Quote:
I don't see the allure of missing April paychecks over this outside of this being some d*** waving contest where you want to feel like u won. The owners aren't going to agree to a bonus pool that is dang near like adding another team's payroll to the league
Welp, that didn't go as planned.
— Jesse Rogers (@JesseRogersESPN) March 2, 2022
All parties are headed home today. Hopefully the progress they did make here in Fla. can still lead to a deal sooner rather than later.
Fingers crossed for the sport.
Right!?! The shift has been used forever. It just goes in and out of style. It's in style right now is all…Ags #1 said:
Are they really talking about banning the shift?
So lay down a bunt.... Guys have bunted doubles because half the field was unoccupied....CampingAg said:
I used to be against banning the shift, but actually wouldn't mind it now. The advent of technology/high speed cameras have benefitted pitching much more than hitting.
Dumb people will say gO tHe OtHeR wAy. Okay, that was fine when the average fastball was 92mph. Now you have sliders coming in at 98.
How has analytics made it slower? Watch any older game from the 70s or 80s. The pitchers get the ball and throw it right back and batters stay in the box. That speeds up the game. Pitch clock helps that.Nitro Power said:
Robot umpires and pitch clocks aren't the answer either.
Analytics is what has made baseball boring and slow.
Funny how the game was just fine for the last 120 years, but when Manturd steps in, it becomes boring and in need of change.
That is a screaming hot take.Nitro Power said:
Robot umpires and pitch clocks aren't the answer either.
Analytics is what has made baseball boring and slow.
Funny how the game was just fine for the last 120 years, but when Manturd steps in, it becomes boring and in need of change.
I have watched games where they change the shift in the middle of an at bat. It could be player placement, or it could be completely having players change position. Do you think this is based on a "feel for the game"? No, it is based on percentages of balls put in play. How does this not have an impact? Further, the lefty, righty nonsense was based on analytics. Now, in fairness, they have rectified that to an extent, but it changes the overall strategy of the game.Quad Dog said:How has analytics made it slower? Watch any older game from the 70s or 80s. The pitchers get the ball and throw it right back and batters stay in the box. That speeds up the game. Pitch clock helps that.Nitro Power said:
Robot umpires and pitch clocks aren't the answer either.
Analytics is what has made baseball boring and slow.
Funny how the game was just fine for the last 120 years, but when Manturd steps in, it becomes boring and in need of change.
Robo umps would eliminate arguing balls and strikes and speed up the game.
So would giving the pitcher and catcher a headset to communicate. No more switching up signs and causing delays and confusion.
Imagine this guy with bigger bases... pic.twitter.com/AoXcQLOUUd
— S FORBES (@BigBhoyShane) March 7, 2022
Players have always changed positions during at bats, but it is more extreme now more than ever. I don't think I've ever heard anyone suggest limiting shifts to help pace of play. The arguments for banning shifts is always about improving offense. I don't think shifts are huge deal for pace of play.Nitro Power said:I have watched games where they change the shift in the middle of an at bat. It could be player placement, or it could be completely having players change position. Do you think this is based on a "feel for the game"? No, it is based on percentages of balls put in play. How does this not have an impact? Further, the lefty, righty nonsense was based on analytics. Now, in fairness, they have rectified that to an extent, but it changes the overall strategy of the game.Quad Dog said:How has analytics made it slower? Watch any older game from the 70s or 80s. The pitchers get the ball and throw it right back and batters stay in the box. That speeds up the game. Pitch clock helps that.Nitro Power said:
Robot umpires and pitch clocks aren't the answer either.
Analytics is what has made baseball boring and slow.
Funny how the game was just fine for the last 120 years, but when Manturd steps in, it becomes boring and in need of change.
Robo umps would eliminate arguing balls and strikes and speed up the game.
So would giving the pitcher and catcher a headset to communicate. No more switching up signs and causing delays and confusion.
You refer to pitchers and catchers communication. Again, was not a problem from the past 120 years.
The fact of the matter is, pitch clocks, banning the shift, robot umpires et al, are only going to make incremental changes. Like 5-10 minute / game max.
If you want to make a significant impact, limit advertising and get rid of replay except in the case of fair foul or homeruns.
ETA: Analytics like WAR. is the kind of nonsense that leads people like Jason Heyward getting $184M contracts. Does anyone really believe he justified 25% of that contract based on just his defense?
MLB’s proposal, sources tell me and @Ken_Rosenthal:
— Evan Drellich (@EvanDrellich) March 9, 2022
• Luxury tax thresholds: 230, 232, 236, 240, 242⁰
• Prearb pool: 40m, flat over time
• Pool counts against CBT (1.33m per team)
•Minimum salary: 700, 715, 730, 750, 770
(cont’d)
A big issue, sources tell me and @Ken_Rosenthal: MLB wants to add a new surchage level to the luxury tax. Right now, there are three levels: base, first surcharge, and second surcharge. Now MLB wants to put in a third to deter owners who have a mind to spend well above the pack.
— Evan Drellich (@EvanDrellich) March 9, 2022
Another major part of MLB’s proposal: MLB is tying removal of the qualifying offer to instituting an international draft.
— Evan Drellich (@EvanDrellich) March 9, 2022
International draft “non-starter” for Latin players and might not be acceptable to union even with major MLB give, sources tell @TheAthletic. Union in latest proposal still wants qualifying offer eliminated, as well as higher CBT thresholds and pre-arb pool than MLB has offered.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal) March 9, 2022
Source: MLBPA proposal today moved to $65 million on prearbitration pool and $232m, $235m, $240m, $245m, $250m on CBT thresholds over the deal.
— Evan Drellich (@EvanDrellich) March 9, 2022
Quad Dog said:How has analytics made it slower? Watch any older game from the 70s or 80s. The pitchers get the ball and throw it right back and batters stay in the box. That speeds up the game. Pitch clock helps that.Nitro Power said:
Robot umpires and pitch clocks aren't the answer either.
Analytics is what has made baseball boring and slow.
Funny how the game was just fine for the last 120 years, but when Manturd steps in, it becomes boring and in need of change.
Robo umps would eliminate arguing balls and strikes and speed up the game.
So would giving the pitcher and catcher a headset to communicate. No more switching up signs and causing delays and confusion.
MLB has canceled more games, pushing Opening Day to April 14. The players rejected MLB’s options, and sent back a counter proposal. That counter was not enough to convince owners not to bring down more games.
— Evan Drellich (@EvanDrellich) March 9, 2022