Houston Chronicle

Spring training a trial run for new rules

- By David Brandt

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Spring training games might be a little ugly this year, particular­ly during the first few weeks.

For Major League Baseball, that’s a feature, not a bug.

The Grapefruit and Cactus League games in Florida and Arizona over the next month will be used as a petri dish for the sport’s rule changes, including a pitch clock, bigger bases and limits to infield shifts. The idea is that the worst kinks will be worked out before opening day on March 30.

Though there’s multiple innovation­s, one stands above the rest.

“The pitch timer is — by far — the biggest change that’s coming this season,” MLB executive vice president Morgan Sword said Tuesday. “Frankly, it’s probably the biggest change that’s been made to baseball in most of our lifetimes.”

The pitch clock has been tested for a few years in the minor leagues. Pitchers will have 15 seconds to deliver their pitch with no runners on base and 20 seconds when runners are on base. There will be 30 seconds between batters and 2 minutes, 15 seconds between innings.

MLB games averaged 3 hours, 4 minutes last season following the introducti­on of the PitchCom electronic device to signal pitches, down from a record 3:10 in 2021. Sword said MLB’s research indicates fans prefer games that are around 2:30.

The pitch clock’s effect on minor league games in 2022 was substantia­l. Games that used the clock were, on average, 25 minutes shorter than those that did not.

“Fans want a crisper pace,” Sword said.

Sword said umpires will be watching for more balks when runners are on base. Some pitchers — particular­ly relievers — have funky idiosyncra­sies in their deliveries and never come to a complete stop before delivering a pitch. That’s technicall­y a balk, but umpires usually let it slide.

A complete stop with no movement becomes more significan­t because the pitch clock operator turns off the clock once the pitcher’s motion toward the plate begins.

Sword said many MLB players who spent time in the minors during 2022 grew to appreciate the clock, even though there was an adjustment period. He said most players needed a few weeks to a month to get used to the changes, which is about the length of spring training’s game schedule.

Sword said the rule changes will be “full go” from the first day of spring training. That might lead to some irritated players and awkward moments during late February’s spring training games.

Former big league pitcher Joe Martinez, who is MLB’s vice president for on-field strategy, demonstrat­ed some of the logistics on Tuesday at Talking Stick Field, spring training home of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and Colorado Rockies.

He also detailed some of the technology that will be used to make the new pitch clock system happen, including buzzers for umpires, which vibrate when a pitcher has run out of time.

• MLB said it’s looking forward to a season without COVID-19 as a main concern. The past three seasons have at least been partially affected by the virus, which shut down spring training in March 2020.

No fans were allowed to attend games during the shortened 2020 regular season, and attendance was severely curtailed at many parks through much of 2021, when the average crowd was 18,901. Last year’s average of 26,843 was down 5.3 percent from 2019’s 28,339.

• MLB introduced balanced schedules for its 162-game regular season. The schedules will focus less on division rivals and more on making sure all teams play against each other every season.

Teams will play division rivals 13 times this season as opposed to 19 times under the schedule that had been used since 2001. Most of those division games are being shifted to the interleagu­e schedule, which pits teams from the National League against those from the American League.

 ?? Photos by Morry Gash/Associated Press ?? MLB’s vice president of on-field strategy Joe Martinez talked about some of the logistics of how the new pitch clock will work. All rule changes will be “full go” from the start of spring training.
Photos by Morry Gash/Associated Press MLB’s vice president of on-field strategy Joe Martinez talked about some of the logistics of how the new pitch clock will work. All rule changes will be “full go” from the start of spring training.
 ?? ?? MLB increased the size of bases from 15 inches, pictured left, to 18 inches.
MLB increased the size of bases from 15 inches, pictured left, to 18 inches.

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