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Posted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 9:14 pm
MLB owners are buzzing about ‘golden at-bat’ rule concept, according to commissioner
Updated: Dec. 03, 2024,
By Joe Noga, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Picture the scene at Progressive Field: In the bottom of the ninth inning, the Guardians have the bases loaded with two out in a close game and are facing their opponent’s hard-throwing closer.
Austin Hedges is due up after entering as a defensive substitute in the eighth. The Guards’ chances at a comeback look bleak with their light-hitting backup catcher in the box. In the past, there would be nothing Cleveland could do because manager Stephen Vogt’s most dangerous hitters were two or three spots away in the lineup.
But this time, Vogt has an ace in the hole: the “golden at-bat.”
Suddenly, José Ramírez emerges from the dugout. The golden at-bat concept gives each team a chance to send their best hitter to the plate one time during a game, regardless of whether or not it is that player’s turn in the lineup.
It sounds like some sort of fantasy, or a rule designed by the owner of the Savannah Bananas to create the kind of circus atmosphere heretofore unheard of for a sport steeped in regulations and traditions, which have gone largely unchanged for the better part of 150 years.
But we are already living in a reality of pitch timers, pickoff limits and ghost runners in extra innings. Could the golden at-bat soon be a part of baseball, whether we like it or not?
Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred, during an October appearance on John Ourand’s The Varsity podcast, floated the very idea of teams being able to randomly substitute their best hitter — one time — at critical moments in any game.
And, even more telling, Manfred said baseball’s owners are warm to the idea.
“There are a variety of [rule changes] that are being talked about out there,” Manfred said during the podcast. “One of them — there was a little buzz around it at an owners’ meeting — was the idea of a golden at-bat. That rule, and things like that, are in the conversation-only stage right now.”
ayson Stark, writing for The Athletic, proffered several variations of the rule, including limiting it to being used by teams who are trailing or tied, or only allowing a golden at-bat in the seventh inning or later.
The golden at-bat rule is aimed at creating more of baseball’s signature dramatic late-inning moments from the offensive side of things. Think Aaron Judge vs. Emmanuel Clase in the ninth inning of a playoff game.
On second thought, maybe think Jhonkensy Noel vs. Luke Weaver and David Fry vs. Clay Holmes. Yeah, that’s better.
There are still plenty of aspects that need to be ironed out. What happens if a manager uses his golden at-bat to start an inning, and that hitter is also scheduled to bat later in the inning? Can players who have exited the game re-enter to take a golden at-bat?
The goal here is to showcase MLB’s biggest stars and create opportunities for them to produce dramatic moments. So, would only All-Stars be allowed to take a golden at-bat? Or could managers manipulate the rule using analytics in order to get the most favorable matchup, regardless of whether or not that includes Judge, Ramírez, Shohei Ohtani or Juan Soto?
A golden at-bat could artificially manufacture a steady flow of drama late in games during the regular season. It could also do away with endings that fizzle due to undesirable matchups. Imagine if Terry Francona had a golden at-bat up his sleeve in the 10th inning of Game 7 in 2016 and could have sent Francisco Lindor to the plate instead of Michael Martinez.
That would have been a golden at-bat that every Cleveland fan could get behind.
Stark theorized that MLB could potentially test the rule at next year’s All-Star Game. But while several players he talked to seemed open to the idea, most front office personnel and several players and coaches voiced their opposition.
The concept seems to take away from the idea of baseball as the ultimate team sport, raising individuals with star power above all others in an effort to produce moments that have, up to now, happened organically throughout the game’s history.
That is what made the Guardians so special in 2024, their ability to get contributions from both the star players in their lineup as well as the rookies and unheralded backups on a daily basis. Sure, everybody would like to see Ramírez bat more often with the game on the line, but Fry hit two walk-off home runs in the playoffs this year. Would a golden at-bat rule have robbed Cleveland fans of those moments if Vogt had that option?
For now, the golden at-bat is still just a concept. One that will surely ignite passions throughout the sport. But the fact that Manfred is talking about it in the open means there is support at baseball’s highest levels. And once an idea like this gains momentum, there is no telling how far it could go.
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