At first I thought it was an example of the Commissioner of MLB laying down the law--specifically, telling pitchers they will get a 10-day suspension if they apply a foreign substance to a baseball before pitching it.
Now I think it could be a great example of the dynamics of MLB.
The Sox manager, Alex Cora, takes it very seriously and has told his pitchers they should avoid the ignominy, which he himself endured, of being publicly suspended. So too did a bunch of MLB pitchers who went public and said this dictum from the commish is bs, high-handed, draconian, and possibly the end of life as we know it.
One pitcher said outlawing foreign substances was tantamount to allowing MLB batters to hit off of a T. Another said he ruined his arm trying to adapt to this foolish and completely unfair new emphasis on an old rule.
And, sure enough, over the past week or so we have seen, especially by the Sox, examples of Sox pitchers being pummeled and Sox hitters pummeling other teams' pitchers.
Now, however, I am beginning to wonder. For example, not one pitcher has yet been nailed for doctoring a baseball. No manager has blown the whistle on an opposing pitcher, nor has any umpire.
Here are the scores from yesterday/last night: 1-0, 11-10, 7-1, 5-3, 9-1, 7-5, 10-2, 5-3, 2-1, 6-5, 11-3, 3-0, 5-3, 8-2, 5-1. One game, Pirates over Guardians 11-10, can be called a slugfest. But Nats over Mets, 1-0, was a pitching duel, ditto Astros over ChiSox, 2-1, and Dodgers over Diamondbacks, 3-0. In 12 of those games at least one team scored 3 runs or fewer.
Like most everyone else on talksox, I watched last night's game, pretty much expecting Pivetta, who earlier was so good, to get hammered again as he was June 12 by the Jays (6 runs in 5 innings). Instead I saw him throwing what I thought were some pretty good sliders and knuckle curves. He gave up 3 runs on a 3 run dinger off a fat fastball near the center of the zone. The next 2 runs by the Royals were off of Andriese, who Cora has used sparingly this year because he stinks. The Royals pitching, on the other hand, had no problem holding the Sox 3d best offense in MLB (3d best OPS, 3d most runs scored) to 3 runs.
So, me, I'm beginning to think the Commish ain't really running the show. He may be right that MLB-wide batting averages are the lowest in 50 years and that one reason for that is pitchers habitually doctoring the baseball to get the right spin rate or whatever. I would add those computer-generated defensive formations have played a role, as have hitters inclinations to swing more upward to hit over those same defensive formations.