“We have two products out there that we’re testing, with both major league and minor league players, designed to deal with the grip issue,” Manfred said. “It’s two different approaches in terms of what’s better and more functional for players.
“We do want to give pitchers a ball with better grip, again more consistent, without providing, let me use the phrase ‘performance enhancement,’ associated with the crazy sticky stuff.”
He said baseball might have an approved gripping agent by next season.
As for the league’s other issues, Manfred said, “Our single biggest priority right now is reach to our fans from a broadcast perspective.” He said the league was addressing that with streaming deals, like the ones recently agreed to with Peacock and Apple TV+, and by finding ways to supplement coverage without further eroding the regional sports network model that has been highly profitable for the league.
He said M.L.B. had made progress in various minor league initiatives to improve game play, with a pitch clock being the one closest to implementation at the major league level. He also said he believed the advancement of women, on and off the field, was a huge priority.
As for the 99-day lockout that consumed baseball’s off-season, Manfred said his main takeaway was that he needed to step up communication, something he is doing by traveling to meet with teams in small groups. And while plenty of feelings were hurt during the lockout, he said it ended in a good place.
“At the end of the day, we got a deal that allowed us to play 162 games,” he said, “and that’s the most important thing.”