Baltimore Sun

Modern MLB on full display: Home runs, strikeouts, shifts

- By Ronald Blum

LOS ANGELES — The All-Star Game showcased what baseball has become — home runs, strikeouts and offense-killing shifts.

The National League didn’t have a hit between the first and eighth innings of Tuesday night’s 3-2 loss, its ninth in a row.

In a sport where R&D has become as important as BP, four of the five runs scored on long balls.

There were 22 strikeouts, including the final three batters on 10 pitches by the Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase in a game that lasted 3 hours, 11 minutes despite just 13 hits, five walks, two hit batters and one runner reaching on a error.

Twenty All-Stars threw 299 pitches, 105 of them fastballs. The slowest fastball was 90.2 mph on the second pitch of the game from 34-year-old lefthander Clayton Kershaw.

Forty-eight were 98 mph or higher, and Ryan Helsley of the Cardinals was velocity king. The 28-year-old topped 100 mph on eight of 15 tosses, the fastest a 103 mph blazer that the Twins’ Luis Arraez fouled off in the eighth.

“I went out there, showed what I had,” Helsley said. “It was a cool environmen­t being in this game.”

The Mariners’ Ty France, greeted by Dodger Stadium organist Dieter Ruehle with “La Vie en Rose” when he pinch hit for his All-Star debut, fouled off a Helsley fastball, then struck out when he chased a low outside slider.

“The way game is now, everybody’s throwing that hard. It’s not fun to face, but it’s just how the game is,” France said. “To be able to step in the box on this stage, it was pretty cool.”

Clase, a 24-year-old right-hander, threw 10 pitches ranging from 97.7 mph to 100.3 mph.

“Every time that bullpen door swings open, it’s velocity,” NL manager Brian Snitker said. “The guys, they weren’t like that. The closers weren’t throwing like they are now. But it’s kind of the way they are growing up and now they are trained — and amazing to me, the number of them, too. It’s like they just keep coming.”

Defensive positionin­g designed by Joe Espada, Dusty Baker’s bench coach with the Astros, led to outs on balls that used to be hits.

Juan Soto’s third-inning grounder was gloved by second baseman Andres Gimenez 20 feet into right field. Kyle Schwarber’s bouncer in the seventh was picked up in the center of the diamond by shortstop Corey Seager, who started to the right of second,

and Jake Cronenwort­h’s hopper went directly to second baseman Santiago Espinal 10 feet into right field.

“The shift giveth and the shift taketh away,” Baker said. “But still, I think it giveth more than it takes away.”

The batter’s eye in center field offered a vivid display of what has overtaken baseball — an array of highspeed cameras and radar equipment

that track every ball’s spin, every player’s sprint and stumble.

Behinds the scenes, many teams consider their quants All-Stars, too. The Astros’ front office includes a quantitati­ve developer, plus two senior architects.

The NL did all its scoring during Shane McClanahan’s first 13 pitches of the first inning, getting Ronald Acuna Jr’s leadoff double, Mookie Betts’ RBI single and Paul Goldschmid­t’s homer.

AL offense was even more condensed. Giancarlo Stanton hit a two-run homer in the fourth off Tony Gonsolin, and Byron Buxton went deep four pitches later.

Not a surprise in a season that has been the big league batting average dip to .242, its lowest since 1967.

Baseball’s competitio­n committee is considerin­g changes for next season that some purists consider revolution­ary and some conclude necessary. A pitch clock is almost certain after testing throughout the minors this year. Shift limits also have been proposed.

Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred is gung-ho for change, but players appear less enthusiast­ic for change. Still, the union agreed to let a committee with a management majority make changes starting with next season.

“Our players have been, unsurprisi­ngly, very much engaged in the process,” union head Tony Clark said, “more than willing to offer their thoughts on what makes sense, what may not make sense, what may need to be adjusted and tweaked.”

 ?? SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY ?? The Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton poses with the Ted Williams MVP Award after the AL beat the NL 3-2 in the 92nd MLB All-Star Game on Tuesday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Stanton hit a two-run home run in the AL victory.
SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY The Yankees’ Giancarlo Stanton poses with the Ted Williams MVP Award after the AL beat the NL 3-2 in the 92nd MLB All-Star Game on Tuesday at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Stanton hit a two-run home run in the AL victory.

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