Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Baseball swings into a new era

- Ronald Blum

WASHINGTON – Boom or bust. This is what baseball has become — and that has owners worried.

“It’s just kind of what it is: home runs and strikeouts,” Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Ross Stripling said.

Stripling had just given up 10th-inning home runs on consecutiv­e pitches to Houston’s Alex Bregman and George Springer on a night players combined for 10 longballs, nearly double the previous all-star record.

Last fall, you may remember, the Dodgers and Astros totaled 25 home runs in the World Series, four more than had ever been hit before in a Fall Classic.

“It’s extremely tough to manufactur­e hits these days, especially with the shift,” Stripling said after the American League’s 8-6 win Tuesday night. “I certainly understand that’s where the game’s going, and so I think this game encapsulat­ed that.”

It took until the 344th pitch for a run to be driven in on something other than a homer: Michael Brantley’s tack-on sacrifice fly that boosted the AL’s lead to 8-5. Joey Votto added the final home run in the bottom half, four more than the previous all-star mark.

“Everybody’s throwing 97 to 100,” Washington ace Max Scherzer, the NL starter, said in a reference to pitch velocity. “You’re not going to string three hits together like that. So everybody’s just swinging for the fence.”

Hours earlier, baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred was expressing alarm. Strikeouts (24,537) are on track to surpass hits (24,314) for the first time and are likely to set a record for the 12th straight season. This year’s average of 17.0 per game is up from 12.6 in 2005. The current big-league batting average of .247 would be the lowest since 1972.

And the average of 2.28 homers per game is just below the record 2.51 set last year.

“Standard operation nowadays, right? We’re going to homer-andpunch-out as an industry,” said Astros manager A.J. Hinch, who led the AL to victory. There’s a great love affair with both results.”

Among 90 plate appearance­s, 44 ended in a home run, strikeout (25) or walk (nine), at 48.9% the highest in allstar history, according to STATS.

“I don’t really want to see guys shorten up and slap the ball around the infield just to avoid a strikeout. That doesn’t excite me,” said Colorado’s Charlie Blackmon, who won the NL batting title last year while hitting 37 home runs. “I don’t mind strikeouts. That doesn’t mean I want guys swinging way out of the zone, but it doesn’t bother me.”

Many cite shifts as the cause of the, well, big shift in offense, transformi­ng groundball­s that once were hits into outs. There have been 20,587 shifts on balls in play, according to Baseball Info Solutions. That projects to a full-season total of 34,668 — up 29.8% from last year and an increase from 6,882 for the entire 2013 season.

“There is a growing consensus or maybe even better an existing consensus among ownership that we need to have a really serious conversati­on about making some changes to the way the game is being played,” Manfred said. “We are not at the point where I can articulate for you what particular rule changes might get serious considerat­ion. I can tell you the issues that concern people: I think that the period of time between putting balls in play, the number of strikeouts, to a lesser extent the number of home runs, the significan­ce of the shift and what it’s done to the game, the use of relief pitchers and the way starting pitchers are going to be used.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The National League’s Scooter Gennett heads home after hitting a two-run homer in the ninth inning to tie the game on Tuesday.
GETTY IMAGES The National League’s Scooter Gennett heads home after hitting a two-run homer in the ninth inning to tie the game on Tuesday.

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