Referees will return to MLS matches for the first time this season after a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) was reached on Monday.
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Officials locked out of MLS this season
Referees reached new CBA with PRO
Could be in charge of weekend's matches
WHAT HAPPENED?
MLS matches at the start of the 2024 season have gone ahead with replacement referees as the Professional Soccer Referees Association (PSRA) and the Professional Referee Organization (PRO) failed to reach an agreement. The PSRA voted to ratify a new CBA on Monday, ESPN reports, meaning the officials may be reintroduced this week.
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THE BIGGER PICTURE
The report claims that 72 of the 97 people eligible to vote backed the agreement. The new deal will run for seven years, finishing at the end of the 2030 season. According to The Athletic, the agreement includes significant pay rises for referees, assistant referees and video assistant referees.
DID YOU KNOW?
Negotiations between the officials' labour union and PRO grew tense as they failed to come to terms ahead of the 2024 MLS season kicking off. PRO controversially locked referees out of MLS matches before the opening game of the season and both sides filed Unfair Labor Practices complaints with the National Labor Relations Board.
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The referees may be back in action for the first time when the Philadelphia Union meet Minnesota United on Saturday. Meanwhile, Lionel Messi's Inter Miami will meet New York City FC in Florida this weekend.