Play ball! MLBPA agrees on July 1 report date

It's time to play ball.

The Major League Baseball Players Association agreed to report to training camps by July 1 and play a 60-game season, the MLBPA tweeted Tuesday evening.

“All remaining issues have been resolved and Players are reporting to training camps,” the MPBPA tweeted.

The owners and the union have also smoothed out health and safety protocols, which were the final hurdles in getting a truncated season approved, the MLBPA said.

The league’s owners voted Monday to implement a 60-game season that would begin around July 24, ESPN reported.

Originally, the owners had submitted a 67-page proposal outlining the safety and testing protocols that would be installed this season, CBS Sports reported.

After nearly three months of stalled negotiations, MLB decided to implement a 60-game schedule. That will allow the league to cram in as many games as possible before its self-imposed regular-season finale date of Sept. 27, ESPN reported.

Players will receive the full prorated share of their salaries -- about 37% of their full-season salaries and around $1.5 billion total, according to ESPN. The postseason will remain at 10 teams. Players will not receive forgiveness on the $170 million salary advance they received as part of the March agreement with the owners and receive no money from the postseason, sports network reported.