may be focused on spring reps and early-season momentum, but they are also aligned behind their new labor leader. In a sport where billion-dollar stakes collide with clubhouse loyalty, that unity could matter more than ever.