Springfield News-Sun

Turn back the clock and play real baseball

- Hal McCoy

Hall of Fame baseball writer Hal McCoy knows a thing or two about our nation’s pastime. Tap into that knowledge by sending an email to halmccoy1@hotmail.com.

Q: Did the Houston Astros get away with their cheating scandal, aided by no fans during the 2020 season and an inept MLB commission­er? — DAVE, Miamisburg/Centervill­e/ Beavercree­k.

A: Ask A.J. Finch (fired) and Alex Cora (suspended) if they got away with it, although both are now back in the game after a year away. Commission­er Rob Manfred certainly dropped the ball on player punishment­s, but a limited amount of fans this year will be presented with a chance to voice their opinions when the Astros hit town, minus their trash cans.

Q: What do you think MLB should do to improve the game on the field? —

BILL, Houston.

A: That’s an old song, an old refrain for me. Return it to the game of yesteryear: No DH, no interleagu­e, no exaggerate­d shifts, no seven-inning doublehead­ers, no putting runners on second to start extra innings, no three-batter limits for relief pitchers. Move the clock back to 1970 and let’s play real baseball again.

Q: What can baseball do to promote a great presence of women in management positions? — BRIAN, Bellbrook.

A: How about starting another “League of Their Own?” Kim Ng is the general manager of the Miami Marlins and that’s a great start. More women need to be hired at the lower levels and let them move up, same way as men do it. More women need to show interest and MLB should be on the lookout for qualified females. Perhaps MLB should start a training school for women.

Q: Why do the Reds always talk about their needs at the end of a season and never address them in the offseason? — JIM, Ketttering.

A: As they say, talk is cheap. They addressed a lot of needs after the 2019 season when they acquired Mike Moustakas, Nick Castellano­s, Shogo Akiyama and others. None produced. So it was back to mostly doing nothing after 2020, hoping those 2019 acquisitio­ns play to the backs of their baseball cards. When a team chases free agents, which the Reds did, those free agents have to want to come and the ones the Reds pursued didn’t. The Reds were always outbid. So it’s the ol’ status quo.

Q: Can you explain why Dave Parker is not in the Hall of Fame? — TOM, Indiana, Pa.

A: That’s easy. He wasn’t voted in. Why? He definitely has the numbers. The only reason I can come up with is that his name was prominent in the cocaine scandal involving the Pittsburgh Pirates when he played there. It might also be why Al Oliver, another worthy player left out, is not in. And that’s truly unfortunat­e because

Oliver’s name was never linked to the scandal and there is no more upstanding and outstandin­g human being than Al Oliver.

Q: Which National League team will be much better than expected and sneak into the playoffs? — JOEL, Kettering.

A: Unfortunat­ely for Reds fans, it wont happen in Cincinnati. My pick to click is the New York Mets. They’ve added shortstop Francisco Lindor and catcher James McCann. Plus they acquired starting pitcher Carlos Carrasco to an already strong rotation of Jacob deGrom, Noah Syndergaar­d and Marcus Stroman.

And they added relief pitcher Trevor May. They are strong on paper, but paper is easily shredded.

Q: Is the power-up approach coming from individual players or from the Reds’ coaching staff ? — JON, Washington, Mo.

A: Joey Votto, Shogo Akiyama and Eugenio Suarez all have said via media interviews that they are in search of more home runs. That is their choice. I’ve also heard manager David Bell say the team needs to put the ball in play more, hit for better averages and be productive in more ways than the long ball. For the sake of winning, one hopes Bell prevails because last season’s .212 team batting average won’t get the job done.

Q: As a young sports writer, who did you like to read? — CHUCK, Troy.

A: Was I ever young? I never missed a JIm Murray column in the Los Angeles Times. My Mount Rushmore of sports journalist­s was Murray, Red Smith (New York Herald-Tribune), Dan Jenkins (Sports Illustrate­d, sports novels), Bob Verdi (Chicago Tribune). And nearly every day I read the column of my boss, Si Burick, because I had to proofread it and I dare not overlook even a missing comma or I was made to stand in a corner. Well, not really. Si was a stickler, but a fabulous mentor.

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred, here with Reds owner Bob Castellini, took no action against players involved in the Houston Astros cheating scandal.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred, here with Reds owner Bob Castellini, took no action against players involved in the Houston Astros cheating scandal.
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