Daily Times (Primos, PA)

In wake of Tejada injury, rules on slides examined

- By Ronald Blum

BOCA RATON, FLA. » After watching Mets shortstop Ruben Tejada carried off the field with a broken leg during the playoffs when the Dodgers’ Chase Utley upended him, Major League Baseball is examining whether to adopt a rule eliminatin­g slides not directly at bases on force plays.

The discussion comes two years after MLB banned home-plate collisions. Central baseball officials spoke with teams and the rules committee met at this week’s annual gathering of general managers. There will be more talk at next month’s winter meetings and consultati­on with the players’ associatio­n.

“We don’t want to have guys carried off the field,” Joe Torre, MLB’s chief baseball officer, said Wednesday. “Obviously, you can’t lose sight of what the game is about. You don’t want somebody just not trying to get to second base and not trying to keep the inning going. It’s a thin line that you have to walk, and that’s why it’s really tough to put pen to paper.”

In Game 2 of an NL Division Series, New York led 2-1 with one out in the seventh inning and runners at the corners. Los Angeles’ Howie Kendrick hit a grounder up the middle and second baseman Daniel Murphy flipped to Tejada, who took the throw awkwardly for an apparent force as Utley slid past the bag. Utley slammed into Tejada, whose back was turned. Tejada flipped over as the tying run scored from third. Tejada fractured his right fibula, Utley was ruled safe on video review and the Dodgers scored four runs in the inning en route to a 5-2 victory.

Torre later suspended Utley for two games, ruling the slide illegal, discipline the players’ associatio­n has appealed.

Pittsburgh’s Jung Ho Kang broke his left leg and tore a knee ligament on a takeout slide in September by the Chicago Cubs’ Chris Coghlan, an injury projected to sideline the shortstop for six-to-eight months.

“We had a specific example of something that happened recently, but every team has similar experience­s,” Mets assistant general manager John Ricco said. “I think the industry is concerned with keeping our players healthy and on the field, so I don’t think we’re unique in that respect. We just want to find a way to have a play at second base be fair and at the same time be able to protect our players.”

MLB banned plate collisions ahead of the 2014 season following intense debate that began in May 2011, when the Marlins’ Scott Cousins crashed into Buster Posey. San Francisco’s All-Star catcher sustained a broken bone in his lower left leg and three torn ligaments in his ankle, an injury that ended his season.

“I didn’t think there could be anything that you could do when Posey went down a few years ago,” Torre said. “You sort of felt forced partly because when I was working in the office I’d get letters from parents whose kids were playing in the minor leagues who got carried off the field.” Torre said additional pressure came from former catcher and current St. Louis manager Mike Matheny, who talked “about losing 18 months of his life, where you can’t recall.”

MLB said the number of days catchers were unavailabl­e to play due to contact at home plate dropped 62 percent from 2011-13 to 2014-15.

The current rule covering slides into second base says it is “deliberate, unwarrante­d, unsportsma­nlike action by the runner in leaving the baseline for the obvious purpose of crashing the pivot man on a double play, rather than trying to reach the base.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sports agent Scott Boras, center, speaks to reporters at the baseball general managers’ meetings, Wednesday.
WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sports agent Scott Boras, center, speaks to reporters at the baseball general managers’ meetings, Wednesday.

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