Houston Chronicle

League to step up ball scrutiny

- By Benjamin Hoffman

Doctoring baseballs with foreign substances to increase spin and movement has been around for as long as baseball has been played. To try to combat the practice, Major League Baseball is going high tech for the 2021 season, adding spin rate analysis to its arsenal of methods for detecting changes and enforcing existing policies.

In a memo distribute­d to teams Tuesday, Michael Hill, a senior vice president for baseball operations, detailed the enhanced monitoring process. There will be increased scrutiny of club spaces, inspection and documentat­ion of balls taken out of play and, in the biggest change from previous methods, the league will use Statcast data to compare spin rates for players who are suspected of doctoring balls, checking to see if the numbers for the game in question differ significan­tly from their career norms.

Umpire enforcemen­t on the field will stay consistent with past practices, according to Hill’s memo.

“The foregoing enhanced monitoring measures, however, will provide the commission­er’s office with a separate evidentiar­y basis to support a finding that a player has violated the foreign substance rules,” he said.

The spitball and other so-called freak deliveries were banned from the sport in 1920, with pitchers initially given one year to adjust to the change before the rule was adjusted to allow “registered” spitball pitchers to finish their careers without changing. But foreign substances like spit, petroleum jelly, pine tar, rosin and sunscreen lotion continued to be used regardless of rules, and enforcemen­t has been spotty at best.

In perhaps the most extreme example of baseball’s indulgence of the act, Gaylord Perry, a star righthande­r, was so synonymous with the doctoring of balls that his 1974 autobiogra­phy was called “Me and the Spitter.” The confession did not derail him, as he continued to pitch until 1983, won 314 games and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1991.

MLB has recognized the need to improve the grip on baseballs in recent years, and has studied how a stickier ball would perform. With the adjusted policy in place, the league hopes to have better data, while also letting players know that it is monitoring the situation.

In March 2020, former Angels visiting clubhouse attendant Brian Harkins was fired when the team learned he had distribute­d a sticky substance to pitchers who requested it.

Asserting he had been made a public scapegoat, Harkins sued the Angels for defamation and in his lawsuit claimed the team had evidence implicatin­g a number of pitchers who used the substance during the 2018 and 2019 seasons, including the Astros’ Justin Verlander and Yankees’ Gerrit Cole.

“It’s an ongoing legal issue, and I am not comfortabl­e talking about it now,” Cole said said before the case was dismissed.

The memo from MLB, which came after teams for years had been expected to police the situation themselves, gives specific guidance on club employees’ responsibi­lities in regard to ball-doctoring substances. It says fines and suspension­s could result.

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