The Maui News

Manfred remains optimistic on labor; pitch clock encouragin­g

- By RONALD BLUM

HOUSTON — Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred exchanged a handshake with players’ union head Tony Clark on the field before the World Series opener and expressed optimism about reaching an agreement before the current deal expires Dec. 1 but did not detail any progress in talks that appear headed to a lockout.

“Have you ever heard me say that I’m anything but optimistic about getting an agreement?” Manfred said. “I am a believer in the process. We’re meeting on a regular basis, and I’m hopeful we find a way to get an agreement by Dec. 1.”

There is no evidence of progress toward an agreement, and many management officials and player agents have said they are prepared for a lockout if there is no deal when the current agreement expires.

“It’s hard to characteri­ze progress,” said Manfred, who was the league’s chief negotiator before becoming commission­er in 2015. “Progress is, you go in a room, you’re having conversati­ons. People are continuing to talk. It doesn’t move in any measurable way that I’ve ever figured out, anyways, and I’ve done it a long time.

“The most important point is that I know our clubs are 100 percent committed to the idea that they want an agreement by Dec. 1.”

Clark said talks have been ongoing and he’s “looking to take advantage of as many days as the schedule permits throughout the course of the next five-plus weeks or so to continue that dialogue.”

TOMAHAWK CHOP

While the Cleveland Indians are changing their name to the Guardians for 2022 and the Washington NFL team dropped Redskins in July 2020, Manfred is comfortabl­e with Atlanta’s decision to keep the Braves nickname.

“It’s important to understand that we have 30 markets around the country. They’re not all the same,” he said. “The Braves have done a phenomenal job with the Native American community. The Native American community in that region is wholly supportive of the Braves program, including the chop. And for me that’s kind of the end of the story. In that market, taking into account

the Native American community, it works.”

While opinions of the Braves name and their use of the tomahawk chop are varied within Native American communitie­s, the National Council of American Indians have called for the franchise to drop the name and chant.

ALL-STAR GAME MOVED FROM ATLANTA

The World Series will be played at Atlanta’s Truist Park this weekend after Manfred moved the 2021 All-Star Game from Atlanta to Denver over the league’s objections to sweeping changes to Georgia voting laws that critics condemned as being too restrictiv­e.

“Atlanta played great down the stretch, did a tremendous job in the playoffs,” he said. “They earned their right in the World Series, and we’re looking forward to being back in Atlanta.”

“We always have tried to be apolitical. Obviously, there was a notable exception this year,” he added. “I think our desire is to try to avoid another exception to that general rule. We have a fan base that’s diverse, has different points of view, and we’d like to keep the focus on the field in the gam.”

He also admitted: “Let me say this: It’s harder than it used to be.”

BALL CHANGES

MLB anticipate­s receiving data next month on experiment­s with tackier baseballs that are being used in the Arizona Fall League.

EXPANDED PLAYOFFS

Manfred said to look beyond the excitement of the 2021 postseason in analyzing whether to expand the postseason beyond

its current 10 teams.

“I think the expansion of the playoffs is a bigger picture issue,” he said.

DESIGNATED HITTER

Expanding the designated hitter to the National League remains a bargaining topic with the players’ associatio­n.

PITCH CLOCK

An experiment with a pitch clock in Low-A West enouraged MLB officials about it’s use. The 316 nineinning games with the clock averaged 2 hours, 41 minute, down from 3:02 for the 91 games without a clock. The clock was set at 15 seconds with bases empty and 17 seconds with runners on base, with 30 seconds between batters and 2:15 between half-innings and for pitching changes.

“Certainly encouragin­g,” Manfred said. “Game times in the 2:40s, which is a really sort of nice number when you think about it in comparison to where we’ve been. I think maybe more important than that is that people that go and watch the games feel like the pace of the game, the action in the game has really been improved, that it actually alters the requiremen­t of moving along pitching, kind of changes the game the way it’s played a little bit. And that would be a useful change for us.”

The average time of a nineinning game was a record 3:10:07 during the regular season, up from 3:07:46 for the pandemic-shortened 2020 season and 3:05:35 in 2019. Postseason games have averaged 3:37:03 this year, up from 3:32:05 last year, and the League Championsh­ip Series averaged 3:41:30.

 ?? AP photo ?? Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred and Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n executive director Tony Clark speak before Game 1 of the World Series against the Atlanta Braves Tuesday in Houston.
AP photo Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred and Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n executive director Tony Clark speak before Game 1 of the World Series against the Atlanta Braves Tuesday in Houston.

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