Baseball in 21st century


By John M. CRISP

Tribune News Service

Does baseball have a future in America, the land of its birth?

Our nation’s culture seems to be working against it. Baseball has to compete with an overwhelming array of other sports, as well as distractions and entertainments of all sorts, at a time when fans are busier and the younger generation’s attention span has putatively diminished.

But as potential fans have less time and, perhaps, less patience for the stately pace of play, baseball games themselves have gotten longer.

In 1950, the average game was played in 2 hours and 23 minutes; in 2016, a game required more than 3 hours.

Games these days are longer for various reasons. Some of them involve strategy. More specialized relief pitchers entail more pitching changes. Strikeouts are up, which means more batters going deeper into the count. This takes time.

So do commercial breaks and inter-inning entertainments. Some commentators even blame the invention of Velcro, which tempts batters to constantly step out of the box to readjust their batting gloves.

Recently the New York Times asked its readers how to make baseball games shorter and livelier. The suggestions ranged from the immediately practical – make all games seven innings, instead of nine – to the fanciful – give umpires bonuses for shorter games.

In the meantime, Major League Baseball and the players’ union have agreed to speed up play by eliminating the requirement that a pitcher throw four balls to issue an intentional walk. Thus a manager can bypass a powerful hitter or set up a double play with a signal to the umpire that moves the batter directly to first base.

Intentional walks

This will save time, of course. Last year in the major leagues 932 intentional walks were issued. Four lobs per walk equals 3,728, which at, say, 18 seconds per pitch amounts to 18 hours and 38 minutes of watching two grown men play catch.

But the actual pitch total was a little short of 3,728. On a few occasions, pitchers overthrew the catcher, allowing baserunners to advance. Even more rarely, a careless pitcher makes a throw too close to the strike zone and an alert batter punches out a hit.

Baseball is about speed, power and strategy, of course, but above all, it’s about control, keeping the leather-covered sphere out of the mitts of your opponents and in the mitts of your teammates. A moment’s inattention and the ball is loose. It could cost a run or a game.

That’s why I’m reluctant to see baseball modify the intentional-walk rule, just as I would hate to see the batter retire directly to the dugout after hitting a home run. It would save time, but it’s not a run until the slugger carefully touches every base.

So how does baseball accommodate fans with less time and younger potential fans to whom baseball might seem tedious? Here’s a suggestion:

Twice a month during the regular season, Major League Baseball should televise a game of spare, old-style baseball, without commercial breaks. Make these day games, on weekends, when kids can watch.

Encourage the players not to dawdle, but let the game develop its own pace. Provide no inter-inning entertainment, no kiss cams, no T-shirt cannons. No attempts to rouse the crowds to cheer. No designated hitter.

Instant replay is great, but don’t permit challenges to calls on the field. Let the ump make an occasional mistake, just like the rest of us.

John M. Crisp, an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service, teaches in the English Department at Del Mar College in Corpus Christi, Texas. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.