In an interview with the Septima Entrada website, LMB president Horacio de la Vega flatly denied Garrido's claim. “There are scenarios to be able to have an 84-game season, 64 games and possibly much shorter scenarios,” de la Vega stated. “Possibly we will have a single round. Instead of 102 games, we'd do half the season, which is 51 games.” De la Vega added the 51-game schedule would be a last option starting in August, a prospect that would potentially mean playing into November if the full playoff format is carried through.
Such a
schedule would undoubtedly create hardships for the winter Mexican
Pacific League, whose regular season typically gets underway in
mid-October. The LMP faced a similar situation in 2018 when the
Mexican League played two separate 57-game seasons with full
playoffs, the brainchild of former president Javier Salinas. The
result was disastrous for both leagues, with tepid fan interest in an
LMB Fall campaign that stretched to within three days of the season
openers for the Mex Pac, where teams were forced to bring in more
imports in the absence of domestic players who needed time to rest
before playing out west. Many Mexican players didn't join their LMP
teams until the second half began in November.
Action at a Mexican League game in Tijuana |
With a
shorter season now a certainty, the Mexican League is exploring an
abbreviated format during which teams only face opponents within
their own division while adding more doubleheaders to the schedule to
maximize the number of games played in a tighter timeframe. However,
de la Vega cautions, “we are working hard because we all want
baseball to return, but first we have to be healthy for that to
happen.”
JALISCO
OWNERS MAKE PITCH TO MLB FOR MEXICO SERIES GAMES
The 2019 Mexico Series was played in Monterrey |
Mexico's
capital city will miss out on its first opportunity to host big
league games that count in the standings, although numerous
exhibition contests have been held there in the past. The pandemic
also put a halt to off-field efforts to bring the Mexico Series to
Guadalajara in 2021. “The reality is that before the pandemic, we
were very advanced in that negotiation,” Jalisco Charros co-owner
Salvador Quirarte says. “Very advanced. But right now, I don't
really know what's going to happen.”
Quirarte
was spearheading talks with MLB to play one of two planned Mexico
Series for 2021 at Estadio Charros, but the virus has knocked the
entire baseball world off its axis and MLB's uncertainty moving
forward while readjusting its calendar casts future Mexico Series
plans into doubt for the time being.
“This
year it was Mexico City's turn,” Quirarte notes, “and we were
very strong in raising our hands for 2021, but this is going to
totally change our plans.” Quirarte points to pending negotiations
between MLB and its players union, whose current Collective
Bargaining Agreement will expire next year.
Estadio Charros in Guadalajara |
Given
the past proactive efforts of both Quirarte and co-owner Armando
Navarro, those are not idle words. Since a group of investors led by
the twosome purchased the original Guasave Algodoneros in 2014 and
moving the Mexican Pacific League team to Guadalajara (where the
newly-christened Charros purchased and reconfigured a stadium built
to host the 2011 Pan American Games), the city has hosted group play
for the 2017 World Baseball Classic, the 2018 Caribbean Series and
Premier12 tournament first round games last November. It would be no
surprise if Quirarte and Navarro had also placed a bid for the WBSC
Under-23 Baseball World Cup scheduled later this year, although that
tournament was eventually awarded to two other LMP cities, Obregon
and Los Mochis.
LIGA,
MEX PAC BOTH ADD RULE CHANGES TO SPEED UP GAMES
As
baseball games have progressively gotten longer over the years, fans
have exponentially increased the volume of their complaints regarding
the time required to watch nine innings (although conce$$ionaire$
have remained $trangely $ilent). Both the Mexican and Mexican
Pacific leagues are responding by instituting rule changes for their
respective upcoming seasons to hopefully speed things up a bit.
Does anybody really know what time it is? |
The
Mexican League announced in February that the 2020 season will see
pitchers required to throw to at least three batters before they can
be replaced on the mound, an attempt to end game stoppages by
revolving-door relievers who face only one batsman before they're
replaced by one of their bullpen mates. Exceptions will be granted if
the umpire crew chief determines that a pitcher was injured prior to
throwing to his third batter.
Mound
visits will be limited this season as well, with managers and coaches
limited to six such trips from the dugout per nine innings that do
not result in a pitcher being replaced on the hill. In the event a
game goes into extra innings, teams will be allowed one mound visit
per inning without a pitcher being replaced. Visits that DO result in
a hurler being pulled will not count against their team's allowed
total.
Finally,
batboys for LMB teams will be allowed on the field in foul territory
during play, theoretically to expedite the collection of bats dropped
near home plate by hitters who leave the batter's box down the
first-base line after hitting the ball.
Likewise,
the Mex Pac is instituting rule changes meant to shave minutes off
their games during the 2020-21 season. One that's similar to LMB
changes is a limit to the number of mound visits by managers and
coaches, although the number of allowable trips has not been set.
Intentional
walks will no longer require four wide pitches in the LMP, but rather
a signal from a team's manager that awards a batter first base
without facing a ball.
Turn and face the strange ch-ch-ch-changes |
One
change that may get the most resistance from people in the stands at
LMP games is the “sudden-death” rule, in which a baserunner will
be placed on second base at the beginning of each half-inning once a
game goes into the 12th inning. It's a rule that has been
used in amateur baseball and softball, mostly at youth league levels,
and in some international competitions, but this will be the first
time a professional league in Mexico tries it during the regular
season (although the Mex Pac office says it will be discarded during
the postseason).
2 comments:
Hi. I hope you are doing well.
Japan still does not impose entry restrictions for travelers from Mexico, so maybe the situation there is better off than some other countries in the world.
I think no one really paid attention, but I noticed that former Astros top prospect Jon Singleton has signed with the Diablos. He has had a lot of troubles off the field and he is away from professional baseball in the past few years. And the Diablos already has Japhet Amador, so presumably Singleton is going to play first base a lot.
I saw Singleton play in Houston in 2013. It's a bit weird, but Singleton was to serve 50-game suspension for substance abuse, but was still in the starting lineup in one of the 2 exhibition games held in Houston just before the MLB Opening Day. In the game I attended, the Astros used a lot of (then) prospects as kind of a showcase for the fans in Houston, so I was able to see players like Carlos Correa, George Springer before they made their MLB debut.
Hello,
Mexico has tightened up a bit as the number of Wuhan virus patients grew. As you shall see in the April 27 Baseball Mexico, nobody knows when games will start being played (if at all).
There's little doubt that Singleton could hit a lot of homers in Mexico City. He's shown power wherever he's gone and would prosper batting at that elevation. His batting average has been no great shakes but he draws a lot of walks so his OBP is good. He's had his drug problems, as you've mentioned, and his latest MiLB suspension for PED use was his third, meaning 100 games. I doubt that smoking pot would be as big a deal in the LMB as it was north of the border, but given Amador's own history in Japan, the Diablos may be monitoring him a little closer than most. He can help them if he plays.
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