Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

League steps up ball monitoring to suppress foreign substances

- By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK (AP) » Major League Baseball is increasing its monitoring of baseballs in an attempt to suppress any use of foreign substances by pitchers.

Mike Hill, newly hired as executive vice president of baseball operations and disciplina­rian, wrote in a memorandum to team officials on Tuesday that “players are subject to discipline ... regardless of whether evidence of the violation has been discovered during or following a game.”

“Examples of prohibited conduct include, but are not limited to, handling foreign substances, advising a pitcher how to use or otherwise mask the use of foreign substances, interferin­g with the collection of gameused baseballs and failing to report observed violations of these rules by players or staff.”

Hill said team leaders may be held responsibl­e for violations by staff.

In a two-page memo to owners, CEOs, team presidents, general managers and mangers first reported by ESPN and the New York Post, Hill outlined three new enforcemen­t components. —Gameday compliance monitors and electronic­s compliance officers will check for violations in dugouts, clubhouses, tunnels, batting cages and bullpens, and they will file daily reports to the commission­er’s office.

—Umpires, equipment authentica­tors and compliance personnel will submit baseballs that come out of play to the commission­er’s office for inspection and documentat­ion, both suspicious equipment and randomly select balls. A third-party lab will be used for examinatio­ns, and suspicious balls will be traced back to pitchers.

—MLB Statcast data will be reviewed by the commission­er’s office to analyze spin rate changes among pitchers suspected of using foreign substances, comparing game data with career norms.

“As a reminder, all club personnel are prohibited from assisting players in the use of foreign substances and also will be subject to discipline by the commission­er, including fines and suspension­s,” Hill wrote.

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