NEW YORK — Tweaking the postseason schedule. Eliminating the link between the All-Star game and World Series. Adding replay for fair-or-foul calls down the lines.
Oh, and a message to the Yankees, Red Sox and Dodgers: Hurry up!
Baseball is looking to make adjustments. Some soon, others later. Some significant, others subtle.
One change already is in effect. Pitchers now can touch their mouths or lips on the mound at any time to get a better grip. No need to step off or ask the umpire’s permission, provided they’re not standing on the rubber and then wipe their fingers.
The Official Playing Rules Committee made that shift in December, the same month commissioner Bud Selig convened a special, 14-member panel to examine all facets of the game. He repeatedly said “there are no sacred cows.”
The group will look at scheduling, pace of game, realignment, umpiring and other areas. Selig promises to seriously study the panel’s suggestions.
Major League Baseball made one recommendation without waiting. It’s directly calling the Yankees, the Dodgers and Boston slow pokes, and telling them to speed up.
The Yankees (3:08), Red Sox (3:04) and Dodgers (3:02) played the longest nine-inning games last year, STATS LLC said; the MLB average was 2 hours, 52 minutes. Boston closer Jonathan Papelbon was fined $5,000 for slow play and the champion Yanks drew the eye — and ire — of baseball for holding incessant mound meetings in the postseason.
“We have hitters that see a lot of pitches. The Red Sox have hitters that see a lot of pitches. We haven’t played the Dodgers so I don’t really know. But that’s going to be a part of it,” Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.
“We do whatever we can. We tell the players what to do, but if you’re going to score runs and see lots of pitches and there’s pitching changes, the game’s going to be longer. But we’re doing everything we can to adhere to the rules,” he said.
There aren’t any threats about what will happen if they don’t comply. Will the prompts help? “We told those three the same thing last year,” MLB vice president of on-field operations Bob Watson said.
Talks have started, meanwhile, between management and the players’ union on altering the postseason schedule this year. Los Angeles Angels manager Mike Scioscia loudly complained last October when his team went through a stretch of playing eight games in 20 days.
MLB and the union are discussing whether an extra off-day during the AL championship series can be pulled. Scioscia, a member of Selig’s blue-ribbon panel, made that a point of emphasis during a meeting of committee members and conference calls.
Any chance of expanding the opening round to a best-of-seven, however, will have to wait until the current labor contract expires after the 2011 season.
“The commissioner paid attention to everything that was on the table, put a lot of thought into it. I think he appreciated all the input,” Scioscia said. “What I was really adamant about was the structure of the postseason as far as how many games you play and how the postseason needs to keep a flow. I know that he paid a lot of attention to it and I’m sure he’ll address it at the proper time.”
Selig has said he anticipates making some announcements before the season starts April 4.
The panel is expected to look hard at whether the league that wins the All-Star game should be awarded home-field advantage in the World Series. The American League has won seven in a row since the innovation began and the issue has constantly drawn debate, with many fans and players saying there are other ways to determine who hosts Game 1.
Among other topics the committee has explored: realignment to better group teams of similar economic situations and changes to the amateur draft. The union generally would be OK on making all players subject to an international draft, but would oppose attaching fixed signing bonuses to each slot.
Replay also drew interest following a postseason of missed calls. At some point, the committee is expected to present its view on using replay to review balls that land in play near the foul lines. That change would require approval from the umpires.
Cleveland general manager Mark Shapiro said announcements from Selig’s office were on the way.
“The commissioner has set a definite agenda on a variety of topics and I’m excited on the progress that was made,” he said.
———
AP Sports Writers Howie Rumberg and Janie McCauley and AP freelance writer Chuck Murr contributed to this report.
Baseball
Playoff sked, pace of game drawing attention
- Baseball
-
-
Miners advance to state final
The Mountain Ridge Miners blanked Bohemia Manor, 3-0, in their Class 1A state semifinal late Wednesday night at McCurdy Field.
-
Red Sox power past Orioles
Daniel Nava and Kelly Shoppach hit sixth-inning homers to turn a tie game in Boston’s favor, and the Red Sox withstood two home runs by Nick Johnson in a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles on Wednesday.
-
Hamels hurls Phillies over Nationals, 3-1
Cole Hamels pitched eight scoreless innings, finishing up by retiring Bryce Harper on a grounder as the Philadelphia Phillies snapped a season-long four-game losing streak Wednesday night with a 3-1 victory over the Washington Nationals.
-
Ortiz leads Red Sox in comeback victory
David Ortiz homered in the sixth inning to start Boston's comeback from a three-run deficit, and the Red Sox got three hits from Will Middlebrooks in an 8-6 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.
-
Salisbury loses in District playoffs
Evan Appleby hit a grand slam on top of throwing a complete game to lead McConnellsburg past Salisbury by a score of 14-3 in the first round of the Pennsylvania District 5 Playoffs.
-
Jones’ dozen strikeouts leads Lakeview
Lakeview Auto Parts rallied for four runs in the top of the seventh and pitcher Trevon Jones struck out 12 in pitching a complete-game five-hitter in a 6-2 Hot Stove Baseball League win over previously undefeated Riverside Sports Monday at Bel Air Field.
-
Strietbeck leads Mountain Ridge to region crown
Dan Strietbeck kept Manchester Valley’s bats quiet and Mountain Ridge scrapped its way to four runs to win the Maryland Class 1A West Region baseball title with a 4-1 victory Friday evening at McCurdy Field in Frederick.
-
Harrison single ends Verlander no-hit bid in 9th
Justin Verlander came within two outs of his third no-hitter, allowing only Josh Harrison’s ninth-inning single in the Detroit’s 6-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.
-
Wood gets final strikeout, retires after 13-plus seasons
Kerry Wood arrived in the majors 14 years ago, a fresh-faced kid with No. 34 on his back, slinging fastballs at 100 mph, delivering breaking pitches that were often unhittable and striking out 20 batters in just his fifth start.
-
Miners upset Northern on Malone, Mills homers, 7-3
Mountain Ridge added three runs to a 4-3 lead during the top of the sixth inning to pull away from top-seeded Northern as the No. 2 Miners played their way into the Maryland 1A West Region finals with a 7-3 win Wednesday at Northern.
- More Baseball Headlines
-
Miners advance to state final

