Porterville Recorder

Speeding up games on MLB agenda for next season

- By RONALD BLUM

ORLANDO, Fla. — Puffing on a cigar, Chicago White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf said what many fans believe.

“It doesn’t matter if the game is 3 1/2 hours if it was an exciting game. But if it’s a 2-1 game, it takes 4 hours, nobody’s too happy with it,” he said Tuesday. “I believe we should speed up the game. That’s one of the things we should do, is limit the number of trips that a catcher can take to the mound in the course of an inning or a game. We could easily cut 20 minutes off the time of a game if we really wanted to.”

The average time of a nine-inning contest was a record 3 hours, 5 minutes this season, up from 2:56 in 2015. The postseason average was 3:29.

Many owners and general managers want to cut down trips to the mound by catchers. Whether the reason is changing signs, AP PHOTO BY talking about pitch selection or just giving a pitcher a breather during long plate appearance­s, management wants to cut back.

Pitchers and catchers say they are being extra cautious in an era where dozens of high-definition cameras are focused on them, and each team has employees in video rooms seeking any advantage.

“There could be an element of paranoia involved,” White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said.

Jon Daniels, the Texas Rangers president of baseball operations, didn’t hedge.

“I don’t think it’s paranoia, I think it’s real,” he said of the sign-stealing threat.

MLB proposed three changes to address game length last offseason that the players’ union didn’t accept, and management can start them next year without player approval: restrictin­g catchers to one trip to the mound per pitcher each inning; employing a 20-second pitch clock; and raising the bottom of the strike zone from just beneath the kneecap to its pre1996 level — at the top of the kneecap.

Baseball commission­er Rob Manfred prefers reaching an agreement with the union, and changes could be phased in over several years. The strike zone change has been discussed less in recent months.

Dialogue between MLB and the union is ongoing.

There also has been discussion about cutting the time between innings by using split screens to broadcast commercial­s while half-innings get underway.

“It’s not just listening to our current fans, it’s thinking about our future fans and the landscape we’re competing on, how they watch other sports, how they digest media in general and where society is kind of taking sports and sports media,” Toronto Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro said. “It’s important to consider those things. To operate in a vacuum would be a mistake.”

While many want to eliminate what they call “dead time,” the debate is what new rules to put in place.

“I know catchers are out there to try to help the pitcher, so when our team does it, it doesn’t annoy me,” St. Louis Cardinals owner Bill Dewitt Jr. said with a laugh before adding: “I think it needs to be eliminated to a degree.”

 ?? JOHN RAOUX ?? Jeff Luhnow, general manager for the Houston Astros, talks with reporters at the annual baseball general managers’ meetings, Monday in Orlando, Fla.
JOHN RAOUX Jeff Luhnow, general manager for the Houston Astros, talks with reporters at the annual baseball general managers’ meetings, Monday in Orlando, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States