The Standard (St. Catharines)

Potential new rules, Harper, Machado dominate off-season

- RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK — The World Series was baseball 2018 in a microcosm.

Half the 44 runs scored by the champion Boston Red Sox and Los Angeles Dodgers came on home runs. That’s the secondhigh­est percentage in baseball history, according to the Elias Sports Bureau, behind only last year’s 57.4 per cent.

There were 109 strikeouts and 76 hits, a 1.43 ratio that was the second-highest behind 1.48 in 2012. That followed the first regular season in major league history with more strikeouts than hits and with the lowest overall batting average since 1972 — the year before the start of the designated hitter.

Discussion of possible rule changes to increase action will dominate the off-season, along with speculatio­n about a freeagent market that includes Bryce Harper, Manny Machado and Josh Donaldson, and possibly David Price and Clayton Kershaw if they opt out of their contracts.

“What we try to do is pay attention over the course of the season,” baseball commission­er Rob Manfred said last week, “think about what we’ve learned during the post-season and see whether we may need to make some change in response to what we’re seeing.”

Analytics have transforme­d the sport, from offence-suffocatin­g shifts to shortening starting pitchers’ time on the mound and constantly rotating relievers from the major leagues to the minors in order to have an array of fresh bullpen arms each game.

“I don’t spend a lot of time worrying about whether analytics are a good thing or a bad thing, and the reason for that is they are a real thing,” Manfred said. “We have them. They’re going to continue to use them. There’s nothing you can do to stop people from thinking about the game, however the heck it is they want to think about the game.”

Discussion will start next week when general managers meet in Carlsbad, Calif. Owners gather Nov. 14-15 in Atlanta, and the major off-season get-together will be the winter meetings at Las Vegas from Dec. 10-13.

Manfred and players’ associatio­n head Tony Clark already have been talking — they appeared together at a World Series news conference last weekend, which would have been unimaginab­le a year ago given the tension between management and players.

Both sides are concerned about a four per cent attendance drop that left the major league average below 30,000 for the first time since 2003. Six ballparks set their record lows and 17 of 30 experience­d drops, partly because of historical­ly bad weather that caused 54 postponeme­nts, the most since 1989.

Management wanted to introduce a pitch clock at the major league level in an effort to speed the pace of games but players refused to agree, and Major League Baseball backed off a threat to impose one over the union’s objections. Instead, a more modest change restricted the amount of mound visits by players and coaches without pitching changes.

Discussion about rule changes will be conducted as the union watches free-agent negotiatio­ns unfold. Last off-season had an unusually slow market that led to player anger. Among the 166 players who became free agents after the World Series, exactly half of the 140 agreements reached were finalized after the start of spring training on Feb. 14.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Indians’ Josh Donaldson hits a solo home run off of Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Matthew Boyd in an American League baseball game Sept. 14 in Cleveland. Donaldson is a free agent this off-season.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Indians’ Josh Donaldson hits a solo home run off of Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Matthew Boyd in an American League baseball game Sept. 14 in Cleveland. Donaldson is a free agent this off-season.

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