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Selig Says MLB Revenue Could Top $9 Billion

mlb bigBRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig says the sport’s revenue could top $9 billion this year.

Major League Baseball reached $8 billion for the first time in 2013, up from less than $2 billion when Selig became acting commissioner in 1992.

Selig also said a new drug agreement with the players’ association is imminent. The deal will increase penalties for first and second drug-testing violations but would allow an arbitrator to reduce penalties for some banned drugs if a player can prove a positive test was caused by unintentional use.

BASEBALL 2014: Major Shifts all Around the Majors

mlb bigMike Scioscia moved his left fielder onto the infield dirt, then watched him start a double play. Matt Williams tried a similar trick — he put his right fielder on the grass behind the mound, only to see a bases-loaded triple fly into the vacated spot.

All over the majors this year, the shift is on.

From the designer defenses taking over the game, to expanded replay, to opening day on a cricket ground in Australia, baseball is changing.

Those scraggly beards of the World Series champion Boston Red Sox? Shaved off, mostly. Soon Derek Jeter will be gone, too.

“You can’t do this forever,” the Yankees captain said. “I’d like to, but you can’t do it forever.”

Ryan Braun and the Biogenesis bunch are back in, reckless crashing into catchers is an automatic out. Robinson Cano, Shin-Soo Choo and Japanese ace Masahiro Tanaka changed sides, as did Jacoby Ellsbury, Prince Fielder and Curtis Granderson.

Plus, there’s a rookie with real pedigree — sweet Hank the Dog got a second chance. He found a home in Milwaukee and his own bobblehead night.

Also, a bright forecast for MVPs Miguel Cabrera and Andrew McCutchen. After a bruising winter that left frozen fields in the Midwest and East, temperatures in Detroit, Pittsburgh and most spots were supposed to warm up for Monday’s openers.

This spring has been much rougher for others.

Even before the Dodgers started the season by sweeping two from the Diamondbacks in Sydney during Major League Baseball’s first regular-season games Down Under, there were serious setbacks.

Kris Medlen, Brandon Beachy, Jarrod Parker and Luke Hochevar already were out for the year with Tommy John surgery. Patrick Corbin and Bruce Rondon later joined them.

Aroldis Chapman is missing at least two months after getting hit on the head by a line drive. There was no defense for that, not even those protective caps now in play for pitchers likely would’ve saved the Cincinnati reliever.

Defense, though, has rapidly become a major focus in the majors.

Be it Dodger Stadium or Fenway Park or anywhere in-between, it’s easy to spot the trend taking over baseball: Creative ways that clubs are positioning their fielders.

The Detroit Tigers even hired a defensive coordinator. Ever expect to hear about a defensive coordinator in baseball?

Matt Martin got that job, and pointed to the overloaded alignments Red Sox slugger David Ortiz sees on a daily basis.

“That’s not out of the norm now. That is the norm. With left-handers, if you’d have seen this 25 years ago, the way they play Big Papi — and 15, 20 guys in the league playing like that — you’d be, ‘What happened? Did I wake up and come to a softball game?'”

Makes perfect sense to Pittsburgh second baseman Neil Walker.

“The data is so undeniable, the defensive metrics are so prevalent,” he said. “You have so much more information, you should use it.”

“There were some times a few years ago when I felt out of place,” he admitted. “I was out there in right field and kind of like, ‘Where am I supposed to be?’ But we practice it, I practice my throws from extreme angles and I’m comfortable.”

An hour later, Walker was standing in shallow right when Phillies slugger Ryan Howard batted in a spring training game. Walker made a diving stop on a hard grounder, scrambled to his feet, but threw the ball past first base.

“It’s not an exact science,” he said.

Fielding always lagged far behind pitching and hitting in statistical analysis, mainly because it was hard to quantify glovework. Teams are trying hard to play catchup.

Baseball Info Solutions tracks defensive shifts, and reports there were 8,134 instances in the majors last season. That’s way up from 4,577 in 2012, and far more than the 2,358 in 2011.

“It’s not as much fun as it used to be,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon lamented. “Everybody’s using it.”

