The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Analytics helping speed up baseball

- By Jimmy Golen

Robot umpires. A strike zone that looks more like a stop sign than a rectangle. Allowing the batter to take off for first base on any pitch, not just a dropped third strike.

With the new pitch clock speeding up the sport, baseball’s brain trust already is trying to figure out what might come next in its efforts to make games more exciting and keep them moving along.

And the people running the sport are using the same kind of number-crunching analytics that caused the problem to solve the problem.

“This is Phase One. There probably is more coming,” Major League Baseball executive vice president Morgan Sword said March 3 at the MIT Sloan School Sports Analytics Conference. “But with every single one of these things, we’ve always tried to (ask): ‘Is this a reasonable change that baseball fans are going to support, or are we veering toward something that’s not baseball any more?’

“It’s a very subjective skill,” Sword said. “There’s lots of things that would work that would just irritate people too much to make it worth it.”

The MIT conference began in 2007 as a small gathering of stat nerds who believed they had found a better way to measure everything from free agent signings to when to go for it on fourth down. It’s now a 2,200-person conclave that fills a downtown convention center with powerful people.

Over the years, some of

the strategies the statistici­ans came up with to help a team win also changed the nature of games. In basketball, that meant players attempting 3-pointers at unpreceden­ted rate; in baseball, it led to a game that has gotten longer and more boring.

The average time of a nine-inning game has stretched from 2 hours, 30 minutes in the mid-1950s to 2:46 in 1989 and 3:10 in 2021.

Statistics pioneer Bill James said “it’s past time” for those running the national pastime to fight back. And he praised them for using the nerds’ own numbers to do it.

“In a sense, the game is a war between the front offices, who are trying to figure out a way to make the game slow and boring, and (league officials) who are trying to figure out a way to make it fast and exciting,”

he said.

“We have some very intelligen­t adversarie­s in that war,” Sword replied.

Sword said the commission­er’s office worked backward from surveys that showed fans want more action and less time waiting for events to happen. MLB tested dozens of possible solutions in the minor leagues during the past two years and some proved impractica­l.

“Many of them wound up on the cutting room floor,” he said.

Future changes would be designed to increase batting averages and cut down on strikeouts that reached a historic high in 2021: The majors are whiffing at a rate higher than batters facing Hall of Famer Sandy Koufax.

“We’re rushing to get stuff done that should have been done 30 years ago,” James said on the conference’s

baseball rules panel. “And let’s get on with it.”

Moving fences back would increase batting averages, but it would be expensive and in some ballparks impractica­l. James mentioned that short home runs down the line used to be a double; that one is also unlikely to be brought back. Changes in equipment and playing surfaces have also been discussed.

Sword said he wants the dropped third strike rule extended to all pitches, but conceded: “Nobody likes that except for me.”

James also suggested “adding sides” to the current rectangula­r strike zone to exclude hard-to-hit pitches at the corners. Most umpires are already adjusting for this, unofficial­ly and perhaps unintentio­nally.

It would be possible to implement with the automated umpires being used in Triple-A this season.

 ?? MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Home plate umpire Jim Wolf waits as the pitch clock counts down during a spring training game between the Brewers and the Dodgers on Feb. 25.
MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Home plate umpire Jim Wolf waits as the pitch clock counts down during a spring training game between the Brewers and the Dodgers on Feb. 25.

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