The rules changes being considered by MLB and the Players Association are well known to baseball fans: pitch timer; mound visits; designated hitter in the NL; mound distance and/or height; roster size; etc. For the most part, tweaking the game in the name of Rob Manfred’s pace-of-play fetish.
MLB has announced a change, effective this season, that actually makes sense for the game that has nothing to do with pace-of-play. The annual August waiver trade period is gone! Heretofore, there was the July 31 annual trade deadline, “wink-wink, nudge-nudge,” in name only as some of the biggest trades occurred in August (think Fred Lynn, Justin Verlander, Josh Donaldson, Jose Bautista, Larry Walker). Frankly, it was a strange process.
The Players Association proposed the change “for the integrity of the game,” but it would not be surprising to learn of a union ulterior motive to effect prospects’ Major League service time. With no trades after July 31, MLB teams will be limited to using prospects in August rather than acquiring a veteran from another team in case of injury or poor performance.
July 31 is now a true deadline. No more guessing as to which players have been placed on waivers in August, teams blocking other teams by making a waiver claim with no intention of acquiring the player, and teams trying to dump a large contract on another team. Theoretically, this will now all happen in the last few weeks/days of July.
Finally, a change that makes sense.
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Ned Colleti commented last night that it would have been better to split the difference and make the date August 15.
Aug. 15 would have worked better for teams, not as well for the players. As long as it is one date it works for fans.