It is safe to say that I rarely agree with Hank Steinbrenner, who is part of the new New York Yankees braintrust (does that qualify as an oxymoron?). However, I share his sentiment about National League baseball. The senior circuit needs to incorporate the designated hitter.
Steinbrenner would like to see the DH added in the National League for selfish purposes. Chien-Ming Wang is out until September after injuring his ankle while running the bases last weekend in interleague play. I prefer that the NL introduce the DH for entertainment reasons. Simply put, NL baseball is not as exciting as the AL brand.
Even in the 1970s and 1980s, when the NL was superior in
overall talent to the
Simply put, pitchers are not challenged in the NL like they
are in the American League. Look at many NL rosters and you will see a
light-hitting batter in the No. 8 spot and the pitcher at No.9, unless you are
Tony LaRussa of the St. Louis Cardinals and bat the pitcher No. 8. This is one
reason why the
The fans are the main reason Major League Baseball should incorporate the DH in the NL. It is not interesting to watch a pitcher hit, especially during a two-out rally. People who do not like baseball criticize the game for being too slow and not having enough action. It is more challenging for the pitcher, and more entertaining for the fan, to have a lineup from 1-9 composed of true hitters.
In August, Major League Baseball might debut instant replay to review questionable home run calls, which is long overdue. Perhaps in the off-season, the league and its owners will consider adding the DH in the National League, which is also long overdue. Traditionalists will fight this, but many of these same traditionalists opposed interleague play when it was introduced but now favor the schedule.
Baseball is a great game, and to remain that way, it needs
to adapt with the times. Watching a pitcher at the plate is boring. Challenging
a pitcher with nine hitters is entertaining and makes the game more attractive
to fans.
