Ottawa Citizen

MLB looking at ways to speed up games

- DAVE SHEININ

Major League Baseball and its union have had substantiv­e discussion­s in recent days over a series of proposals, among the most drastic proposed changes in years, that could bring significan­t rule changes to the sport in 2019 and beyond, according to two sources familiar with those talks.

The discussion­s have included both on-field rule changes, pushed by commission­er Rob Manfred, and proposals from the union to improve competitiv­e balance.

According to reports by The Athletic and ESPN, the specific rulechange proposals include:

The adoption of the designated hitter in the National League.

A rule requiring pitchers to face a minimum of three batters, except in the case of injury or when finishing an inning.

A 20-second pitch clock, a time-saving device Manfred has espoused for more than a year now.

A single trade deadline before

the All-Star break, to replace the traditiona­l July 31 deadline and the Aug. 31 waiver-trade deadline.

The expansion of rosters from

25 to 26 players, with a maximum of 12 pitchers.

A reduction in mound visits from

six to five.

A rule, which would be tested in

spring training and the All-Star Game, in which each half-inning in extra innings would begin with a runner on second base.

Tweaks to the draft order to

reward winning teams and penalize perennial losing teams.

A rule that would permit twosport athletes, such as Kyler Murray, to sign major league contracts as enticement to play baseball.

Though the proposals remain in preliminar­y stages, and it is unclear which if any would be implemente­d in 2019 — the DH rule would almost certainly have to be pushed to future seasons, because NL teams already have largely finalized their 2019 rosters — the talks represent a significan­t step for a sport that has seen rising acrimony between owners and players over the slow pace of the last two free agent markets.

Top baseball officials have criticized the union publicly for not showing a willingnes­s to come to the bargaining table, even as top union officials have criticized some owners over a perceived lack of competitiv­eness.

Many of MLB’s proposals were designed for the purpose of speeding up the game, one of Manfred’s top priorities.

The pitch-clock would penalize pitchers or hitters who stall between pitches with a ball or a strike call. The three-batter minimum and the 12-pitcher limit on rosters would both reduce the frequency of pitching changes. While the three-batter minimum could cause the loss of jobs for some left-handed specialist­s, the roster expansion to 26 players — bringing 30 extra big league jobs — could be an enticement for the union to agree.

The union, meantime, has made it a priority to entice teams to spend money to compete, after watching many teams largely sit out this winter’s free agent market, which has caused a logjam of roughly 100 free agents still unsigned with spring training camps set to open next week.

 ??  ?? Rob Manfred
Rob Manfred

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