The Hamilton Spectator

RULES PITCH

MLB considerin­g moves that could speed up games; universal DH

- 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 rule-change proposals include:

• The adoption of the designated hitter in the National League, making the DH universal across both leagues.

• 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 timesaving 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 to five from six.

• 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 are preliminar­y and it’s unclear which if any would be implemente­d in 2019 — the DH rule, for example, 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 in the past 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 traditiona­l 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 in an effort to compete after watching many teams largely sit out this freeagent market, which has caused a

logjam of roughly 100 free agents still unsigned with spring training camps set to open next week. The union also sees tanking — teams stripping its payroll and hoarding prospects and draft picks — as a fundamenta­l problem.

The union’s proposals reportedly would give improved draft position to high-performing, lower-revenue teams while penalizing teams that repeatedly lose a large number of games.

Of all the proposed changes, the universal DH arguably would be the most significan­t to the game on the field.

Since 1973, baseball has operated with different rules for the National and American Leagues — with pitchers hitting in the former, but not the latter — and necessitat­ing shifting rules for interleagu­e and World Series games.

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Houston Astros’ Justin Verlander is regarded as one of the slowest-working pitchers in the majors.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Houston Astros’ Justin Verlander is regarded as one of the slowest-working pitchers in the majors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada