JUPITER, Fla. โ Thereโs a lot that Marlins ace Sandy Alcantara likes about Major League Baseballโs new rules, such as the limitation on infield shifts.
โLast year I got so mad sometimes because they move the position player and the ball was right there,โ the NL Cy Young Award winner said.
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One of the biggest ways the sport is addressing its slowly moving product is the introduction of a pitch clock. Pitchers now get 15 seconds between deliveries if there's no runner on base, 20 seconds if someone is aboard. And it's 30 seconds to resume play between batters.
The pitch clock will take some getting used to, Alcantara said, though he's not too worried about the adjustment because he's used to working pretty quickly. But working with the new pitch timer in spring training has taken more energy out of him than he expected.
โEspecially when itโs hot like today,โ Alcantara said after pitching two innings against the New York Mets in Jupiter, Florida, where temperatures were in the upper 80s. โI mean, I was trying to take my time because I was getting tired when I throw pitch by pitch by pitch.โ
Thatโs an early adjustment that many pitchers are grappling with. Most have been pleased with the faster pace of play, which has dropped from 3 hours, 1 minute last spring to 2:39. The Mets beat the Marlins 8-4 Wednesday in 2:37.
But with less time between innings and pitches, players have expressed worries about rushing, as some are getting winded from running back and forth after certain plays.
โKind of tough to get your breath after backing up third base and you know you only have 25, 30 seconds to get back on the mound,โ Miami left-hander Jesรบs Luzardo said.
After about a week of spring training, pitch clock violations are being called at a rate of 1.63 per game.
Already, it's become a new sign of the times in baseball โ an umpire pointing to his wrist, indicating a pitcher dawdled too long.
Mets ace Max Scherzer, who is eagerly testing the range of what's allowed, was called for a balk after going too quickly. New York Yankees reliever Wandy Peralta, meanwhile, recorded a three-pitch strikeout in a lightning-fast 20 seconds.
Marlins manager Skip Schumaker likened the new pace to conditioning in the weight room.
โYou lift the most weight when you have a little bit of rest,โ he said. "If youโre maxing out, youโre waiting a couple of minutes before your next rep. If youโre not conditioned, that next rep isnโt as good as the first rep. That goes with pitching, too. How sharp are you going to be if youโre not conditioned?
โGoing behind home plate, backing up third, sprinting to first, all that is real. How about covering first base in St. Louis in July when itโs 110 degrees and itโs the sixth inning and youโre 85 pitches in?โ
As for other instances when pitchers could be winded, Schumaker said it could come into play when relievers enter from the bullpen.
โColorado is my concern,โ he said. โItโs at altitude and itโs in right-center-field, and when youโre running in from there, youโre pretty tired. I wonder what that looks like."
Miami reliever Matt Barnes wondered if the shorter time between innings will tempt pitchers to throw fewer warmup pitches.
โSay youโve got a long run in in Chicago. Itโs April 15 and itโs 30 degrees out, and you get out there,โ Barnes said. โAre they going to say you have one more (warmup pitch) or youโre going to throw a ball, and you only get four pitches, and now youโre risking injury?โ
Arizona left-hander Joe Mantiply was assessed an automatic ball in a game against the Cubs because he didnโt finish his warmup pitches quickly enough after entering as a reliever.
โWeโre trying to train for it,โ Detroit Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. โEverything that weโre doing off the mound we are doing with a clock. So, bullpens, lives (live batting practice), obviously the games, weโre going to make sure that these guys get used to pitching at the pace in which theyโre going to have to pitch.โ
Cardinals reliever Jordan Hicks said he could see pitchers becoming winded in certain situations.
โWhen I ran in last year from the bullpen โ thatโs pretty far โ and Iโd throw all my (warmup) pitches, Iโd be out of breath without the pitch clock.โ
Known for his blazing fastball, Hicks said he has thought about ways of slowing things down this season.
One option, he said, is to back away and use one of his step-offs to catch his breath. Under the new rules, pitchers can disengage from the rubber โ either to call timeout or to attempt a pickoff throw โ twice per plate appearance.
โYou could walk around the grass and grab the rosin. Iโm sure if it gets too deliberate, where they say, โOh, youโre avoiding the rules,โ then theyโll probably say something. But if youโre quick about, thatโs an extra three seconds right there.โ
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AP freelance writers Mark Didtler and Rick Hummel contributed to this report.
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