Los Angeles Times

Baseball fans vs. the pitch clock

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Re “The pitch clock — you’re gonna love it,” Opinion, March 7

Scott Jennings makes some poor arguments in favor of new rules in Major League Baseball like the pitch clock — not that there are many good ones.

The rules are an attack on baseball’s pace. This sport is unique in that time is not a factor. Each game

has its own pace.

I’m not sympatheti­c to Jennings’ need to herd his four youngsters at games that can last longer than three hours. If you want to leave early, then leave.

TV, baseball’s golden goose, wants shorter games so it can get to its regular programmin­g and its advertisin­g revenue. That’s what it’s all about. And MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred is the right guy to do the networks’ bidding.

Eugene Lesser Los Angeles

Haven’t we mechanized baseball enough with analytics and pitch counts? We’ve practicall­y taken away complete games and no-hitters.

Putting baseball on a clock to speed up the game is a symptom of a much larger issue in society. Today there’s always a need to be in a hurry, even when you aren’t going anywhere. We cannot tolerate boredom, even a minute of it.

In Los Angeles, we arrive at the game in the second inning and leave in the seventh. Many do not even watch the game between eating and texting.

Baseball as a pastoral sport has been destroyed. Harry Schwarz

Agoura Hills

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While understand­ing Jennings’ dislike of the shifts that until recently packed defenders on one side of the infield depending on the hitter, some fans still liked them.

In the National Football League, the defense can blitz or send everyone running after the quarterbac­k if it wants. Or, it can doubleor triple-team one player on the offense. Nobody cries that such an alignment is unfair or that it spoils the symmetry of the field.

Mostly what the shift in baseball has done is expose the inability of today’s hitters to either bunt or hit the opposite way, a skill that some players were taught in Little League.

In football, a quarterbac­k might sneak the ball for a first down instead of throwing a 60-yard pass that ends up incomplete. Why can’t hitters in baseball similarly adjust?

Tim Mull Northridge

 ?? Morry Gash Associated Press ?? THE PITCH CLOCK counts down during a spring training game between the Dodgers and Brewers.
Morry Gash Associated Press THE PITCH CLOCK counts down during a spring training game between the Dodgers and Brewers.

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