New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Boone: Yankees will ‘probably’ keep using PitchCom system

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Gerrit Cole and many of the Yankees' pitchers gave PitchCom a thumbs up.

PitchCom is the new technologi­cal advancemen­t sweeping through Major League Baseball. The system, designed to improve pace of play and eliminate sign stealing, allows pitchers and catchers to communicat­e through wearable devices and transmit signals at the press of a button. Cole said on Friday he liked the system, save for a few predictabl­e snafus that come with trying out new technologi­es. The Yankees' manager also said he got mostly positive feedback from his pitchers who used it on Opening Day.

“I think we probably will (keep using it),” Aaron Boone said on Saturday. “We'll see how it unfolds. I'm sure we'll find some hiccups along the way. But

I think we've transition­ed to it pretty well and the guys seem to like it.”

One problem pitchers faced on Friday was being unable to hear the communicat­ion when they had two strikes on a hitter, as the stadium's PA system blasts the two-strike siren that Aaron Judge pushed for last season. During his time on the mound, reliever Michael King had to step off the mound at one point because he couldn't make out what the device in his hat was telling him to throw.

“That's usually correctabl­e on the fly,” Boone said of the miscommuni­cation. “I don't think that's going to be a huge issue moving forward. Also, if the wrong button gets hit or whatever, you can just step off and shake, or the catcher can call time.”

PitchCom will be an adjustment in itself, but getting back into the rhythms of a baseball season always takes a little bit of time on its own, especially now that the players didn't have their typical training time in Florida. With such a huge amount of games still ahead of them, Boone wants his players to simply get settled in before worrying too much about anything bigger.

“From a pitching standpoint, and certainly from a starting standpoint, making sure we continue to build guys up,” the skipper said of his early season priorities. “You want to play as clean a brand of baseball as you can. I think early in the season, you love to see guys get things out of the way: first hit, first RBI, those kinds of things. Then you can get settled into the grind of the regular season. Sometimes when you get off to a slow start, that can weigh on you.”

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