Waterloo Region Record

Like it or not, it’s the campaign of the DH

For one season anyway, National League adopts designated-hitter rule

- BEN WALKER

Before all the self-proclaimed purists forecastin­g the destructio­n of baseball strategy and the very sanctity of the sport as we know it go berserk bemoaning the inclusion of a designated hitter in the National League this season, remember this: In a most remarkable October full of huge momentum swings, the pivotal blow that decided last year’s World Series was delivered by, yep, the NL DH.

OK, that clang resonating off the right-field foul screen at Minute Maid Park — courtesy of Howie Kendrick’s home run in Game 7 for the visiting Washington Nationals — probably won’t drown out the wailing of longtime NL fans over the plan to play this virus-delayed season (gasp!) with a DH in both circuits.

And it certainly won’t quell the debate that’s raged since April 6, 1973, when Ron Blomberg of the New York Yankees stepped to the plate at Fenway Park as Major League Baseball’s first DH (and drew a basesloade­d walk from Luis Tiant).

To many NL fans, the scribble of “DH” on the lineup card sullies the whole stadium. To lots of American League fans, the sight of a pitcher touching a Louisville Slugger is a total affront to the diamond.

No matter, that’s part of the proposal MLB owners are making to players — a full-time DH in the National League, same as the AL. This year, only.

Jim Riggleman has managed and coached in each league and seen both sides.

“During this abbreviate­d season I’m OK with it,” he wrote in an email Monday. “In general, I think the NL game is a much better game. The pitcher’s AB is not the point. It’s all the ramificati­ons that the pitcher hitting has on the strategy of the game. More interestin­g game and tougher game to manage with pitcher hitting.”

With that, let’s take a meaty cut at what this might mean:

Who’s up?

Kyle Schwarber (Chicago Cubs), Nick Castellano­s (Cincinnati) and Dominic Smith (New York Mets) made it to the majors with their bats, not gloves. They’d be natural fits.

Christian Yelich (Milwaukee),

Yoenis Cespedes (Mets) and Hunter Pence (San Francisco) are coming off injuries. The DH spot would give them a break from the daily grind.

Kevin Cron (Arizona) hit 38 homers in Triple-A and six more for Arizona. With first baseman Christian Walker coming off a breakout season, Cron could have a new slot.

Justin Turner (Los Angeles Dodgers), Ryan Braun (Milwaukee) and Jay Bruce (Philadelph­ia) are among older players who might see time there. The Nationals (Ryan Zimmerman, Starlin Castro, Eric Thames and Kendrick) and Colorado (Daniel Murphy and Ian Desmond) could rotate. Nick Markakis and Adam Duvall

would benefit in a crowded Atlanta outfield.

Ouch!

Max Scherzer, Masahiro Tanaka and Adam Wainwright are among the aces in recent years to be injured either batting or running the bases. With a stopand-go spring training and a desire to quickly ramp up to regular-season speed, no one wants to see pitchers get sidelined doing something besides throwing.

Who does this rule hurt? Start with Madison Bumgarner, the power-hitting pitcher who signed with Arizona. He loves to hit and once toyed with entering the All-Star Home Run Derby. The Diamondbac­ks would probably rather put up someone paid to bat. Jacob deGrom, Clayton Kershaw and Stephen Strasburg likely will keep excelling. But their ERAs are likely to take a hit — those NL lineups will look a little more imposing.

Opportunit­y knocks

Sonny Gray (Cincinnati), Sandy Alcantara (Miami) and Chris Paddack (San Diego) all start for teams that struggle to score runs. With the DH, managers might let them stay in longer, instead of pulling them for a pinch-hitter.

Yasiel Puig doesn’t have a team. He combined for 24 homers and 84 RBIs with Cincinnati and Cleveland last year and remains a free agent.

Matt Adams (Mets), Logan Morrison (Milwaukee) and Greg Bird (Texas) signed minor-league deals in the off-season and, if they prove they’ve still got pop, could be lowpriced options. NL rosters were pretty full when the shutdown came in March, but now there figures to be rejigging.

Speaking of states

For every entertaini­ng homerun trot by the likes of a Bartolo Colon, don’t forget: Pitchers hit a whopping .128 overall last year.

NL twirlers were better at the dish — they hit .131, while their AL counterpar­ts flailed at .087.

There aren’t many like Shohei Ohtani out there. Nelson Cruz, Edwin Encarnacio­n, J.D. Martinez and Miguel Cabrera are easy DH fits in the AL. The NL side will be more of a scramble.

And, with extra playoff teams, no doubt guys like Jorge Soler, Daniel Vogelbach and Corey Dickerson could become trade targets come October — or whenever the deadline is set.

 ?? ERIC GAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Howie Kendrick was the designated hitter when he slugged a home run in Game 7 for the visiting Washington Nationals in last year’s World Series. The designated-hitter debate rages on.
ERIC GAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Howie Kendrick was the designated hitter when he slugged a home run in Game 7 for the visiting Washington Nationals in last year’s World Series. The designated-hitter debate rages on.

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