Maddon is a shifting maven, having employed four-man outfields and routinely putting three players on one side of the dirt at different depths.

In a recent exhibition, with a runner on third base, Maddon overshifted his infield in the middle of an at-bat. No luck. A wild pitch scored the run.

Maddon has a theory on why it took teams so many years to shift around.

“They were afraid they might be wrong,” he said. “But it always made sense to adjust your fielders. Why would you play someone in a place where a guy never hits it?”

And if a big bopper tries to bunt down the unprotected third base line, that’s OK.

“There are times when I’m begging him to bunt against us,” Maddon said.

Scioscia’s strategy paid off this month for the Los Angeles Angels when his repositioned left fielder handled a grounder and began a bases-loaded DP in extra innings. Williams, Washington’s first-year manager, tried something with the bases loaded in the eighth and paid the price.

Offered San Diego manager Bud Black: “Yes, my thinking has changed.”

“We will move,” he said.

So will the Reds, after new Cincinnati manager Bryan Price talks to his men on the mound.

“Pitchers can be pretty temperamental about defensive alignment. We know that,” he said. “We want to have the discussion beforehand, not after.”

St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak wants to start earlier, letting his minor leaguers get accustomed to moving. On Thursday, Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter took a spot in short right field, fielded a grounder and threw out a runner at first.

Minnesota’s Jason Kubel has been on the other side a lot.

The lefty hitter debuted a decade ago and rarely saw defensive shifts, if ever. Against the Yankees this month, he faced three fielders on the right side every at-bat.

“Now, I think it would be weird if I came up and saw that nobody was moved,” Kubel said.

MLB’s High-Tech Replay Room Opens Sunday

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — After deciding close calls on the field since 1876, baseball opens a high-tech control room this weekend where the fates of batters, pitchers, runners and fielders will be decided by umpires up to 2,600 miles away in the building where the Oreo cookie was invested.

Starting with the Los Angeles Dodgers’ game at the San Diego Padres on Sunday night, the U.S. opener of the 2014 season, players, managers and fans will turn their attention to the ROC — the Replay Operations Center. In a dimly lit room of just under 1,000 square feet in the Chelsea Market in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District, umpires and technicians will make the decisions that could decide games and championships.

MLB Hopes for New Drug Deal this Week

mlb bigNEW YORK (AP) — People familiar with the negotiations tell The Associated Press that baseball players and management hope to reach a new drug agreement this week that would increase initial penalties for muscle-building steroids and decrease suspensions for some positive tests caused by unintentional use.

The deal would also eliminate the loophole allowing Alex Rodriguez to earn almost $4 million during his season-long ban, the people said. They spoke on condition of anonymity in recent days because talks are ongoing.

The sides hope to reach an agreement by Sunday, when the Los Angeles Dodgers open the U.S. portion of the major league schedule at the San Diego Padres.

Guillen, Wedge Join ‘Baseball Tonight’ Crew

Baseball Tonight Logo ESPNBRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — Former managers Ozzie Guillen and Eric Wedge are in the ESPN lineup this season for “Baseball Tonight.”

ESPN also said Monday that perfect-game pitcher Dallas Braden is set to become a studio analyst for the nightly show.

The opinionated Guillen last managed with the Marlins in 2012. He will be part of the ESPN crew throughout the season and work with Sunday Night Baseball on ESPN Deportes.

Wedge will be on ESPN television and radio after managing Seattle last year. He is scheduled to make his debut Tuesday on a spring training game telecast.

Braden threw a perfect game for Oakland in 2010, and last pitched in the majors in 2011.

ESPN will take its pregame show “Baseball Tonight: Sunday Night Countdown” on the road several times this season, starting at Petco Park on March 30 when the Los Angeles Dodgers visit San Diego.

Locals Love it as MLB Makes Quick Trip Down Under

mlb bigSYDNEY (AP) — Yasiel Puig and Paul Goldschmidt hadn’t left the stadium before workers began dismantling what was quite an impressive place to play baseball.

For a week, at least.

