USA TODAY International Edition

Late innings equal late nights

World Series games averaging 3: 41 this fall

- Ronald Blum

HOUSTON – Late innings means late nights in the World Series, with many fans struggling to stay awake as the Braves and Astros play baseball’s most important games of the year.

The first five Series games averaged 3 hours, 41 minutes, up from 3: 37 for the Dodgers’ six- game win over the Rays last year.

This year’s opening World Series game took 4: 06 and Game 5 lasted exactly 4 hours, both ending after midnight on the East Coast.

This year’s overall postseason average of 3: 38 is an increase from 3: 32 last year.

Sooner or later, Major League Baseball will institute a pitch clock – with or without an agreement with the players’ associatio­n.

“I want to be really clear about this,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said before the Series opener. “We have rights under the agreement to do certain things with a certain process that’s been followed. There’s going to come a point in time where the pressure to make change is going to be sufficient. I prefer to do it by reaching an agreement with the players.”

MLB has the right to unilateral­ly change on- field rules with one year of advance notice to the union. During the 2016- 17 offseason, MLB proposed a 20second timer in many situations, with a second violation resulting in the umpire calling a ball.

As part of a March 2019 agreement that increased active rosters from 25 to 26 players and mandated a pitcher face three batters or finish an inning, MLB agreed not to implement a pitch clock through 2021.

Players have been reluctant to consider a clock.

Players union head Tony Clark, a former All- Star first baseman, didn’t give a direct answer when asked whether he wanted to see a crisper product on the field.

“I’m a former player. I owe everything to the game. So do I watch it? Do I critique it? Do I analyze it? Am I willing to have a conversati­on about its wellbeing?” he said. “Always have and will continue to. That’s not going to change. And I’m sure that at the end of the World Series, the dialogue that we’ve had to this point will continue.”

Asked what he thought of MLB’s experiment­s at minor league levels, he responded: “The experience in some instances has been less than favorable.”

Nine- inning games averaged a record 3: 10: 07 during the regular season, up from 3: 07: 46 for the pandemic-shortened 2020 season and 3: 05: 35 in 2019. The average was 2: 49 in 1991 and 2: 33 in 1981.

A pitch clock would eliminate much of the dead time caused when hitters step out of the batter’s box and pitchers back off the mound and take deep breaths on the infield grass.

MLB experiment­ed with a 20- second pitch clock during spring training in 2019, with a cutout on the first pitch of every plate appearance.

“I absolutely am in favor of it,” broadcaste­r Bob Costas said. “For obvious reasons, it gets trickier with men on base.”

Minor league Triple- A and Double- A games have had a 20- second pitch clock since 2015.

“It’s not that hard,” said Houston outfielder Kyle Tucker, who first reached the majors in 2018 and spent time at Triple- A in 2019. “You just, I don’t know, speed it up a little bit, I guess.”

A test was held this season at minor league Low- A West, setting the clock at 15 seconds with the bases empty, 17 seconds with runners on, 30 seconds between batters and 2: 15 for half- inning breaks and pitching changes.

The 316 nine- inning games with the clock averaged 2: 41, down from 3: 02 for the 91 games without a clock.

“Certainly encouragin­g,” Manfred said. “Game times in the 2: 40s, which is a really sort of nice number when you think about it in comparison to where we’ve been. I think maybe more important than that is that people that go and watch the games feel like the pace of the game, the action in the game has really been improved, that it actually alters the requiremen­t of moving along pitching, kind of changes the game the way it’s played a little bit. And that would be a useful change for us.”

Braves manager Brian Snitker didn’t mind the Triple- A clock but isn’t in favor of some possible restrictio­ns. He and Astros manager Dusty Baker both think the primary cause of lengthy postseason games is time between innings.

The break has been set at 2 minutes, 55 seconds for at least 20 years, with 2: 25 for extra innings and pitching changes. That is up from 2: 05 inning breaks during the regular season, except for 2: 25 during nationally broadcast games.

“Commercial time pays the bills, and that’s the reality of it all,” Baker said. “You can cut down the commercial time, and then you’ve got to cut down the amount of money that’s passed around.”

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/ AP ?? A Braves fan watches during the ninth inning in Game 5 of the World Series against the Astros.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/ AP A Braves fan watches during the ninth inning in Game 5 of the World Series against the Astros.

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