The eight-team Atlantic League, which has franchises along the East Coast, will enact the change during the second half of its 120-game regular season, one person familiar with the matter said. It will be the first change of mound regulations in professional baseball since 1969, when MLB lowered the mound after a season in which seven starting pitchers posted sub-2.00 ERAs.
MLB officials pushed for the experiment after years of internal deliberations about altering the distance from the mound to home plate, one of the people familiar with the discussions, who spoke anonymously so as to freely detail the private sessions, told The Washington Post. It is geared toward increasing action on the base paths and increasing the amount of contact make.
“[MLB leaders] reached the conclusion that the things that drew us to the game in the first place are being eclipsed by absolute outcomes, and, frankly, people find it boring,” one of the people involved in the decision said. “Batters will hit the ball more frequently, and that’s really the root of what we’re doing here.”
An MLB official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, explained that moving back the mound has been brought up for years, but then dismissed as too radical.
But when the league began to consider other, more minor changes, its leadership concluded it would be “negligent” not to test the one change that might solve the problem on its own.
“We kept coming back to the fact that we can try to change four or five things, and we’re going to, to try to nudge the game in the right direction and get more contact back,” an MLB official said. “But we’d probably be negligent if we didn’t at least try the one solution that, while we were calling it radical, might in and of itself be the solution.”
The Atlantic League will also institute a “double hook” rule governing the designated hitter: Teams can keep a DH in their lineups as long as their starting pitcher remains in the game. When a manager goes to the bullpen, the new pitcher must bat or be substituted out of the game.
That rule amounts to a compromise between the rules in the American League, where teams can use the designated hitter for all of their pitchers, and the National League, where teams are not allowed to use one at all.
MLB hopes that allowing teams to use a designated hitter until the starter is out of the game will incentivize teams to rely more on starting pitchers, something the league’s fan surveys said would be a popular shift. At a time when several teams use “openers” for a few innings and even proven top starters often last just five or six innings, league officials hoped the loss of a designated hitter might influence some managers to keep their starter in an inning or two more.
Moving the mound back has not been expected to be part of those conversations, and it almost certainly will be a polarizing experiment. The Atlantic League tried to push the mound back two feet in 2019, before its agreement with MLB, but withdrew the proposal after pushback from pitchers, several of whom threatened to leave the league.
The Atlantic League is independent, and its teams are not affiliated with MLB franchises. It is a partner league with MLB and has debuted experiential rules before — perhaps most notably so-called “robo umps” in 2019. Players there are signed by the teams themselves, which means they are not usually elite prospects and are never under contract with major league organizations.
But even though it won’t be tested on highly paid young players, the new rule could reignite tensions over MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred’s newly experimental eye toward the game. This year, Manfred hired Theo Epstein, the former president of baseball operations for the Chicago Cubs and the former general manager of the Boston Red Sox, to serve as a consultant tasked with finding new ways to increase in-game action and pace of play.
“These rule changes are extremely viable — otherwise MLB wouldn’t do them,” one of the people involved in the discussions said.
But if increasing the size of the bases and limiting shifts qualify as significant rule changes, moving the mound back is a massive one.
The major league mound has been 60 feet 6 inches from home plate since before the 1893 season. Diamonds across the country, from those on the edges of corn fields to polished high school facilities, are built to those specifications. Few numbers, save perhaps the 162-game season, are as sacred. Baseball has a tendency to cling to tradition and seems unlikely to receive a proposed change like that quietly.
“The hypothesis that joint kinetics would increase with pitching distance was not supported, as there were no significant differences found,” wrote the researchers, who did note that the increased distance allowed for more vertical and horizontal break, potentially “counteracting the timing effect” experienced by hitters.
That study only looked at fastball mechanics and was supported by MLB, all of which could provide plenty of fodder for skeptics. But a news release sent out by MLB points to the reaction time for a 93.3-mph fastball, which was the major-league-average velocity in 2020. The same pitch thrown from 61 feet 6 inches is approximately equivalent to a 91.6-mph fastball. That was the majors’ average fastball velocity in 2010.
Even once it has been tested, the rule is far from reaching the majors. If the rule seems to have the desired effect in the Atlantic League, MLB likely first would try it out at lower levels of affiliated minor leagues, then at higher levels of affiliated minor leagues.
There is no guarantee it will have the desired effect. In the process of traveling another foot, for example, a higher percentage of breaking balls could break out of the zone, increasing walks undesirably. On the other hand, the additional time to move could make contact harder to come by, though the additional time could also mean hitters can track the ball longer and react better.
“I think the knowledge we’ll gain is the most important thing,” the MLB official said. “Of all the rule changes, some are going to work well. Some are going to have conflicting impacts. And some will stumble into some unintended, counterproductive consequences. If all that happens is we rule it out, that’s really helpful information that will allow us to focus our resources on other areas that might be more fruitful.”
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