Home plate was dug up, the pitcher’s mound flattened and the eight-foot-high perimeter home run fence taken down within an hour after Puig’s Los Angeles Dodgers beat Goldschmidt’s Arizona Diamondbacks 7-5 Sunday.

It was a two-game Dodgers’ sweep of Major League Baseball’s opening weekend at Sydney Cricket Ground.

The Dodgers and Clayton Kershaw won the Saturday opener 3-1, sending the Diamondbacks back to the U.S. 0-2 to start the season and with the L.A. team holding a very early two-game lead in the AL West over their Arizona adversaries.

The regular season will resume next weekend for both teams, with a few exhibition games scheduled this week while they recover from jet lag after the 15-hour flights Down Under and back.

The cricket ground, and Australian baseball fans, meanwhile, may never be the same.

Nearly 80,000 fans attended the weekend games at the 162-year-old ground in leafy Moore Park, minutes from downtown Sydney.

Clearly, sports-mad Australia loved having the world’s best baseball players in Sydney. So did their rugby, cricket, soccer and Aussie Rules football stars who took time to mingle with Kershaw and Puig, among others, for photo shoots.

It was a mutual admiration society, with Kershaw posing on his birthday with a kangaroo and kicking around a rugby ball on the eve of his opener. Puig and Goldschmidt even tried their hand at cricket.

Cracker Jack and two-foot-long hotdogs became part of the menu at the SCG snack bars, and MLB commissioner Bud Selig was non-committal about a return to Australia in the near future.

Australian fans might like to see it sooner than later. Never were foul balls into the stands more heartily cheered, because they could keep them. In cricket, where balls are changed only after a predetermined amount of play, they must be returned to the field.

“This event was outstanding, really cool,” Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson said. “The crowds were great. The preparation from the city of Sydney was outstanding. They treated us well.”

Mattingly says a concern after the teams return to the U.S. will be avoiding complacency. They’ll have a few days off, then three exhibition games before returning to the regular season next Sunday for a three-game series in San Diego.

“My biggest fear is when you start games, games that don’t count are tough to get ready to play,” he said. “And then you get lazy and you get bad habits. That’s what I will try to fight.”

Regardless, Mattingly loved his Australian experience.

“Your team kind of comes together on a trip because you really don’t know anyone else,” he said. “We document how far you’ve got to go, and how it changes our schedule, but at the end of the day you look back on it as a memory you don’t really forget.”

G’day, Baseball! Opening Day Goes Down Under

mlb bigSYDNEY (AP) — The most quintessential of American sports took top billing at the symbolic home of Australia’s national game as the 2014 Major League Baseball season began Down Under at Sydney Cricket Ground.

At a venue steeped in the history of another bat and ball game, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Arizona Diamondbacks opened the season Saturday night before a sellout crowd of around 40,000.

The two-game series marks the first regular-season games in Australia. Previous MLB season openers were held in Japan, Mexico and Puerto Rico.

The gameday menu was popular, and expensive. It cost $36 for a 2-foot-long hot dog. There also were ice-cream sundaes served in batting helmets.

Another novelty for the crowd involved balls that got hit into the stands. Fans could keep them, unlike cricket where the ball is returned to play.

‘Stick the Landing:’ Changing a Ball to a Strike

Baseball CatcherWASHINGTON (AP) — It was a crucial pitch in a game in the early 1990s. A fastball. Away.

When the ball hit Randy Knorr’s mitt, the Toronto Blue Jays catcher moved it back over the strike zone.

The umpire called it a ball.

“Fifty-thousand fans in the stands are booing,” Knorr said. “I knew it was a ball. I was just trying to bring it back over. And he smacked me in the back of the head and said: ‘Don’t ever do that to me again. You know that was a ball, and now you made everybody in the stadium think it was a strike. Don’t do it again.'”

At that moment, at least, Knorr was no Jose Molina.

We’ve all seen it. When a game’s on television, the center-field camera zooms in on the mitt, where the catcher does his best to massage balls into strikes. Sometimes it works; sometimes it doesn’t. Technically, it’s an attempt to cheat, an ingrained and artful baseball deception as old as the neighborhood play at second base.

