Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

ASG no longer decides home field

- Staff and wire reports The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

Home-field advantage in the World Series won’t be at stake when baseball’s AllStar Game is played at Marlins Park in July.

Starting next season, the pennant winner with the better regular-season record will earn the right to start the World Series at home and host a potential Game 7.

The change was included in Major League Baseball’s tentative new collective bargaining agreement that was agreed upon Wednesday night, just before the previous agreement ended.

In addition, players and management agreed the minimum stay on the disabled list will be reduced from 15 days to 10.

Home-field advantage in the World Series generally rotated between the leagues through 2002. Baseball, led by then-Commission­er Bud Selig, and Fox television promoted the “This Time It Counts” innovation after the 2002 All-Star Game in Milwaukee ended in a 7-7, 11-inning tie when both teams ran out of pitchers. Selig was booed in his own Milwaukee backyard.

“This energizes it. This gives them something to really play for,” Selig said after owners approved the change by a 30-0 vote in January 2003. “People pay a lot of money to see that game. They deserve to see the same intensity they see all year long. Television people pay a lot of money for the game. It was not and should not be a meaningles­s exhibition game.”

What began as a twoyear experiment was extended. The American League won 11 of 14 All-Star Games played under the rule, and the AL representa­tive won eight World Series in those years.

As part of the changes for next year, players in the AllStar Game will have the incentive to play for a pool of money.

The DL change will allow teams to make quicker decisions on whether to bring up a roster replacemen­t rather than wait to see whether the injured player would be ready to return in less than two weeks.

An internatio­nal play plan is part of the new agreement that includes a payment schedule for potential games in Asia, Mexico (and elsewhere in Latin America) and Britain, plus U.S.-based special events such as this year’s July 3 game between the Marlins and Braves in a specially built ballpark on a military base in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

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