Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association continue their negotiations in the hopes of starting the 2020 season. On Monday, the league offered up its latest proposal to the MLBPA, which consisted of a 76-game regular season and 75 percent prorated salaries.

During Monday's installment of "Nothing Personal with David Samson," David Samson reiterated that he believes that the 2020 MLB season will still happen despite the constant proposal rejections from both sides.

"Baseball will happen. August 1st is the most likely date and the negotiations that are going on right now are completely normal," Samson said. "It is very normal to repackage proposals that the other side thinks 'hey, you haven't moved at all.' But the owners would say 'we have moved, we've repackaged.' There will eventually be a proposal that has been repackaged where both sides can save face. Both sides can say they didn't get what they wanted and both sides can say that they can live with what they're getting. That's how an agreement works."

The league and MLBPA have gone back-and-forth quite a bit in recent weeks. The owners recently rejected the MLBPA's recent proposal that featured a 114-game season and expanded postseason. 

While both sides continue to go back-and-forth, Samson believes that a deal will ultimately come to fruition and we'll have baseball by late summer.