The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Postseason sets new record for game times

- By Ronald Blum The Associated Press

With managers and pitching coaches walking to the mound earlier and more often the 2017 MLB postseason has clocked average game times up seven minutes from last year and 18 from 2015.

LOS ANGELES » Don’t be surprised if you doze off during one of these World Series games, wake up and discover they’re not even at the seventh-inning stretch.

With managers and pitching coaches walking to the mound earlier and more often in another postseason of record game times, Justin Verlander is the lone throwback.

Verlander pitched the only complete game during the playoffs, when the average time of a nine-inning game stretched to a sometimes thrilling but often annoying 3 hours, 32 minutes, up seven minutes from last year and 18 from 2015.

“There are the outliers, there are guys like me who can still go deep in games,” the Houston ace said as he prepared to start Game 2 against the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night.

When the Dodgers last were in the World Series, Orel Hershiser pitched a pair of complete games against Oakland, a threehit shutout in Game 2 that took 2:30 and a four-hitter in the Game 5 finale that lasted 2:51.

The average time of a nine-inning postseason game hasn’t been below three hours since 1990, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

Attribute the elongated action — or inaction — to mushroomin­g mound visits along with television commercial time.

Los Angeles ace Clayton Kershaw won’t get the chance to replicate the feats of Sandy Koufax, who pitched a fourhit shutout against Minnesota in Game 5 of the 1965 Series at Dodger Stadium that took 2:34, then came back on two days’ rest to toss a three-hit shutout on the road that won Game 7, which breezed by in 2:27.

“I don’t think it’s fair to compare eras because baseball is a lot different now,” Kershaw said. “I’m not going to debate which one is better or worse. But there’s a lot of things that change over the course of the time. And we have a really good bullpen; you can’t argue with that. I think the era of baseball we are in is pretty great. I’m happy to be a part of it.”

Even before the postseason, teams were concerned the average nine-inning game during the regularsea­son took 3:05:11, up from 3:00:42 last year and 2:56 in 2015. Major League Baseball has proposed a 20-second pitch clock and restrictin­g catchers to one trip to the mound per pitcher each inning, rules management can impose unilateral­ly for 2018.

“I think you’d start to see some of the most sophistica­ted signs known to man,” said Astros manager A.J. Hinch, a former big league catcher. “You can’t express enough how important it is to give no competitiv­e advantage to the hitter when it come to your signs, to what pitch the guy is throwing. All of that is out of paranoia that you don’t want the hitter to know what’s coming.”

Talks between management and the players’ associatio­n are ongoing, and it is possible changes could be phased in over several seasons.

Advanced analytics have transforme­d the sport. Last year’s World Series was the first in which no starting pitcher got even one out in the seventh inning, according to Elias.

The average pitches by a starter this postseason is 81, according to Baseball Info Solutions, down from 96 in 2010. The average number of outs by postseason starters has dropped in the same span from 18 to 14.

Houston, like many teams, often prefers its starting pitchers not face batters for a third time.

“In the last probably four or five years I think things have really started to change rapidly,” Verlander said. “You can buck the trend of some of the numbers to a certain point, but it’s going to be hard for the younger generation to be able to show that they can do that when they might not even have the opportunit­y.”

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 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi makes a call to the bullpen during the fifth inning of Game 6 of baseball’s American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros Friday in Houston.
DAVID J. PHILLIP — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi makes a call to the bullpen during the fifth inning of Game 6 of baseball’s American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros Friday in Houston.

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