Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Need more baseball nets

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It happens in the blink of an eye: A pitch arrives at the plate, the batter swings and a baseball or a bat rockets into the stands. In most cases, there is no harm beyond a few spilled nachos. But sometimes a fan fails to get out of the way, with grim consequenc­es.

Last fall, a toddler sitting with her grandparen­ts at Yankee Stadium was struck in the face by a 105-mph foul that broke her nose and orbital bones and caused bleeding in her brain. A Schaumburg man sued the Cubs last year after an errant drive left him with facial fractures and unable to see out of one eye. In 2010, a 39-year-old mother of two attending a minor league game in Texas suffered a fatal injury from a drive that hit her head.

These are not as rare as you might think. A Bloomberg News investigat­ion found that some 1,750 fans are injured each year at major league games.

Major League Baseball has been quick to adopt technologi­cal changes to keep fans entertaine­d, even though it means some of them spend more time looking at their smartphone­s than at the field. It has been slower to address the dangers of such distractio­n for those sitting close to the plate but beyond the protective netting behind it.

In 2015, it recommende­d that teams extend the nets to the inside edge of each dugout. Most teams, to their credit, went even further, installing protection to the far end of each dugout.

Last month, with spring training fast approachin­g, the last two holdouts, the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and the Tampa Bay Rays, said they would do the same before opening day. Commission­er Rob Manfred had been expected to mandate such changes.

A New York City councilman had proposed an ordinance requiring the Yankees and Mets to string netting all the way to the foul poles—which is the norm in Japan. Some injuries have led to lawsuits, and delaying improvemen­ts amounted to inviting more legal troubles.

The profession­al sport has long enjoyed the shield of the “Baseball Rule,” which is printed on tickets to warn that spectators attend at their own risk. But that protection, though recognized by the courts, has been called into question by the nature of modern ballparks.

“People can now interact using their cellphones while sitting in their seats,” Chicago attorney Timothy Liam Epstein told The Seattle Times. “And so, you now have venue owners and teams that are participat­ing actively in individual, targeted distractio­ns that would seem to be a relatively easy way for a plaintiff’s attorney to defeat a presumptio­n of the case getting tossed under the ‘Baseball Rule.’” Last year, the Atlanta Braves reached a settlement with the father of a 6-year-old girl who suffered a fractured skull from a foul ball.

Team owners would rather not write that kind of check. Fans would rather not incur that kind of injury. With expanded netting is in place, both will be a lot safer.

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