Pitch perfect: MLB’s pace-of-play rules are showing that less is more (2024)

The time – emphasis on time – has come to declare that Major League Baseball has nailed its effort to speed up games. MLB people always talked about wanting to finish games in less than three hours, but they never could make it happen. Now they have.

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The average time of a game in the first two-plus months of the season is 2hr 40min – a span not seen since the early 1980s – much shorter than the bloated averages of 3hr 6min in 2022 and 3hr 11min in 2021. But stats are only part of the story.

Two pitch clocks are mounted behind home plate and two above the center field fence to provide ballgames with a rhythm – and to excise all that added time for, say, a hitter to step out of the batter’s box to readjust his gloves, or for a pitcher to stroll around the back of the mound.

Baseball literati like George Will once celebrated the sport as a “timeless game”, without clocks needed, or wanted. But the poets penned those rhapsodies when games were shorter – under two-and-a-half hours on average as recently as 1976. (Will likes the rules changes, by the way.)

The pace grew languid. Fat needed to be trimmed. People don’t have three hours for much of anything now. After a minor-league test drive, MLB rules were changed for this year. Some thought games might feel forced, rushed, even gimmicky. The clocks are not obtrusive at all.

I went to a game recently to judge the effect of the new rules firsthand. The game in Philadelphia between the Phillies and the Arizona Diamondbacks, on a Monday, would be no quickie – 2hr 57min. But it would have lasted another half-hour under the old rules.

Fans don’t pay attention to those three-foot-high clocks with the yellow numerals. I’d thought they might do countdowns, like a scoreboard or 24-second clock indoors. The clocks were immediately switched off, not merely reset to 0, as soon as the pitcher and batter engaged.

The time limits sound tight, but they aren’t. Pitchers have 15 seconds to begin throwing a pitch, 20 seconds if a runner is on base. Hitters need to be in the batter’s box, focused on the pitcher, with at least eight seconds on the clock. A ball is added to the count if a pitcher fails to start his windup in time, with a strike added to the count if a batter is not locked in on the pitcher.

There is some wiggle room. Pitchers are limited to two “disengagements” – ie stepping off the rubber or trying to pick off a runner – per plate appearance. Additionally, each team is given five mound visits per game, a statistic kept on the big scoreboard at Citizens Bank Park.

Of the 18 half-innings in the Diamondbacks’ 6-3 victory, eight took five minutes or less. Only two took more than 10 minutes: Arizona’s three-run, four-hit second inning, and the home seventh, which included a mid-inning pitching change and ended with the bases loaded.

The game still ended with nine runs, about the same as MLB’s 2023 average of 9.11, up about a half-run from 2022. There were four home runs. Slightly bigger bases and a rule that limits infielders from “shifting” to a batter’s strength might have helped the teams to 16 hits.

Pitch perfect: MLB’s pace-of-play rules are showing that less is more (1)

There were no pitch-clock violations in the Arizona-Philadelphia game – and only three in 12 major-league games that night, per a brand-new Twitter site, @MLBClockViolations, put together by a Canadian sports fan and web-services director named Luke DeWitt.

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(Pitch-clock violations have not disappeared as pitchers and batters have become more familiar with the rules, DeWitt told me, but players are becoming more comfortable. There were 82 violations in the first 15 days of June, compared with 146 in the first 15 days of the season.)

With restrictions brought on by the pandemic now gone, the rules changes also might have helped boost attendance to 27,244 per game through 15 June, compared with 26,566 all of last year. And summer, the height of the baseball season, is still to come.

In large part because the Phillies got hot at the end of last season and made it to the World Series, Philadelphia’s average home attendance has spiked this year, to 39,228 per game compared with 27,689 at the same point of last season, or a 42% uptick. One possible reason is that weeknight games start earlier, a benefit to families with school-age kids.

A big-league ball game is not a cheap night out. I paid $40 on StubHub for a ticket with a $48 face value to sit in Section 317, behind home plate but in the upper deck, just below the nosebleed seats. Parking was $25. A Federal Donuts chicken-tenders platter was $12.49.

The Phillies pushed up the start of midweek night home games to 6.40pm from 7.05pm, so this game ended at 9.40pm. Many families still headed for the parking lots after the seventh inning ended at 9. But they would have seen less than six innings a year ago.

Clocks have been used recently to mark time between half-innings and during mid-inning pitching changes late in games – which have practically bogged down games since there have been relief pitchers. Now, a reliever has two minutes to get to the mound.

These pitch clocks could be ominous, looming over a ballgame like an examination proctor, but the atmosphere is the same. Kids in Little League shirts still cavort in the aisles, and fans still efficiently stride to the concession stands for a mid-game beer ($10.99 to $15.99).

And, speaking of beer, three teams quickly announced they were extending the time in which they sell cold ones – from seven to eight innings – because the new rules resorted in shorter game times. Why, a fan stuck in a beer line might miss more action on the diamond!

The Phillies did not respond to my request asking if food and beer sales were down because games were shorter. But crowds have been bigger, so it might be a wash, anyway.

The Phillies lost, but I heard no one grumbling that he or she had been short-changed. After the final out, the people left in the park sort of did a collective shrug, got out of their blue seats and headed for their cars or the subway. I bet most of them will return.

