The Vermont Lake Monsters are shown in action at UVM’s Centennial Field in August 2018. Photo by Jim Welch/VTDigger

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., ripped into Major League Baseball late Friday over the decision to eliminate the Vermont Lake Monsters as part of a reorganization of the minor leagues.

The new structure, built on a 120-team regional scheme, would drop 40 teams, including the Burlington-based franchise.

โ€œMajor League Baseballโ€™s announcement to eliminate the Vermont Lake Monsters and 39 other Minor League teams has nothing to do with what is good for baseball and has everything to do with greed,โ€ Sanders said in a statement. 

โ€œIf the multibillionaire owners of Major League Baseball have enough money to pay hundreds of millions in compensation to a single superstar baseball player,โ€ Sanders said, โ€œthey have enough money to prevent 40 minor league teams from shutting down in Vermont and all over this country.โ€

The Oakland Aโ€™s affiliate, which played home games at the University of Vermontโ€™s Centennial Field, was inactive this past season due to the coronavirus pandemic.

This is not the first time Sanders has brushed up with MLB โ€” or commissioner Rob Manfred.

The league had been floating proposals to restructure the minor league system well before Covid-19 changed the economics of baseball and first introduced the new model in a statement released in October 2019. Sanders denounced that plan last January with nearly identical language to his statement Friday night.ย 

โ€œIf the multibillionaire owners of Major League Baseball have enough money to pay hundreds of millions in compensation to one superstar ballplayer,โ€ he said at the time, โ€œthey damn well have enough money to pay minor-league players a living wage and prevent 42 minor-league teams from shutting down.โ€

Sanders and Manfred reportedly met last year to discuss the changes. It wasnโ€™t clear whether the two would meet again, but Sanders said in a tweet Friday that he would do โ€œall I can to fightโ€ the reorganization. 

The writing had been on the wall for the Lake Monsters for some time. The coronavirus pandemic has devastated minor league sports, already a financially precarious industry, in which it’s common for teams to generate at least half of their annual revenue from ticket sales alone. Though MLB played an abridged, 60-game regular season last year, Minor League Baseball was shelved back in June. 

In December, the Oakland Aโ€™s terminated a 10-year affiliation with the Lake Monsters, leaving the Burlington-based outfit without a league or a parent organization for the first time in 27 years.ย ย 

The Lake Monsters have not yet made a formal announcement regarding the teamโ€™s future. As recently as last week, Lake Monster social media pages highlighted CHAMP, the teamโ€™s mascot, delivering more that 200 blankets to the UVM Childrenโ€™s Hospital and the Committee on Temporary Shelter.

Reporter Seamus McAvoy has previously written for the Boston Globe, as well as the Huntington News, Northeastern University's student newspaper.