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Manfred: MLB didn’t alter baseball

Despite HR pace, commish insists no changes found

- News services

Faced with a record onslaught of home runs that has convinced many pitchers that baseballs are juiced, Commission­er Rob Manfred says the sport has been unable to find any changes in the manufactur­ing process.

A May 2018 report to Major League Baseball by professors specializi­ng in physics, mechanical engineerin­g, statistics and mathematic­s concluded there was less drag on the ball, causing more home runs. MLB still has not figured out why, and Manfred denied accusation­s by AL All-Star starter Justin Verlander and other pitchers that baseballs deliberate­ly had been altered.

“Baseball has done nothing, given no direction for an alteration in the baseball,” Manfred told the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America on Tuesday in Cleveland. “The biggest flaw in that logic is that baseball somehow wants more home runs. If you sat in an owner’s meeting and listened to people talk about the way our game is being played, that is not the sentiment among the owners for whom I work. There is no desire on the part of ownership to increase the number of home runs in the game. To the contrary, they’re concerned about how many we have.”

Batters have hit 3,691 homers in 1,345 games, on pace for 6,668 over the full season. That would be 19% above last year’s 5,558 and 9% over the record 6,105 hit in 2017 that topped the Steroids Era high mark of 5,693 in 2000.

“Pitchers have raised issues about particular­ly the tackiness and the seams on the baseball, and we do believe that those could be issues that are related to the performanc­e of the ball and we’re trying to get our hands around,” Manfred said.

He firmly rejected claims that MLB changed the ball to spark offense.

“Manipulati­on of the baseball is a great conspiracy theory,” Manfred said. “How you manipulate a human-dominated handmade manufactur­ing process in any consistent way, it’s a smarter human being than I.”

Netting a ballpark decision: Extending protective netting down foul lines is a ballpark-to-ballpark decision because of differing configurat­ions, according to Manfred.

Following a series of foul balls that injured fans, MLB mandated ahead of the 2018 season that netting extend to the far end of each dugout.

Still, several fans have been foul balls this season.

“We recognized early in this process that it was very difficult to set an individual rule, one rule that applied to 30 different ballparks given their structural difference­s, and instead we have opted to work with the individual clubs over a period of time to extend netting,” Manfred said.

“We’ve made extensive progress on that and I believe that that progress will continue, and I think one of the reasons that we have had progress is that we have not put clubs in an impossible position by adopting a one size fits all rule.” hurt by

Bumgarner stakes heat up: The trade market for Madison Bumgarner is taking shape, even if four of the clubs reportedly most interested in dealing for the Giants starter aren’t ready to confirm they’re part of it.

The Brewers, Braves, Astros and Twins are among the teams most focused on acquiring Bumgarner, The Athletic reported.

It’s likely all four of those teams will make the postseason, which would make getting someone like Bumgarner all the more attractive, considerin­g his playoff dominance throughout his career (8-3, 2.11 ERA in 16 games).

Bumgarner (5-7, 4.03 ERA) had been solid in his previous two starts before having to exit Saturday’s game after two innings when he took a line drive from the Cardinals’ Jose Martinez off his left elbow. He was diagnosed with a left elbow contusion, but he’s expected to make his next start Saturday against the Brewers in Milwaukee.

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ?? Batters are on pace to hit 6,668 home runs this season. That would be 9% over the record 6,105 hit in 2017.
TONY DEJAK/AP Batters are on pace to hit 6,668 home runs this season. That would be 9% over the record 6,105 hit in 2017.

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