MLB sticky stuff: Pitcher checks, enforcements change in 2022

Brendan Hail

MLB issued a memo to its clubs Friday outlining a further crackdown on sticky substances, a tacit admission that pitchers began cheating again late last season as they learned workarounds to the routine checks by umpires. Beginning in spring training games this weekend and throughout the season, umpires will inspect […]

MLB issued a memo to its clubs Friday outlining a further crackdown on sticky substances, a tacit admission that pitchers began cheating again late last season as they learned workarounds to the routine checks by umpires.

Beginning in spring training games this weekend and throughout the season, umpires will inspect a pitcher’s hand, top and bottom, when conducting random between-innings inspections. Umpires can still examine a pitcher’s hat, belt and glove, as was done last season starting in June.

In the memo to clubs obtained by Sports Illustrated, senior vice president of baseball operations Mike Hill wrote, “If an umpire’s inspection reveals that the pitcher’s hand is unquestionably sticky or shows unmistakable signs of the presence of a foreign substance, the umpire will conclude that the pitcher was applying a foreign substance to the baseball for the purpose of gaining an unfair competitive advantage.” In such a case the pitcher is ejected and suspended automatically.


https://www.si.com/mlb/2022/03/25/sticky-stuff-further-crackdown

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