How much does it influence the game? More than you probably thought. In a sabermetric age where everything is measurable, teams can calculate how many runs a catcher can save by mastering the art of pitch framing. Webpages galore are devoted to the topic, with stat-geeks analyzing the location of every single pitch and tabulating which catchers are best and winning balls and losing strikes.

Teams are keeping count as well. Knorr is now the bench coach for the Washington Nationals, who have devoted more resources to analytics in recent years under general manager Mike Rizzo. This spring training, Rizzo made a trade with the Tampa Bay Rays to acquire Jose Lobaton, in part because Lobaton rated well in pitch-framing.

And where did Lobaton learn the skill? From the guru himself, Molina.

“It’s like those pitches away that when you think that it’s a ball, he can make those a strike,” Lobaton said. “I’ve been trying to do the same. But I’m not like him. I try to be like him, but I can’t.”

A half-dozen extra strikes in a game can make a difference. Rays manager Joe Madden once said that Molina is worth 50 runs per season based solely on pitch framing. Other estimates vary, but mathematical consensus shows that Molina’s subtlety with the glove translates into three to five extra wins each year. That’s enough to win or lose a pennant.

“Any pitch that can change a count that way, whether it’s going to be a 2-1 or a 1-2, that’s the biggest swing you can possibly have right there,” Nationals reliever Drew Storen said. “It keeps you in good counts. It definitely helps you out, if you can get five or six calls that would’ve gone the other way just from the catching framing it.”

Molina’s peers at the top of pitch-framing ratings include his brother, Yadier Molina of the St. Louis Cardinals, and Jonathan Lucroy of the Milwaukee Brewers. All have something in common: soft movements using the wrist and elbow while the rest of the body stays still. Lucroy, who checks in at 195 pounds, has flourished despite a frame not necessarily suitable for framing.

“It’s strange,” Brewers closer Jim Henderson said. “You would think if you miss your spot as a pitcher with that small target you might not get the call, but somehow he makes it work within the parameters of the plate there. So it’s actually amazing how well he does if we screw up.”

Lucroy said it took years to hone the skill after he first paid attention in the minors. It’s a world of difference from those Little Leaguers who yank the ball every which way.

“You can see a big, big difference between guys who can catch and guys who can’t,” Lucroy said. “The pitcher hates it because he wants to be able to pitch and throw, knowing the pitch he throws, that if it’s a strike, it’s going to be called a strike and not taken outside of the zone. … The easiest thing for young players to work on is just keeping your head and body still and just moving your hand. That’s all it is; catch the ball and stop it.”

Or, as Nationals pitching coach Steve McCatty put it: “You’ve got to stick the landing.”

Another pitch-framing master was four-time All-Star Bob Boone. Now a Nationals assistant general manager, Boone would be so intent on keeping still that if the bases were empty he would let the ball glance off his webbing and roll to the backstop rather than move his mitt to catch it.

“I’m going to try to catch it right here,” said Boone, pointing to gap between his thumb and forefinger, “but sometimes I miss ’em. ‘Hey I’m right on the corner, you saw I was on the corner, and he threw it in my glove.’ … If you can get a half-inch on each side and the strike zone’s 20 inches high, that’s 20 square inches. That’s like 4-by-5. All of a sudden the pitcher knows I’ve got that much bigger strike zone.”

Conversely, there are catchers who just can’t sit still. It shouldn’t be a surprise that Jorge Posada, who retired three ago, statistically ranks among the worst pitch-framers in recent major league history. Posada spoke of the importance of the skill while working as a guest instructor with the New York Yankees this spring, but he didn’t venture an opinion as to his own ability.

“I don’t know. I guess people can go back and look and see how they thought I did,” Posada said. “Some guys were better than others, I guess.”

Replay Wizards Becoming Key Positions on MLB Teams

mlb bigKISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — Propped up next to a satellite production truck, peering at a laptop outside Osceola County Stadium, Cullen McRae was practicing.

Not hitting. Or pitching. Or fielding.

The son of former big league star and manager Hal McRae was busy watching TV. Specifically, preparing for his role as a replay wizard, a video review coordinator for the Miami Marlins.

