Orlando Sentinel

How about new ideas to save bullpens?

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COMMENTARY managers to empty their bullpens, if necessary, so the use of position players should slow.

According to ESPN Stats and Info, 24 teams have used a position player at least once, while the Cubs and Brewers lead the majors with six positionpl­ayer appearance­s (by five different Cubs and two different Brewers).

Everyone gets a good laugh, as when

did it last month against the Diamondbac­ks at Wrigley Field, lobbing two pitches to and inducing a long flyout.

Some believe letting position players pitch is embarrassi­ng, while others point out it’s no more embarrassi­ng than watching most National League pitchers hit. The only thing for certain is it’s now an accepted part of baseball strategy.

The “bullpennin­g” of baseball has turned most relievers into one- or twoinning pitchers, and there’s no room on staffs for the old-fashioned “long man” who can eat innings in a losing cause.

Many journeyman pitchers have had to perform such duties in their careers. There was value in the role, despite the fact the pitcher usually was not good enough to start or close, making him easy to “waste” in a blowout.

One performanc­e that sticks out in my mind was watching 23-year-old White Sox reliever

coming into a game against the Orioles in August 1976 after

put the Sox in an 8-0 hole in the second inning.

Vuckovich allowed no runs on two hits over the final 61⁄3 innings, keeping the Sox in a game they lost. In fact, the ’76 Sox lost 97 games, including 18 of the 20 games Vuckovich appeared in from June 30 on.

He was a young arm on a truly awful team but did his job whether “excited” or not and learned how to pitch in the majors. The Sox let the Blue Jays grab Vuckovich in the expansion draft after the ’76 season, and he went on to become one of the American League’s top starters for the Brewers, going a combined 32-10 in 1981 and ’82, winning the ’82 Cy Young Award and helping them reach the ’82 World Series.

Perhaps another Pete Vuckovich is out there on some losing team, hoping to get in work whenever he can to improve and open eyes for next year. Or maybe we’d rather laugh off the endings with position players.

Who knows the answer? But as a Little League aficionado, I’d prefer MLB allow “coach-pitch” in such situations. Instead of position players, get the manager out on the mound to show off his stuff.

Some, such as White Sox manager

could be impressive because they already throw batting practice. Rockies manager

who won 121 games in a 15-year major-league pitching career, can probably still bring it.

And who wouldn’t love to see or

taking the ball from a pitcher and then giving it to himself?

But after Rizzo’s appearance, one fan suggested an even better idea.

“Maybe Maddon is on to something that could be used as a marketing tool,” he wrote. “We already have guest conductors for the seventh-inning stretch. How about guest pitchers?”

That sounds like a great revenue enhancer for baseball, which currently has less action than a

movie and could use some new ideas.

Imagine the Cubs calling on an emergency mopup reliever from the stands, like the Blackhawks used 36-year-old accountant as an emergency goalie last year.

Qualifying fans could enter a lottery to participat­e, and when the Cubs are trailing by eight runs or so, Maddon could make a call to the stands for a fresh arm.

The money would go to charity, the fans would get a kick out of it and the designated mop-up man or woman would get his or her name in the Baseball Encycloped­ia.

It’s worth a shot, though with the Cubs’ luck, big fan

would probably win the lottery.

 ?? MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES ?? Phillies shortstop — yes, shortstop — Scott Kingery allowed 2 runs in 11⁄3 innings of relief work last week against the Mets.
MITCHELL LEFF/GETTY IMAGES Phillies shortstop — yes, shortstop — Scott Kingery allowed 2 runs in 11⁄3 innings of relief work last week against the Mets.
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