Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Strikeouts eclipse hits for 1st season

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — The most-heard sound at major league ballparks this year was “Strike three!”

A whiff of offense would be nice rather than all those nights filled with nonstop whiffs.

Strikeouts will exceed hits over a full season for the first time in major league history. The overall batting average has dropped to its lowest level since 1972, the year before the designated hitter.

Lefty hitters — facing smothering defensive shifts — have fared even worse, with their lowest average since 1968, before the pitcher’s mound was lowered.

Starters throw fewer pitches and hard-throwing relievers are changed more frequently. The game has transforme­d at a dizzying pace.

“We need to thoughtful­ly review the trends,” baseball commission­er Rob Manfred said Wednesday.

Manfred looks ahead to a postseason featuring 20-year-old Atlanta star Ronald Acuna Jr., Boston, the New York Yankees and Chicago Cubs and possibly Los Angeles Dodgers, too.

But much of the offseason will be spent analyzing historic changes.

There were 40,196 strikeouts and 40,098 hits through Wednesday, and Ks exceeded hits over a full month for the first time in April, then again in June and September.

Before this year, the previous low differenti­al for a full month was in April 2017 when there were 138 more hits than strikeouts, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Strikeouts have set a record for the 11th consecutiv­e season, surpassing last year’s 40,104.

The .248 big-league batting average is down seven percentage points from last year and a Steroids Era high of .271 in 1999, part of an all-or-nothing approach at the plate.

No wonder batters swing for the fences.

“Years ago, if a player had more strikeouts than hits, they didn’t get out of Class A ball,” said Dan Duquette, the Baltimore Orioles’ executive vice president of baseball operations.

“Ted Williams had some good ideas: three balls and you go to first base; make home plate smaller so you don’t have to defend as much territory,” Duquette said.

“It’s something to consider, because, really, it’s an entertainm­ent business, right?”

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