Albuquerque Journal

MLB may make unilateral rule changes for ’18 season

Manfred: Union not cooperatin­g

- BY JANIE MCCAULEY ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX — Major League Baseball intends to give the players’ associatio­n the required one-year advance notice that could allow management to unilateral­ly change the strike zone, install pitch clocks and limit trips to the pitcher’s mound starting in 2018.

Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred made the announceme­nt Tuesday after union head Tony Clark said last weekend he did not foresee players agreeing to proposed changes for 2017. Under baseball’s labor contract, management can alter playing rules only with agreement from the union — unless it gives one year notice. With the one year of notice, management can make changes on its own.

Manfred said he will send a letter to the union in the coming days and plans to continue dialogue with Clark and others in hopes of reaching agreement.

“Unfortunat­ely it now appears that there really won’t be any meaningful change for the 2017 season due to a lack of cooperatio­n from the MLBPA,” Manfred said during a news conference. “I’ve tried to be clear that our game is fundamenta­lly sound, that it does not need to be fixed as some people have suggested, and I think last season was the kind of demonstrat­ion of the potential of our league to captivate the nation and of the game’s unique place in American culture.”

Yet, he also added: “I believe it’s a mistake to stick our head in the sand and ignore the fact that our game has changed and continues to change.”

Manfred said while he prefers an agreement, “I’m also not willing to walk away.” Clark met with Cactus League teams last week, five at a time over Thursday, Friday and Saturday, before departing Monday for Florida to visit each Grapefruit League club — and proposed rules changes were a topic.

“I have great respect for the labor relations process, and I have a pretty good track record for getting things done with the MLBPA,” Manfred said. “I have to admit, however, that I am disappoint­ed that we could not even get the MLBPA to agree to modest rule changes like limits on trips to the mound that have little effect on the competitiv­e character of the game.” Clark saw talks differentl­y. “Unless your definition of ‘cooperatio­n’ is blanket approval, I don’t agree that we’ve failed to cooperate with the commission­er’s office on these issues,” he wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “Two years ago we negotiated pace of play protocols that had an immediate and positive impact.

“Last year we took a step backward in some ways, and this offseason we’ve been in regular contact with MLB and with our members to get a better handle on why that happened. I would be surprised if those discussion­s with MLB don’t continue, notwithsta­nding today’s comments about implementa­tion. As I’ve said, fundamenta­l changes to the game are going to be an uphill battle, but the lines of communicat­ion should remain open.”

Clark added “my understand­ing is that MLB wants to continue with the replay changes (2-minute limit) and the no pitch intentiona­l walks and the pace of game warning/fine adjustment­s.”

Manfred said he didn’t want to share specifics of his priorities for alteration­s.

“There’s a variety of changes that can be undertaken,” Manfred said. “I’m committed to the idea that we have a set of proposals out there and we continue to discuss those proposals in private.”

MLB has studied whether to restore the lower edge of the strike zone from just beneath the kneecap to its pre-1996 level — at the top of the kneecap. Management would like to install 20-second pitch clocks in an attempt to speed the pace of play — they have been used at Triple-A and Double-A for the past two seasons.

Players also have been against limiting mound meetings. The least controvers­ial change appears to be allowing a team to call for an intentiona­l walk without the pitcher having to throw pitches. In addition, MLB likely can alter some video review rules without the union’s agreement— such as shortening the time a manager has to call for a review.

“Most of this stuff that they were talking about I don’t think it would have been a major adjustment for us,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

Manfred said starting runners on second base in extra innings sounds unlikely to be implemente­d in the majors. The change will be experiment­ed with during the World Baseball Classic and perhaps at some short-season Class A leagues. Manfred said it was a specialpur­pose rule “beneficial in developmen­tal leagues.”

Manfred also said Tuesday that a renovated Wrigley Field would be a great choice to host an All-Star Game and Las Vegas could be a “viable market for us.”

“I don’t think that the presence of legalized gambling in Las Vegas should necessaril­y disqualify that market as a potential major league city,” Manfred said.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? MLB commission­er Rob Manfred says he is disappoint­ed the MLBPA would not agree to even modest rule changes.
LYNNE SLADKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS MLB commission­er Rob Manfred says he is disappoint­ed the MLBPA would not agree to even modest rule changes.

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