“It’s cool to be a part of history,” he said after Miami beat Houston 7-2 Friday. “It’s a work in progress for all of us.”

Along with the rest of Major League Baseball, McRae is charging into this new world where managers can challenge calls by umpires. He comes from a baseball family — his brother, Brian, played a decade in the bigs — but the only advice he’s gotten came from his mom and sister.

“They just told, ‘Don’t mess it up,'” he said.

In the hours before the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers began the regular season in Australia, and with the Marlins’ opener on March 31 against Colorado rapidly approaching, McRae and others in his position were busy.

MLB, umpires and teams still are tweaking and tinkering with expanded replay, trying to figure out how everything fits together.

Before this year, replay mainly focused on potential home-run balls. Now, most every call is subject to review. Managers get one chance to contest an ump’s ruling; if they’re right, they get another try.

In spring training, calls get checked by umpires inside those remote TV trucks. Once the season starts, there will be a central replay booth in New York — if the technology isn’t set, there is a backup plan to do reviews from trucks at the stadiums.

Deciding when to dispute a call could start with someone watching the broadcast in the clubhouse. If they see safe and the ump says out, they can immediately call the dugout and suggest a challenge.

“Every team seems to be doing it differently,” McRae said.

The Cleveland Indians hired a former minor league manager as their replay coordinator. The Washington Nationals will put two people in the video room at home. The St. Louis Cardinals, meanwhile, didn’t want to say who will monitor telecasts.

The San Diego Padres are training a few guys for the task. No matter who’s doing the job, manager Bud Black wants to see one key trait.

“I hope he has good eyes. He better have good eyesight,” Black said, smiling.

The Padres want someone who has “an understanding of the game, obviously,” Black said. “And it has to be a guy that we have a great deal of confidence in in watching a baseball game, watching a replay and a feel for a play.”

The Detroit Tigers think they found that person in Matt Martin. The three-time AL Central champions hired the former minor league manager for a dual purpose — he’ll fill the newly created post of defensive coordinator, then head to the video room at Comerica Park and on the road during games as their replay guru.

The detail-oriented Martin realizes the system will take time to sort out.

“Talking with the umpires … they’re like, ‘Hey, there’s going to have to be some patience from everybody with this thing,'” he said.

As opening day approached, Martin wasn’t sure exactly what footage he’ll get to review.

“That’s still — we’ve kind of gotten various reports on that — so it’s still kind of up in the air. Which is crazy at this point,” he said recently.

For Friday’s exhibition between the Marlins and Astros, McRae had a walkie-talkie to communicate with the dugout. It’ll be a little more fancy when the games count.

McRae, who started with the Marlins in 1997 selling season tickets and later became their video coordinator, will work with Pat Shine. The former college coach at UC Irvine was hired as a major league administrative coach and will also batting practice.

When there’s a close play, bench coach Rob Leary will check with the video review crew and then signal whether manager Mike Redmond should challenge.

Redmond kidded that he might take his replay strategy to extreme measures, giving umps an earful before he gets an eyeful from Leary.

“When you think about it, I can go out there and get thrown out, and that gives Lear a lot of time to get out there and then he can challenge,” Redmond said. “So on the really big play, I’ll get thrown out and I’ll wait for Lear to come out and we’ll make sure we get it right.”

BASEBALL 2014: Major Shifts all Around the Majors

mlb bigMike Scioscia moved his left fielder onto the infield dirt, then watched him start a double play. Matt Williams tried a similar trick — he put his right fielder on the grass behind the mound, only to see a bases-loaded triple fly into the vacated spot.

All over the majors this year, the shift is on.

From the designer defenses taking over the game, to expanded replay, to opening day on a cricket ground in Australia, baseball is changing.

Those scraggly beards of the World Series champion Boston Red Sox? Shaved off, mostly. Soon Derek Jeter will be gone, too.

“You can’t do this forever,” the Yankees captain said. “I’d like to, but you can’t do it forever.”

