FORT MYERS, FLA. – A clock ticking backwards isn't only the newest and most significant change to the way baseball is played in the major leagues — it's also a metaphor for what the national pastime is trying to accomplish.
"We want to restore the pace and rhythm that the game once had, something that had gradually gotten away from us," Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said. "We're not creating something new; we just want to make sure the game remains as crisp and exciting as it has for many decades.
"I would predict that once all the attention dies down, most fans won't even notice the clock."
They might on those nights at Target Field when the final out is recorded around 9 o'clock instead of 9:45 p.m., as had become the norm. A month's worth of spring training games have demonstrated that enforcing limits on the time between pitches, between batters and between innings dramatically shortens a typical baseball game without removing any of the action.
"It feels really good, too," Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said of spring games, which have averaged 2 hours, 36 minutes, according to MLB. "The game doesn't have to be three, three-and-a-half hours, and we're proving that right now. Get out there and throw strikes, attack hitters, and the games will be crisp."
But the pitch clock is not the only way that the Twins' season, which opens Thursday at Kansas City, will be strikingly different in 2023. The bases, 12 inches by 12 inches until now, will be 15x15, a change that will subtract 4 ½ inches from the distance base-stealers must travel. Infielders must be standing on the infield dirt when a ball is pitched, and two on each side of second base.
In addition, extra innings will begin with a runner on second base, a pandemic rule that has now been made permanent. And beginning this season, the Twins will play at least one series against all 29 MLB opponents each year.
"Part of our job is to adapt to change, and to do it well," Baldelli said. "That's never been more true than this year."