THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
July 28, 2021 at 14:40 JST
Dominican Republic’s Julio Rodriguez celebrates after hitting a single against Japan during the first inning of a baseball game at the 2020 Summer Olympics on July 28 in Fukushima. (AP Photo)
YOKOHAMA--If the Colorado Rockies were in the Olympics, they’d have had some shorter nights.
Olympic baseball, which started Wednesday, has some notable differences from Major League Baseball.
A biggie is the rout rule, which would have saved some innings for the Rockies. A game is over when a team is losing by at least 10 runs after seven innings. That would have cut short the Colorado’s 12-2 win over Philadelphia on April 25, their 12-0 loss to San Francisco the following day and their 13-8 win over Cincinnati on May 13.
The Olympic rout rule was put in place by the World Baseball Softball Confederation for all but medal round games: The final out also has occurred if a team is ahead by 15 runs after five innings.
Olympic baseball is a throwback to the pre-analytics age. MLB Statcast isn’t installed, so there is no scrutiny of spin rates, exit velocity and launch angle.
“Basically, we had nothing,” American third baseman Todd Frazier said after the Americas qualifying tournament. “We had no video. We had no analytical process. It’s ‘Here’s your bat. Bring your own stuff.’“
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