Pitch perfect: MLB’s pace-of-play rules are showing that less is more (2024)

FAQs

Pitch perfect: MLB’s pace-of-play rules are showing that less is more? ›

Pitch perfect: MLB's pace-of-play rules are showing that less is more. The time – emphasis on time – has come to declare that Major League Baseball has nailed its effort to speed up games. MLB people always talked about wanting to finish games in less than three hours, but they never could make it happen.

What are the pace of play changes for the MLB? ›

The new rule set time limits of 30 seconds between batters, 15 seconds between pitches with empty bases, and 20 seconds between pitches with occupied bases. The result was a 24-minute decrease in game length, according to Ronald Blum of the Associated Press.

How much shorter are MLB games with the pitch clock? ›

NEW YORK -- The average time of a nine-inning major league game dropped to 2 hours, 40 minutes in the first year of the pitch clock, a 24-minute decrease in a season of change that resulted in a spike in batting average and the most stolen bases in nearly 40 years.

Has the pitch clock sped up games? ›

On Sept. 8, 2022, Major League Baseball announced a new rule to increase the pace of play throughout Major League games for the 2023 season and beyond.

What is the quickest MLB game ever played? ›

Not one hour and 51 minutes. Fifty-one minutes. On 28 September 1919, five days before the Cincinnati Reds met the Chicago White Sox in an infamous World Series tattered by gambling, the New York Giants beat the Philadelphia Phillies, 6-1, in New York in the first game of a doubleheader – in 51 minutes.

How fast do MLB players have to react to a pitch? ›

Hitters have roughly 0.40 seconds reaction time (typically) to: determine the type of pitch. determine if it's a strike or a ball. determine the speed of the pitched ball.

How does MLB measure pitch speed? ›

PITCHf/x is a system using three permanently mounted cameras in the stadium to track the speed and location of a pitched baseball from the pitcher's mound to home plate with an accuracy of better than one mile per hour and one inch.

What is the MLB pitch clock rule? ›

The pitch clock: With runners on base, pitchers will have 18 seconds between pitches, down from 20 this year. MLB proposed the change after seeing the average time of a nine-inning game grow by more than seven minutes, from 2 hours, 36 minutes in April to 2:44 in September.

How much time does the pitch clock save? ›

Games reduced by 30 minutes

The length of a nine-inning game is shorter by 30 minutes, down to two hours and 37 minutes. That's 81 hours over the course of a 162-game schedule. There are also more runs being scored and more balls in play.

Has the pitch clock helped? ›

While the changes (and others made previously, including putting a runner on second base when a game goes to extra innings and no longer making the pitcher throw the four pitches associated with an intentional walk) have succeeded in speeding up the game, not everyone agrees that this is a good thing.

Why do pitchers not pitch complete games anymore? ›

One reason for the decrease in complete games is that it appears that the age of specialization has arrived in baseball. This is particularly true for pitchers. There are starting pitchers, long -relief pitchers short-relief pitchers, right-handed pitchers, left-handed pitchers, and closers.

What is the fastest pitch ever clocked in MLB history? ›

This statistic refers to the highest recorded velocity at which a baseball pitch has been thrown in the history of Major League Baseball (MLB). Aroldis Chapman, a professional baseball player, holds this record with a pitch that clocked in at a speed of 105.1 miles per hour (mph).

Has there ever been a perfect pitching game? ›

In the history of Major League Baseball, there have been 24 total perfect games. They are understandably are a rarity because they require a pitcher to last the entirety of a game without a player from the opposing team reaching base.

What is the longest baseball game ever played professionally? ›

The Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings, two teams from the Triple-A International League, played the longest game in professional baseball history over three days in 1981. The game lasted 33 innings, with 8 hours and 25 minutes of playing time.

What was the 51 minute baseball game? ›

September 28, 1919: Giants and Phillies record 51 outs in 51 minutes, the fastest game in major-league history. At the end of the 1919 season, two teams from these cities that love to hate one another came together for a game that has no equal.

What's the longest an MLB game has gone without a run? ›

The Mets, it seems, have a penchant for playing in historically long games. Six years before they played 25 innings in Flushing, they played 24 against the Astros in Houston. Incredibly, the game was scoreless until the bottom of the 24th, the longest any Major League game has ever stayed scoreless.

What are potential changes to MLB? ›

More MLB rule changes proposed, including batter timeouts, pitching changes and mound visits. The reduction in the pitch clock from 20 to 18 seconds with runners on base is the most significant proposal Major League Baseball's joint competition committee is considering, but not the only one.

What are they doing to speed up baseball games? ›

Under the new rules, pitchers have 15 seconds to throw a pitch when the bases are empty and 20 seconds to do so with runners on base, with a pitch clock behind home plate letting them know how much time is left—similar to a play clock in the NFL.

How much time do you have to react to a 90 mph baseball? ›

Some Hitting Facts:

A hitter has a limited amount of time to react to the pitch ● 90 mph = Approx. 0.45 sec. 80 mph = Approx. 0.50 sec.

What is the 40 man rule in MLB? ›

Each MLB team is allowed to have 40 players on their roster that are protected, signed to major league contracts with that club. The 40-man roster contains all 25 active Major League players as well as 15 other players that are in various spots in the club's minor league system or on the MLB injured list.

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