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Getting your player ready...

NEW YORK — Major League Soccer and its players signed a five-year labor contract that avoided a strike scheduled before Thursday’s MLS season opener.

Negotiators began intensive talks last week in Washington, and the deal was signed shortly after 11 a.m. MDT on Saturday.

“This can all be a positive relationship going forward,” Los Angeles Galaxy star Landon Donovan said. “Going forward, we’re going to have a real relationship with the league as opposed to being combative at times.”

MLS players union head Bob Foose said a majority of players will receive guaranteed contracts for the first time and there will be increased player rights within the league when contracts expire.

“From our perspective, these negotiations were always about players’ rights,” Foose said, with his members wanting to bring their rights “more in line with leagues from around the world.”

“Soccer is a global game, and we were adamant that these changes were necessary to make MLS as competitive as possible,” Foose said.

Talks went on overnight before an agreement was reached.

“This is a great way for Major League Soccer to start its season,” MLS commissioner Don Garber said.

Management was opposed to free agency within MLS, which has negotiated all contracts as a single entity on behalf of its teams since play began in 1996. MLS said players always had the option of signing with clubs overseas.

“Players will have greater rights at the expiration of their agreements, but they will not be free agents within the league,” Garber said.

Instead, there will be a re-entry draft for players whose contracts end or whose options are declined, or who reach a certain age.

“We think we have made some real improvements in players’ ability to move,” Foose said.

The union said March 11 it would strike if an agreement wasn’t reached before March 25. Player representatives flew in to attend talks, including Donovan, the league MVP. The Galaxy star completed a 10-week loan to Everton last weekend and said he might return to England in the event of a strike.

“It was not fun. It was tiring,” Garber said, “but it was very productive.”

The talks were supervised by George H. Cohen, director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, and Garber credited Cohen and his staff for helping forge a deal.

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