The Standard Journal

Pick up baseball's pace, sure, but don't change the game

- By GENE LYONS NEA Contributo­r

When the world threatens to get you down, there is always baseball -- an absorbing refuge, an alternate reality entirely unto itself. To a person of my temperamen­t, the MLB package on satellite TV constitute­s the entertainm­ent bargain of the century. A man can read and write only so many hours a day.

Sit down, put your feet up, turn on the Red Sox, Cubs, Dodgers, etc. and it's certain that He Who Shall Not Be Named, won't be. Regardless of the follies and imbeciliti­es on the news networks, the focus is on the never-ending narrative and deep minutiae of the game.

There can be controvers­y, even fierce argument. How dumb were the Red Sox not to sign a powerhitte­r over the winter? Can a third baseman be found to fill that void? Who to trade? You can't get something for nothing.

On the tactical level, what was Farrell thinking about bringing Kimbrel on in the eighth? And so on. Any serious fan can talk about such things for hours.

To hear some people tell it, though, the sport's in trouble. MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred worries that the pace of the game is too slow to tear millennial­s away from their iPhones. No less an authority than conservati­ve columnist (and baseball savant) George F. Will complains that the games are too long: "This year the average nine-inning game is 3 hours and 4 minutes, up 4 minutes from last year and 14 minutes from 2010."

Actually, that seems about right to me.

Will also f rets t hat there are too many walks, too many strikeouts, too few balls put in play, maybe even too many home runs. Too many relief pitchers over 6-foot-5 throwing 95 mph fastballs at batters swinging from their heels instead of bunting, executing hitand-run plays, and playing old- fashioned, hit' em- where- t hey- ain't country hardball.

Few seasoned observers watching all those home runs flying out this season doubt that the baseballs have been "juiced" somehow -- although people have been saying this since the 1950s, to ritual denials.

If so, it surprises me that some enterprisi­ng physics professor can't prove the contention one way or the other.

But hey, it beats arguing about steroid junkies and Pete Rose.

"MLB's worsening pace of play," Will warns, "will not attract generation­s shaped by ubiquitous entertainm­ents."

Problem is, nothing in the physical world will tear addicts away from their glowing screens. I sometimes used to tell people who find baseball boring that I found them boring. But the truth is that I became obsessed playing endless hours as a lad. If I'd been good enough, I'd have kept playing until they retired my number.

My wife's childhood friend Brooks Robinson did that, and I pretty much decided I needed to marry her when he gave us World Series tickets one year. She shyly asked, would I take her? Um, yeah. I definitely will.

Kids who play the game love the game. That's basically how it goes.

OK, confession time: One reason I don't care s o much about l ong games is that the DVR is my friend. If the broadcast begins at 6 p.m., I begin watching around 7:30, giving me 90 minutes to burn. I watch only the commercial­s featuring Lily, the endearing AT&T girl.

A reliever ambles in from the bullpen, takes eight warm- up pitches, and then there's a conference at the mound. I zip through the whole thing in maybe 20 seconds. Play ball!

On my TV, that threehour game runs maybe 2:15. Doesn't everybody do this at home? Why not?

That said, there are several simple rule changes that would definitely perk up the action. First, and most obvious, a 20-second clock between pitches. Some guys just work too slowly on the mound. It'd make them concentrat­e better, and keep infielders on their toes. It's already working in the minor leagues.

Second, designated hit- ters in both leagues. A few pitchers, like San Francisco's Madison Bumgarner, can hit. So let him hit every day. The rest are wasting everybody's time. The DH extends players' careers and makes for more offense.

Third, keep the instant replay challenges, but limit umps to 90 seconds. They're not negotiatin­g the Treaty of Versailles.

No to robo-umps calling strikes. Humans play this game.

Fourth, and maybe most controvers­ial: Do away with formerly rare, now-ubiquitous (and stifling) defensive shifts. You want more situationa­l hitting? More singles, doubles, hit- and- run plays? I'm with Yankees Manager Joe Girardi: The rule should be two infielders positioned on either side of second base.

Mets General Manager Sandy Alderson has another idea. "I would require a pitcher to throw to three hitters," he told the New York Post. "One, it would speed up the game. Two, and more important, it would change the dynamics of the game in the late innings."

Boy, would it. Alas, too much to be acceptable to traditiona­lists like me.

Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co- author of "The Hunting of the President" (St. Martin's Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at eugenelyon­s2@ yahoo. com.

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