USA TODAY International Edition

Proposed changes could rid game of traditions

- Gabe Lacques

Evolution is inevitable, and good, and that can even apply to baseball.

Change once came in drips, but two decades of innovation on the backfields and batting cages and boardrooms has flooded the diamond.

Now, Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred wants to blow up the dam.

A bevy of significant rule changes — often discussed, but often not long for the negotiatin­g table — are being batted about by MLB and the players’ associatio­n, a list of bullet points that go far beyond limiting mound visits or telling pitchers to hurry it up a bit.

No, what’s on the table right now would, to borrow a turn of phrase from Manfred, render extinct significant elements of baseball as we know it.

There’s a lot of smarts in these proposals, which were first reported by The Athletic sports website. There’s also a Pandora’s box of unintended consequenc­es. Let’s try to parse them out.

The universal DH

Unless you’re 55 or older, you have no solid recollecti­on of a world without the designated hitter.

It would certainly be a drag to see what we’ve come to know as the National League style of play vanish. And the universal DH will almost assuredly tack time onto the game, as one more Three True Outcomes slugger will grind out lengthy at-bats where a pitcher once quietly and quickly flailed.

Still, it’s not like the NL has lapped the American in time of game; in the past four seasons, just 19 of the 37 teams whose games ran the longest hailed from the AL. Length of game seems to correlate more strongly with whether a team is in contention and thus more deliberate in its actions.

The union will certainly not object to a bevy of higher-paying jobs getting created, and it would enable guys such as Mark Reynolds to sign actual, major league deals rather than the boilerplat­e (collusive?) minor league deal with a $1 million guarantee should he make the team. (Reynolds has produced a .821 OPS the past three seasons while getting paid between $1 million and $2.6 million.)

So the double switch will die. There will also be more home runs and a slot in the lineup for marquee players who might otherwise take the day off altogether. We can live with that.

The three-batter minimum

Sure, nobody has enjoyed the Creeping La Russaism that has infected baseball since the legendary manager revolution­ized the use of lefty specialist­s and exhaustive matching up.

Yet it’s also undeniably been part of the game going on four decades. Like the DH, it has created a specialize­d line of work.

And much like the talk of limiting shifts that has gotten many up in arms, it goes against everything baseball stands for to legislate legitimate strategy out of the game.

Then again, if nobody’s still up at 12:30 a.m. when the ninth pitcher of the night records the final out, perhaps baseball does have a problem.

So here’s a less extreme solution: Allow one La Russa Voucher per game.

If it’s late September, and the Red Sox and Yankees are vying for a division title, and it’s a 2-1 game, and Aaron Boone has been dreaming all night of sticking Zach Britton on Andrew Benintendi, should we really force Britton to face J.D. Martinez, too, when a rested Dellin Betances is ready?

To eliminate that option seems like overreach. At the same time, limiting that option would create even more strategy.

Hey, if the Brewers want to pull some Wade Miley shenanigan­s in the playoffs, cool. But they’re out of luck if they want to match up in the later innings.

The pitch clock

As you watch the NFL or any baseball game and see every replay tortured and analyzed from every angle, have you ever asked yourself, “You know, we could really use more regulation­s in sports.”

Well, imagine a pitcher releasing a pitch 20.3 seconds after the pitch clock started. Would the opposing manager, the batter, a baserunner point at the clock as if a major injustice occurred?

Would a replay review be required, or would a buzzer in the umpires’ pocket be judge, jury and pitcher-cutioner?

Certainly, pitchers can work more quickly. Not surprising­ly, the 26 slowest workers in 2018 were all relievers; they pitch in the tensest moments of the game and throw harder, requiring more recovery time between pitches.

But you also can’t expect pitchers

merely to catch and release. Of the 336 pitchers who threw at least 50 innings last season, just three — Brent Suter, Steven Matz and that man Miley again — averaged less than 20 seconds a pitch. At the very middle of that group, the average pitch time was 24 seconds.

Can we honestly expect your standard pitcher to shave four seconds off his between-pitch routine and not be affected? Would the mere existence of the clock not somehow distract and detract from fan, pitcher and batter experience?

Not everyone is Pedro Baez or Bud Norris. So rather than punish everybody, throw the book at the most chronic offenders — those who average 27 or more seconds between pitches.

Fine them. Put them on the clock, or threaten to do so. Forcing everyone to alter their behavior merely to shave seconds has both competitiv­e and aesthetic ramifications.

 ??  ?? Dodgers manager Dave Roberts makes a pitching change during Game 4 of the World Series. JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/USA TODAY SPORTS
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts makes a pitching change during Game 4 of the World Series. JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA/USA TODAY SPORTS
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