Penticton Herald

New rules aimed at speeding up baseball

-

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Managers or coaches must make a pitching change if they head to the mound for the seventh time in a game under baseball’s new pace of play rules.

Commission­er Rob Manfred and executive Joe Torre explained some of the parameters Tuesday, one day after MLB imposed stricter limits on mound visits in an effort to speed up games. “I don’t see pace of games issues as harsh or not harsh,” Manfred said during his annual visit to the Cactus League. “I see them as a fan-friendly issue.”

Torre noted that umpires will keep players from proceeding to see the pitcher if six mound visits have already occurred.

“From our perspectiv­e it’s important to go back to, first, principles. On pace of game, I think the first and most important principle is that pace of game is a fan issue,” Manfred said. “Our research tells us that it’s a fan issue, our broadcast partners tell us that it’s a fan issue, and the independen­t research that our broadcast partners do confirm with that, that it’s a fan issue.”

MLB has the right to institute rules changes absent an agreement with one year notice and made proposals during the 2016-17 off-season for a pitch clock and more restrictio­ns on mound visits.

Giants catcher Buster Posey noted that it’s the players’ jobs to move forward as the game adapts, whether they like the decisions or not.

“I actually was listening to John Smoltz talk about it and I agree with what he was saying. He says, as baseball players, you adjust,” Posey said last week. “No matter what it is, you adjust. I think it might affect a few people, but they’ll adjust. If it affects me, I’ll adjust. I don’t foresee it being an issue.

“For me personally, baseball being my job, my job’s to go out and perform with what I have. That’s kind of the way I approach it. I think ultimately if you’re looking at it from a fan’s perspectiv­e, you want to put a product on the field that they’re going to enjoy the most.”

Cubs manager Joe Maddon joked of having a coach keep track of the mound visit similar to the way an assistant basketball coach tracks timeouts, saying “maybe there’s going to be seven on the scoreboard like the number of timeouts in a game.”

Regarding slow-moving free agency, Manfred said MLB is pleased to see more signings in recent days.

“At the end of the day, we want players signed, we want the best players playing the game,” he said. “It’s always our goal.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada