MLB managers to consider replay
With critics calling for expanded video review of umpires' calls
and some players pushing to expand the first round of the playoffs,
baseball commissioner Bud Selig established a committee of managers
and longtime executives.
Managers Tony La Russa, Jim Leyland, Joe Torre and Mike
Scioscia were selected Tuesday for the "special committee for
on-field matters," which Selig will chair and will meet for the
first time next month.
Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, who is black, was the only
minority picked for the panel.
Scioscia was livid with the number of off days during the
postseason, and Selig promised to re-examine the format, which
added four extra off-days starting in 2007 at the behest of the
sport's broadcast networks.
Following a series of blown calls by umpires during the
playoffs, many said baseball should expand video review, which
began in 2008 and is limited to whether potential home runs are
fair and whether the ball went over the fence.
"This is not a reaction to some of the things that happened
during the playoffs," Selig said. "I'm not saying that it didn't
keep moving me along in this direction because it did, but frankly
I had this in mind for a long time."
The group will examine scheduling, umpiring, the strike zone
and pace of game, which again became an issue when
<fstl:categorylink
categoryId="71596">Yankees</fstl:categorylink> catcher
<fstl:categorylink categoryId="85270">Jorge
Posada</fstl:categorylink> made frequent trips to the mound
during the postseason.
Selig repeatedly said "there are no sacred cows." While he
has opposed expanding the use of instant replay, he said "I will be
guided by what this committee comes up with."
No players or umpires were included.
"We can't have every constituency involved at first," Selig
said.
New union head Michael Weiner said this month players may
propose during the next round of bargaining in 2011 to expand the
first round of the playoffs to best-of-seven from best-of-five.
"Owners are entitled to structure their internal affairs as
they wish," Weiner said Tuesday. "It's clear the subjects will have
to be collectively bargained. I think the owners understand that
bargaining becomes difficult if one side gets entrenched in
positions before consulting or negotiating with the other. The
players have the own ideas about these subjects and look forward to
an exchange of ideas with the owners when bargaining commences."
Selig acknowledged that some recommendations could take
awhile to implement because of collective bargaining agreements and
network broadcast contracts.
La Russa and Schuerholz said the designated hitter was the
one on-field issue that has lasted the longest during their tenure.
"When I was in the American League, I was in favor of the
designated hitter. In the National, I've maybe taken another
position on that," said Schuerholz, a former Kansas City GM. "Our
game has proved that it can succeed and flourish with the different
approaches in the different leagues."
La Russa said he would be in favor of eliminating the DH.
There has never been a consensus on the issue in recent years and
players would have to approve, which appears unlikely.
"I think the game is more complete without the DH," La Russa
said.
The committee includes Baltimore president for baseball
operations Andy MacPhail, Cleveland general manager Mark Shapiro,
Atlanta president John Schuerholz and former Minnesota GM Terry
Ryan.
There are four owner representatives: Toronto president Paul
Beeston, Philadelphia president Dave Montgomery, Seattle president
Chuck Armstrong and St. Louis chairman Bill DeWitt. Political
columnist George Will also is on the panel.