Current:Home > FinanceWhat you need to know about MLB's new rule changes for 2024 season -StockPrime
What you need to know about MLB's new rule changes for 2024 season
View
Date:2025-04-14 16:19:47
After a largely successful first season for Major League Baseball's sweeping rule changes, the league announced several tweaks for 2024, focusing on further improving the pace of play.
In 2023, nine-inning games averaged 2 hours and 39 minutes, down nearly 25 minutes from 2022 and the shortest since 1985 (2:40).
Some of the changes for 2024, voted on by the Competition Committee, will include shortening the pitch clock with runners on base and decreasing the number of mound visits.
The Competition Committee is made up of six owners, four players and an umpire. The MLB Players Associated released a statement after the league's announcement that players had voted against the rule changes.
"Immediate additional changes are unnecessary and offer no meaningful benefit," MLBPA director Tony Clark said. "This season should be used to gather additional data and fully examine the health, safety and injury impacts of reduced recovery time; that is where our focus will be."
HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.
Here's what to know about the rule changes that baseball announced for 2024:
Pitch clock tweak
The time between pitches with runners on base is now 18 seconds, down from 20. With the bases empty, the pitch clock remains 15 seconds.
According to MLB, "pitchers began their deliveries with an average of 7.3 seconds remaining on the 20-second timer in 2023."
Mound visits
The number of mound visits per team will be reduced from five to four.
MLB notes that teams only averaged 2.3 mound visits per game and that "98% of games would not have exceeded a limit of four mound visits" last season.
Pitchers who warm up must face a batter
A pitcher who is sent to the mound to warm up between innings must now face at least one batter.
MLB says there were 24 occasions last season that a pitcher warmed up between innings and was replaced before throwing a pitch, "adding approximately three minutes of dead time per event."
Wider runner's lane
The runner's lane towards first base will now include the space between the foul line and the infield grass. That adds 18 to 24 inches to the runner's lane, which MLB explains "allows batters to take a more direct path to first base while retaining protection from interference."
The league notes that some ballparks will be given "limited grace periods granted by MLB due to difficulty in modifying the field (e.g., synthetic turf field)."
veryGood! (148)
Related
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Eight or nine games? Why ESPN can influence debate over SEC football's conference schedule
- After several setbacks, Boeing will try again to launch its crewed Starliner on Saturday
- McDonald's president hits back at claims Big Mac prices are too high amid inflation
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- A pregnant stingray with no male companion now has a ‘reproductive disease,’ aquarium says
- Sen. Joe Manchin leaves Democratic Party, registers as an independent
- WNBA commissioner says charter flight program still has a few kinks but is running smoothly
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Michelle Troconis hears emotional testimony ahead of sentencing in Jennifer Dulos murder conspiracy
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Oil executives imprisoned five years in Venezuela sue former employer Citgo for $400 million
- Know what dreamscrolling is? You're probably doing it.
- Search resumes for mom, National Guard sergeant who vanished tubing in South Carolina
- Trump's 'stop
- Dylan Sprouse reflects on filming 'The Duel' in Indianapolis during Indy 500 weekend
- Taco Bell's Cheez-It Crunchwrap Supreme release date arrives. Here's when you can get it
- Former US senator from Indiana Joe Donnelly to step down as US ambassador to the Vatican
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Tesla recalling more than 125,000 vehicles to fix seat belt warning system
Air National Guard unit that was suspended after classified documents leak will restart mission
BLM buys about 3,700 acres of land adjacent to Río Grande del Norte National Monument in New Mexico
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Woman charged, accused of trying to sell child for $20, offered her up for sex for $5: Police
AP analysis finds 2023 set record for US heat deaths, killing in areas that used to handle the heat
Mayoral hopeful's murder in Mexico captured on camera — the 23rd candidate killed before the elections