Montreal Gazette

DH not in play for NL teams in 2019 season

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Don’t look for a National League designated hitter this year or for new anti-tanking rules in June’s amateur draft.

Baseball commission­er Rob Manfred said Friday that management is focused on pace-of-game changes for 2019 and bolder ideas proposed by the players’ associatio­n are too complex to be put in place for this season.

Speaking Friday after an owners’ meeting, Manfred felt encouraged the union responded to management’s proposal for a pitch clock and a three-batter minimum for a relief pitcher unless an inning ends.

“Some of these items need to be part of broader discussion­s that certainly will continue after opening day, and I hope we can focus on some of the issues that need to get resolved quickly in the interim,” Manfred said.

Baseball is in its third year of a five-year labour deal, one in which the free agent market has slowed considerab­ly — even with premier players available such as Bryce Harper and Manny Machado. Management would discuss larger changes as part of a deal for a new collective bargaining agreement extending beyond December 2021.

“I hope and I really do believe that there is a common interest between the players’ associatio­n, the players, the owners and the commission­er’s office in changes, whether they’re midterm or otherwise, that make our entertainm­ent product the best it could possibly be,” Manfred said.

Management presented its latest proposal on Jan. 14, one that included a requiremen­t that pitchers face at least three batters or finish an inning. Players responded Feb. 1 with a broader plan, renewing their push for the DH in all games, an earlier trade deadline aimed at discouragi­ng teams with losing records from trading stars, increasing service time for top young stars called up early in the season, and rewarding and penalizing teams in the draft based on their records.

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