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New Baseball Rules for 2023

Major League Baseball will implement a variety of sweeping rules changes for the 2023 season. While the focus has reasonably been on a pitch clock and restrictions on defensive shifts, there are far more changes for the new season that haven’t been discussed widely.

The changes to the rules are meant to improve the pace of play and also encourage more offensive action.

The rules were approved by an 11-member competition committee, but not unanimously. The Players Association, which holds four committee spots, voted against the biggest changes involving pitch clocks and shift restrictions, according to a statement they released after the vote.

We’ll have the off-season to digest and prepare for all of it. But to start, here is the overview of what we’ll see next year.

Pitch Clock & Batter Timeouts

This season, MLB conducted tests at the Minor Leagues with versions of these rules. They say that compared to 2021, the pitch clock reduced an average nine-inning game time from 3 hours, 4 minutes last year to 2 hours, 38 minutes this year, a 26 minute difference.

By limiting pick off moves, stolen bases at the Minor Leagues went from 2.23 per game in 2019 to 2.83 in 2022, with stolen base success rate jumping from 68% to 77% over that time.

Defensive Shifts

MLB says that defensive alignments with four players in the outfield increased nearly 6x across across baseball since the start of the 2018 season. The new shift restrictions, the league says, will return baseball to “a more traditional aesthetic.”

Bigger Bases

The physical size of the base pads next year will increase from a 15-inches square to 18-inches. Bigger bases will reduce the distance between first and second and between second and third by 4½ inches.

This change, MLB says, encourages teams to attempt base stealing more frequently and generally to be more aggressive on the basepaths.

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