New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Pitching rules loom large

- By David Brandt

PHOENIX — Mark DeRosa said last week that one of his most important jobs as United States manager during the World Baseball Classic is making sure his players understand the tournament is a competitio­n, not an exhibition.

Just two games in, he sort of undercut his own message.

“Obviously, I want nothing more (than) for these guys to repeat as champions and hold up the trophy,” DeRosa said following Sunday’s 11-5 loss to Mexico. “But I’m not going to do anything to jeopardize these guys’ bigleague careers.”

Those two sentences are a good encapsulat­ion of what makes the WBC such an intriguing, but frustratin­g endeavor.

Sure, it’s cool to have an Olympics-style tournament in baseball. But no matter how much players and coaches say they want to win, there are limits to that competitiv­eness.

Lots of limits, actually. Particular­ly when it comes to pitching.

DeRosa’s comments came in the aftermath of a U.S. pitching meltdown against Mexico. Brady Singer and Daniel Bard both got hit hard and struggled with their command. In a normal, competitiv­e setting, DeRosa probably would have pulled each pitcher before the damage could get worse.

But the U.S. manager’s hands were tied. The tournament’s rules — along with directives from MLB clubs — make pitching decisions the toughest part of the job for all skippers in the WBC.

Pitchers for all countries are limited to 65 pitches per outing in the first round. If a player throws more than 50 pitches in an outing, he can’t pitch for the next four days. If he throws more than 30, he can’t pitch the next day. Finally, if he throws on back-toback days, he must sit out the next day.

And that’s just the official rules of the WBC.

Major League Baseball teams — who are allowing their high-priced pitchers to play in the tournament while risking injury — often have even tighter requests of managers.

Some MLB teams don’t want their pitchers throwing on back-to-back days. Others don’t want them to come into the game in the middle of an inning. Still others don’t want them to pitch multiple innings.

It’s a big jigsaw puzzle for DeRosa and all the WBC managers. In some games, it goes smoothly. But in others — like against Mexico — it doesn’t go well.

“There’s a lot of guys that mean a lot to these big-league ballclubs and their seasons,” DeRosa said. “I’m not going to do anything to jeopardize them. I would have loved to have put Kendall (Graveman) back out there after five pitches. I would have loved to put Devin (Williams) back out there after one. But that’s not what we’re doing.”

The trepidatio­n for bigleague teams is understand­able. During a normal year, most MLB pitchers are just starting to ramp up their workload during mid-March spring training games instead of enduring high-stress moments in competitiv­e games.

The worry about potential pitching injuries has also affected the makeup of team rosters. Using the U.S. as an example, the lineup is full of stars like Mike Trout, Nolan Arenado, Mookie Betts and Paul Goldschmid­t. The pitching staff has a lot of guys casual baseball fans probably haven’t even heard of, like Jason Adam or Aaron Loup.

 ?? Chris Coduto/Getty Images ?? Pitching coach Andy Pettitte, left, and manager Mark DeRosa of Team USA pose for a photo after a workout before the start of the World Baseball Classic on March 10 at Chase Field in Phoenix.
Chris Coduto/Getty Images Pitching coach Andy Pettitte, left, and manager Mark DeRosa of Team USA pose for a photo after a workout before the start of the World Baseball Classic on March 10 at Chase Field in Phoenix.

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