Ryan Braun and the Biogenesis bunch are back in, reckless crashing into catchers is an automatic out. Robinson Cano, Shin-Soo Choo and Japanese ace Masahiro Tanaka changed sides, as did Jacoby Ellsbury, Prince Fielder and Curtis Granderson.

Plus, there’s a rookie with real pedigree — sweet Hank the Dog got a second chance. He found a home in Milwaukee; no telling if he’ll later visit Petco Park.

This spring has been much rougher for others.

Even before the Dodgers and Diamondbacks started the season in Sydney, Major League Baseball’s first regular-season games Down Under, there were serious setbacks.

Kris Medlen, Brandon Beachy, Jarrod Parker and Luke Hochevar already are out for the year with Tommy John surgery, and Patrick Corbin may soon join them.

Aroldis Chapman likely will miss at least two months after getting hit on the head by a line drive. There was no defense for that, not even those protective caps now in play for pitchers likely would’ve saved the Cincinnati reliever.

Defense, though, has rapidly become a major focus in the majors.

Be it Dodger Stadium or Fenway Park or anywhere in-between, it’s easy to spot the trend taking over baseball: Creative ways that clubs are positioning their fielders.

The Detroit Tigers even hired a defensive coordinator. Ever expect to hear about a defensive coordinator in baseball?

Matt Martin got that job, and pointed to the overloaded alignments Red Sox slugger David Ortiz sees on a daily basis.

“That’s not out of the norm now. That is the norm. With left-handers, if you’d have seen this 25 years ago, the way they play Big Papi — and 15, 20 guys in the league playing like that — you’d be, ‘What happened? Did I wake up and come to a softball game?'”

Makes perfect sense to Pittsburgh second baseman Neil Walker.

“The data is so undeniable, the defensive metrics are so prevalent,” he said. “You have so much more information, you should use it.”

“There were some times a few years ago when I felt out of place,” he admitted. “I was out there in right field and kind of like, ‘Where am I supposed to be?’ But we practice it, I practice my throws from extreme angles and I’m comfortable.”

An hour later, Walker was standing in shallow right when Phillies slugger Ryan Howard batted in a spring training game. Walker made a diving stop on a hard grounder, scrambled to his feet, but threw the ball past first base.

“It’s not an exact science,” he said.

Fielding always lagged far behind pitching and hitting in statistical analysis, mainly because it was hard to quantify glovework. Teams are trying hard to play catchup.

Baseball Info Solutions tracks defensive shifts, and reports there were 8,134 instances in the majors last season. That’s way up from 4,577 in 2012, and far more than the 2,358 in 2011.

“It’s not as much fun as it used to be,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon lamented. “Everybody’s using it.”

Maddon is a shifting maven, having employed four-man outfields and routinely putting three players on one side of the dirt at different depths.

In a recent exhibition, with a runner on third base, Maddon overshifted his infield in the middle of an at-bat. No luck. A wild pitch scored the run.

Maddon has a theory on why it took teams so many years to shift around.

“They were afraid they might be wrong,” he said. “But it always made sense to adjust your fielders. Why would you play someone in a place where a guy never hits it?”

And if a big bopper tries to bunt down the unprotected third base line, that’s OK.

“There are times when I’m begging him to bunt against us,” Maddon said.

Scioscia’s strategy paid off this month for the Los Angeles Angels when his repositioned left fielder handled a grounder and began a bases-loaded DP in extra innings. Williams, Washington’s first-year manager, tried something with the bases loaded in the eighth and paid the price.

Offered San Diego manager Bud Black: “Yes, my thinking has changed.”

“We will move,” he said.

So will the Reds, after new Cincinnati manager Bryan Price talks to his men on the mound.

“Pitchers can be pretty temperamental about defensive alignment. We know that,” he said. “We want to have the discussion beforehand, not after.”

St. Louis general manager John Mozeliak wants to start earlier, letting his minor leaguers get accustomed to moving.

Minnesota’s Jason Kubel has been on the other side a lot.

The lefty hitter debuted a decade ago and rarely saw defensive shifts, if ever. Against the Yankees this month, he faced three fielders on the right side every at-bat.

“Now, I think it would be weird if I came up and saw that nobody was moved,” Kubel said.

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