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Posted



Manfred says there is buzz around the Golden At-Bat rule , I just can't imagine this happening, it's awful





https://www.si.com/mlb/rob-manfred-buzz-golden-at-bat-rule-baseballhttps://www.si.com/mlb/rob-manfred-buzz-golden-at-bat-rule-baseball


It should be allowed but only if the batter uses his own erection as the bat. And covers it in pine tar first


Posted


They need to send this idea to the golden showers.



iow, it'll probably be implemented by next season with the justification that fan reaction was "overwhelmingly positive".


Posted


Problem is it gets guys like Jayson Stark fleshing it out like this





• Each team gets to pick one at-bat — at any point in the game, but only once — to play its Golden AB card. So would it save that card for The Juan Soto Moment? Or would it play it in the second inning, with the bases loaded and a chance to blow up a game? Strategy alert!



• Or there's this option: Each team gets one Golden AB per game — except only in the seventh inning or later.



• Or there's the variation I'd vote for — where only a team that is trailing (or tied) in the ninth or later gets to use a Golden AB. I'm a fan of less is more, and two Golden ABs every game (one per team) might be overkill.



• There's also this potential wrinkle: The Royals use their Golden AB to let Bobby Witt Jr. lead off the ninth. He makes an out. But who's batting second? Whaddaya know, it's Witt's turn in the lineup. So here he comes again. Yes, that could be a thing.



So what variation will actually end up happening (if any of them do)? We have many golden miles to travel before we can answer that.



https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5961016/2024/12/02/golden-at-bat-rule-mlb?source=user-shared-articlehttps://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5961016/2024/12/02/golden-at-bat-rule-mlb?source=user-shared-article


Posted


(In best Don Corleone voice)

"What have they done to my game? I don't want his mother to see him like this"



Later


Posted


Manfred has already announced the slowest of marches to his retirement in 2029, which sets him up with coverage to do all sorts of insane things.


Posted


Longtime fans universally hate this idea, so Manfred will take that as a green light.


Posted


"Longtime fans hate change" is true, mostly--and all MLB needs to dismiss opposition. They will base decisions on what young fans think.



This is a stupid idea the game doesn't need


Posted


I was just a kid when the DH was introduced, and I don't remember the announcement or the buildup. Wonder how people responded then.



This is a terrible idea. One of the (many) cool things about baseball is the randomness of it. In basketball, you know LeBron is always going to get the last shot. But Tommy Edman becomes a Dodger hero - and Mets villain -- because he produced great things from the nine-hole. With this, someone like him migt not get that shot if Mookie Betts gets the golden treatment there. And that's just and example from the last season.


Posted


The move MLB really needs to make in order to increase star power is to have Ohtani pitch to himself.

It'll be the greatest Mano-a-mano sporting event since the time that Rocky fought Rambo.


Posted


=Marshmallowmilkshake post_id=180155 time=1733264092 user_id=119]
I was just a kid when the DH was introduced, and I don't remember the announcement or the buildup. Wonder how people responded then.

Posted


If this golden at-bat was implemented 125 years ago, nobody today would question the rule. The golden at-bat would be viewed as normal a tactic as the double-switch. And the poets would be waxing poetic about how perfect the game of baseball is with this golden at-bat.



And if the Commissioner then decided today, to suddenly eliminate the golden at bat after 125 years of uninterrupted use and tradition and history, youse would all be going apeshit over the rule's removal.


Posted


I still hat the DH rule, and I've told that to Ron Blomberg (the first ever DH).

Since then he has written on his Facebook page that he hates the rule himself and wished it had never become a rule. He then (jokingly) asked forgiveness from all true baseball fans.



Later


Posted (edited)


=MFS62 post_id=180162 time=1733266696 user_id=60]
I still hat the DH rule, and I've told that to Ron Blomberg (the first ever DH).

Since then he has written on his Facebook page that he hates the rule himself and wished it had never become a rule. He then (jokingly) asked forgiveness from all true baseball fans.



Later

Edited by Guest
Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:
But it then just sort of became permanent without ever officially being designated as such like some government program that keeps going on just out of sheer momentum and the lack of anyone wanting to be the one to kill it.


Me. I'll do it.



I want to be the one to kill it.


Posted


=batmagadanleadoff post_id=180161 time=1733266236 user_id=68]
If this golden at-bat was implemented 125 years ago, nobody today would question the rule. The golden at-bat would be viewed as normal a tactic as the double-switch. And the poets would be waxing poetic about how perfect the game of baseball is with this golden at-bat.



And if the Commissioner then decided today, to suddenly eliminate the golden at bat after 125 years of uninterrupted use and tradition and history, youse would all be going apeshit over the rule's removal.

Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:

=Marshmallowmilkshake post_id=180155 time=1733264092 user_id=119]
I was just a kid when the DH was introduced, and I don't remember the announcement or the buildup. Wonder how people responded then.


Some liked it, some didn't. Pretty much the same as now.

It came on the heels of an offensive drought although the depths of that drought was a half decade in the rearview by that point so it was kind of an answer to a problem that was already solving itself (with the help of the post-'68 mound/strike zone tweaks).



But what the DH was Really all about was that the AL was in a attendance and competitive slog due to several factors:

- much slower on the whole in signing black and Latin players they had less young talent, less exciting talent, and more aging players who would fit the DH mold

- the AL spent so long being a one-team dependent circuit (you either loved the Yanx or loved to hate them) it's not a coincidence that the rule was implemented following the decade long crash of their main meal ticket. Mantle, Berra, and Ford, the team stunk, and the draft prevented them from stocking all the future stars as they had for decades.

