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Sources: David Price to give each Dodgers minor leaguer $1K in June to help during pandemic

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Foxworth sounds off on MLB owners shaming players to take pay cuts (2:16)

Domonique Foxworth says MLB owners are being unfair, manipulative and greedy in how they are trying to get players to take pay cuts. (2:16)

David Price has yet to throw an official pitch for the Los Angeles Dodgers, but he has already made a profound impact throughout the organization.

The All-Star left-hander will give each minor league player who is not on the Dodgers' 40-man roster $1,000 for the month of June, sources confirmed to ESPN. The act of generosity will impact just over 200 people facing unprecedented difficulty during the coronavirus pandemic.

The development was first reported by Francys Romero.

The Dodgers had already committed to continuing their $400-a-week payments to minor league players -- domestic as well as those training out of the team's academy in the Dominican Republic -- through June. The Oakland Athletics recently decided to cease those payments at the end of this week, and other teams might soon follow suit.

Minor league baseball is unlikely to take place in 2020, and upward of 1,000 minor league players could end up getting released over the coming days. Most of those cuts would've taken place at the end of spring training had the pandemic not shut down sports in the middle of March, but the strong likelihood of a reduced draft and fewer affiliates in 2021 and beyond puts minor league players in an especially precarious situation.

Most minor league players earn below minimum wage and are not protected by the Major League Baseball Players Association, which is engaged in a contentious negotiation with MLB over compensation for what will be, at most, a significantly shortened season in 2020. MLB players received an advance of $170 million for April and May and won't receive any more than that if the season is canceled.

Price, the No. 1 overall pick out of Vanderbilt in 2007, joined the Dodgers alongside Mookie Betts in a five-player deal with the Boston Red Sox on Feb. 10. If MLB plays this summer, the former Cy Young Award winner and five-time All-Star will enter the fifth season of a seven-year, $217 million contract he signed in December 2015.