Shorter games, more running, more
action. Two years in, MLB's rule changes have provided a jolt
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[September 26, 2024]
By WILL GRAVES
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Two years ago, it looked as if Major League
Baseball was having an existential crisis. To many inside the game,
it certainly felt like one as a sport built on its timelessness
careened toward a future hellbent on speeding things up.
Pitch clocks. Defensive shift bans. Bigger bases. Fewer throwovers.
Ghost runners. Expanded playoffs designed to keep more teams in
contention. All with the expressed purpose of getting the fans in
the stands to put down their phones and the ones sitting at home
from flipping to a channel where something — anything really — was
actually happening.
Though the changes are working, there was trepidation. And with good
reason.
Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts could feel baseball
retreating into the mainstream background, and the metrics — from
attendance to TV ratings on down — backed it up.
“I think that in the last 10 or 20 years, you know, football and
basketball have taken market share,” he said.
The issue wasn’t the players, who are throwing it harder, hitting it
farther and running faster than any generation that came before it.
It was the game itself.
Baseball rule changes having tangible impact
Nearly two seasons into MLB’s great experiment, the bleeding has
stopped. The average game time has dropped to 2 hours, 36 minutes,
the lowest since 1984. Attendance is up 11% since 2022. Viewership —
particularly among fans 18-34 — has risen 10.5% since the changes
were adopted. Youth participation is spiking. Baseball’s social
media ecosystem is thriving.
The angst that accompanied MLB’s modernization has been replaced
with something far different as the 2024 playoffs loom: legit buzz.
The best player on Roberts’ team and arguably the best player on the
planet, Shohei Ohtani, offered proof in Miami last week.
Six swings. Three home runs. Two stolen bases. A club-record 10
RBIs. The inaugural member of the 50/50 club. It was an iconic
performance by Ohtani that broke barriers and social media along
with it.
“I don’t love all the rule changes, but they seem to be making the
game more exciting for fans, which is why we play — for our fans,”
Cleveland Guardians manager Stephen Vogt said.
Fans enjoying watching more action, rising baseball stars
A fanbase that is growing younger seemingly in lockstep with the
game’s bid to get faster. According to MLB, the median age of ticket
buyers has dropped five years (from 51 to 46) since 2019. The number
of tickets sold to fans ages 18-34 has jumped 8.5% over that span.
It helps that the games are getting shorter. Attendance at weeknight
games is up 12% over 2022 per MLB, in part because fans aren’t as
concerned they’re going to be out all night.
“To sit down and watch a game used to be just too much of a time
commitment, right?” said Tate Conrad of Des Moines, Iowa, while
taking in a game at between the Chicago Cubs and New York Yankees in
early September.
Now, not so much. And it’s not just that the games are shorter.
There’s more happening, most notably on the base paths.
The decision to limit pickoffs has allowed base runners to go wild.
There have been nearly 1,000 more stolen bases in 2024 than there
were in 2022 heading into the final days of the regular season and
three teams topped 200 stolen bases for the first time since 1980.
“I just feel like the attention span of people is getting shorter
and shorter,” Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Jake McCarthy said.
“So I just think when you turn on a baseball game, the odds of a
play like that happening — (the changes have) increased the chances
of it.”
Then there is the wave of young stars, including Pittsburgh Pirates
rookie ace Paul Skenes, San Diego Padres outfielder Jackson Merrill,
Kansas City shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. and Cincinnati shortstop Elly
De La Cruz.
That group could eventually be where Ohtani and teammate Mookie
Betts, New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge, and Philadelphia
Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper are now: the faces of the game.
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New York Yankees' Aaron Judge waits to bat during the seventh inning
of a baseball game against the Oakland Athletics in Oakland, Calif.,
Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024. (AP Photo/Nic Coury)
Nontraditional outlets bringing more eyeballs to
baseball
Yet there’s more at play here. It’s not just baseball that’s
changing, but the way the game is being consumed. It’s not just that
more fans are watching games on their phones than ever — MLB.TV’s 28
highest-rated telecasts have all come over the course of the last
two seasons — but that they’re looking toward nontraditional
outlets.
Outlets like Jomboy Media. Co-founded seven years
ago by Jimmy O’Brien when he was in his late 20s along with Jake
Storiale, Jomboy Media offers sports-related content across various
platforms, including a YouTube channel that has nearly 2 million
subscribers.
“My brother is 10 years younger than I am, and baseball abandoned
him,” O’Brien said. “They didn’t put highlights where people could
find them.”
Skenes sees the increasingly symbiotic relationship between players
and content creators as a driver of interest in the game.
“They are growing the game and I think that’s a byproduct of what
we’re doing on the field,” he said.
Loosening swag restrictions in baseball widens the game's appeal
The aim isn’t just to create fans, but players.
There’s evidence that it’s working. Over 16 million children
participated casually in baseball in 2023, according to the Sports &
Fitness Industry Association, more than double what it was in 2014,
the last year before MLB launched it’s “Play Ball” Initiative.
Little League International counts more than 2 million kids playing
youth baseball or softball under its umbrella across the world, a
slight increase over 2019.
It helps MLB has loosened up its staid rules on uniforms and
celebrations, allowing players to express themselves in ways that
used to be forbidden. Bat-flips, hand-gestures and highly specific
home run celebrations are now an accepted part of the game, along
with more freedom for players to use whatever colors they prefer on
their cleats or their gloves.
Swag is important. Pirates manager Derek Shelton points to New York
Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor as proof.
“I think it’s been a very concerted effort by Major League Baseball
to try to make it a little bit more, I don’t know if ‘cooler’ is the
right word but appealing to younger kids because that’s what they
gravitate towards,” Shelton said.
Roberts sees an uptick of optimism on the field, in the stands, and
in the culture. While things are hardly perfect — not in a season
that will end with the historically bad Chicago White Sox crossing
the 120-loss barrier, the Athletics bailing on Oakland and a rash of
elbow injuries to high-profile pitchers that have left some
wondering if the clock is to blame — there is an energy about the
game that it lacked in recent years. Yes, it took seismic changes to
get here. Yet all sides seem to have bought in as a potentially
electric October looms.
“The talent’s never been higher,” the Dodgers manager said. “More
eyeballs (are on the game). And I think attendance is speaking
volumes to that. I think the parity in the game speaks to that.
"So we’re in a good spot.”
___
AP Baseball Writers Ron Blum, Jay Cohen, Stephen Hawkins, Janie
McCauley and Mike Fitzpatrick and AP Sports Writers Alanis Thames,
Tom Withers, Steve Megargee, Joe Reedy and Dave Skretta contributed
to this report.
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