National Post

Players need to take ownership of quicker pace

‘We want them to stay in the three-foot world’

- Barry Svrluga

By now, trudging toward the midway point of this baseball season, we have been well- versed on the reasons games are taking longer than ever before. Pitchers throw harder. Batters swing for the fences. They miss a lot. Fewer balls are in play. Hitters are striking out at a record pace. Again. Both sides take longer to prepare for each pitch.

Hello, average game time: three hours, eight minutes, longest ever.

Yet all of those considerat­ions leave something that seems rather obvious unconsider­ed. Advanced analytics have provided us with more ways to analyze and enjoy the game than ever before. So much is quantifiab­le, including the fact there’s more time between pitches — 23.8 seconds — than at any point in the decade since PitchF/x has been recording such data, and the indispensa­ble website FanGraphs has been sharing it with any member of the public who cares to click. Velocity, swing rates, batting average on balls in play, we know it all.

The aspect that can’t be quantified by such numbers: the brain.

“We want them to stay in their three- foot world,” said Charlie Maher, director of psychologi­cal services for the Cleveland Indians.

Staying in their three-foot world means focusing on the pitcher’s rubber or the batter’s box. But people such as Maher, who has decades’ worth of experience working with baseball players in maximizing their mental performanc­e, allow that such a pursuit takes time.

Athletes in general, and baseball players specifical­ly, often talk about slowing the game down so they can better process the informatio­n — the circumstan­ces — with which they’re presented. But what if, by slowing the game down for themselves, they’re slowing it down, for everyone?

Two things: There’s no way this can’t be true, and it’s fixable, at least to a degree.

Mental coaching, sports psychology — whatever label you give it — there’s no denying it has been on the rise in baseball ( not to mention other sports) over the past generation, at least. It would be silly to think that, if this has an impact on individual players or teams, that it doesn’t have an impact on the sport as a whole.

Let’s walk through what Maher and others have tried to instil in players. The Indians, and other teams, use an acronym: MAC. The “M” is for mindfulnes­s.

“It’s learning how to centre yourself,” Maher said. “The moment is what you have. You’re in the batter’s box. You’re on the pitcher’s mound. That’s what you can deal with.”

The “A” follows, and it’s for acceptance.

“As they compete, things happen during the game,” Maher said. “The pitcher might have two outs and no men on, and two minutes later, they might have two men on. It’s learning to accept the situation, but not judging yourself in that situation. Instead of saying, ‘ What the hell’s going on? I shouldn’t have thrown that pitch,’ let it go.”

And, then, the “C” which means commit.

“Commit to the next pitch,” Maher said. “Stay in the moment. Relax. Get the job done.”

Now, how long did it take you to read those elements? I timed myself. The result: 22.5 seconds.

Maybe you process more quickly than you read. And you could work through those pieces in what MLB suggests should be the time to deliver a pitch when no one’s on base, and the batter’s in the box: 12 seconds.

But you can’t tell me that all this informatio­n comes in a streamline­d package. We have read, with increasing regularity, about all the factors players are evaluating as they approach a pitch from either side — whether throwing it or trying to attack it.

We have read about launch angle, and if a player is consciousl­y trying to hit a ball in the air rather than on the ground, well, doesn’t it make sense that it takes a bit of time to remind himself how to do that?

The psychology, too: Some players clear their minds by tapping a certain spot on the rubber or redoing their batting gloves.

“It has to work for the individual player. It can’t be forced,” Maher said. But it works for some players, so they do it. “It’s some action, some physical action — with the batting gloves, or rubbing the ball up. Something.” The clock is ticking. Maher has another trick. “If you don’t know what else to do, and you have 1012 seconds to turn yourself around, do something that’s very cheap, very economical,” Maher said. “That’s deep breathing. What that does for them, it centres them.”

For them. What about the rest of us?

Inhale, exhale. Inhale, exhale. One thousand one. One thousand two.

 ?? HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES ?? Steven Matz of the New York Mets listens to manager Terry Collins as he gives instructio­ns. Analytics show the onus is on the players to pick up the pace of play, which has been an impediment in recent years.
HARRY HOW / GETTY IMAGES Steven Matz of the New York Mets listens to manager Terry Collins as he gives instructio­ns. Analytics show the onus is on the players to pick up the pace of play, which has been an impediment in recent years.

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