Think about it: by the late-'60's/early '70s the NL had the better (on field and at the turnstiles) New York team, Los Angeles team, Chicago team, Missouri team, and Ohio team. That's half the league and most of the big markets with the rest of the markets being, at best, a draw meaning the AL had the advantage virtually nowhere.



It was an 'experimental rule' which was supposed to expire if it wasn't constantly renewed every so often. Remember when the NFL killed instant replay after having it for a short time? ... same idea (the NFL later re-voted it back into existence after a few years without). But it then just sort of became permanent without ever officially being designated as such like some government program that keeps going on just out of sheer momentum and the lack of anyone wanting to be the one to kill it.
Posted


Kay's rant and the idea that gimmicky rule changes are going to draw in young viewers in droves reeks of hopeful speculation being treated as fact.

It reminds me somewhat of when some christian churches in the 1970's decided that updating the language in their prayer books and such was the key to drawing in the younger crowd only to find out that it did nothing of the sort and instead turned off some of those who were already attending and liked the services just as they were.


Posted


Maybe a well placed the golden shower can extinguish the golden AB



Society seems to be totally in on short form reels and videos and jiggy rule changes like this one appeal to the limited attention span of today's youth in much the same way


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:

Kay's rant and the idea that gimmicky rule changes are going to draw in young viewers in droves reeks of hopeful speculation being treated as fact.

It reminds me somewhat of when some christian churches in the 1970's decided that updating the language in their prayer books and such was the key to drawing in the younger crowd only to find out that it did nothing of the sort and instead turned off some of those who were already attending and liked the services just as they were.


What would likely happen if this rule is adopted, I would guess, is not much, fan-wise, other than griping about or applauding the new rule. The new rule will neither drive away old and established fans nor will it bring in new fans all on its own. Existing fans aren't going away no matter what they say. They're addicted to baseball the same way cigarette smokers are addicted to nicotine. And the owners know that better than the fans do.



Even without any rule changes, the game is already drastically different than what it was 20, 25 years ago. Nothing lasts forever. If youse don't like this rule, maybe youse'd like a basketball rule where any player that takes a shot can't take another shot for two minutes.



The argument that the rule is bad simply because it was never done that way before is an extremely weak argument.


Posted


Frayed Knot wrote:

Kay's rant and the idea that gimmicky rule changes are going to draw in young viewers in droves reeks of hopeful speculation being treated as fact.

It reminds me somewhat of when some christian churches in the 1970's decided that updating the language in their prayer books and such was the key to drawing in the younger crowd only to find out that it did nothing of the sort and instead turned off some of those who were already attending and liked the services just as they were.




Key saying "to jump a guy for trying to make a legitimate change " what ? Legitimate?


Posted



What would likely happen if this rule is adopted, I would guess, is not much, fan-wise, other than griping about or applauding the new rule. The new rule will neither drive away old and established fans nor will it bring in new fans all on its own. Existing fans aren't going away no matter what they say. They're addicted to baseball the same way cigarette smokers are addicted to nicotine. And the owners know that better than the fans do.



Even without any rule changes, the game is already drastically different than what it was 20, 25 years ago. Nothing lasts forever. If youse don't like this rule, maybe youse'd like a basketball rule where any player that takes a shot can't take another shot for two minutes.



The argument that the rule is bad simply because it was never done that way before is an extremely weak argument.


That Kay likes it is a pretty convincing argument that it's bad.



Basketball doesn't matter. Baseball shouldn't be making rules based on how another sport operates.





There's making changes to the game to adjust for changing times, ability, etc. That's the DH. Pitching got specialized, so they separated out that aspect of it. But fundamentally the game is the same. 9 batters, locked into a batting order. 9 fielders, can 'roughly' play anywhere to try to get the batters out. offense vs defense. It's a team game with individual pitcher-batter faceoff at the crux of it. Sort of like Family Feud.



This is also why the shift rules are bad, but for opposite reasons. That takes away defensive strategy and freedoms and streamlines the game. That's boring. Golden AB stuff is needless complexity and messes with the team game dynamic. And not in a good way. The entire history of the modern game has dealt with complex strategies of lineup management, bullpen management, etc. You're basically taking that agency out of the defensive team's hands. It's for spectacle, not for game, and that's a bad reason to make changes to the game.



If you want to have a more spectacle-based game, go for it, but why destroy the good game you already have? Do something like Rugby Tens and make a separate version of the game. Or keep it to the WBC? You've already got this tournament, that can be pretty fun. Introduce the rule there. Have it more often even, or variants of it. Make a Winter Ball league or takeover the Australian league or something, and have the variant there.



Quick interjection to say: GAMBLING. This ties into the "we gotta win the 22 year old bro eyeballs" take of Kay and other idiots that don't get it. The Gambling opportunities here are not to be ignored. Especially the teeth-gnashing hot-take screamfests that will draw views/clicks/etc to/with scum like barstool when a manager does or does not use this rule the way they want. Image the odds swing if you think like Ohtani is going to hit for the backup catcher. Or you bet on the team down 2 thinking your star is going to hit for that struggling OFer you hate, but the manager doesn't do that? btw, they're re-upping Stephen A Smith at ESPN, giving him all the money from the actual talented people they fired.



to sum up. It's dumb and bad, Manfred's incentives are terrible and he hates baseball. Also it's rarely going to be used for the fabled Ohtani-Trout matchup to end the game. You're more likely to deploy your slugger in a 5th inning 2 on, 2 out situation with your light-hitting catcher up. And then the opposing manager will bring in a reliever.


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