Nats’ star Ryan Zimmerman’s AP diary: Bring the DH to the NL

For The Associated Press

Nats’ star Ryan Zimmerman’s AP diary: Bring the DH to the NLBy RYAN ZIMMERMAN

EDITOR’S NOTE: Ryan Zimmerman is a two-time All-Star infielder who has played 15 years in the majors, all with the Washington Nationals. He holds most of the team’s career hitting records, and his two homers and seven RBIs last postseason helped the Nationals win their first World Series championship. With baseball on hold, Zimmerman is offering his thoughts — as told to AP Sports Writer Howard Fendrich — in a diary of sorts. In the seventh installment, he discusses the possibility of the

— and, perhaps, beyond.

Growing up, I always just thought of the DH as the difference between the two leagues. But I also did have a sense of: “This is silly. Why don’t we all just play by the same rules?”

For me, it’s just a cleaner game with the DH. You know what’s going on. You know the lineup. The pitcher can just worry about pitching.

Over the last five or so years, the idea of a universal DH really gained steam. You’ve seen some pitchers get hurt, whether it’s hitting or running the bases.

Guys like Max Scherzer, Jacob deGrom, Madison Bumgarner — they still work at hitting. But 95% of the pitchers don’t really even try anymore.

When you look back at the ’90s and early 2000s, pitchers took a lot of pride in it. They got the bunts down. Some of them could hit-and-run pretty regularly. “Pitchers who hit” was actually a part of the game.

Now, I feel like, a majority of the time that spot’s an out. And when they’re supposed to be advancing runners, it looks like not many of them really even care anymore. If you really watch the games in the NL, most pitchers don’t even really want to be up there.

No one comes to the field to watch pitchers bunt or hit. At least I don’t think they do. I’d much rather see those guys throw eight shutout innings than lay a bunt down — especially when the other team is just going to intentionally walk the next guy to set up a double play, anyway.

I guess I’ve probably changed on the DH rule a little bit. Coming up, being a defensive player, I took so much pride in the way I played defense. My whole life and the beginning of my career, I almost thought of myself as more of a defensive player, and then the offense sort of came as I got older and more mature — to the point that now I’m pretty proud of what I’ve done at the plate in the big leagues.

Now you’re talking about real career extension for a guy like me that could play first base three or four days a week, and then DH three or four days a week.

Also, with all the new thoughts and worries about time of game, for all the talk that the DH adds time to AL games, I actually think their games run smoother. In the NL, if the pitcher makes the last out of an inning, or a pitcher is on second base when the last out is made, I feel like some pitchers take five minutes to get back out there to the mound.

I know the counter-argument is the NL has so much more strategy with double-switches, and you need to worry about if you want to leave your pitcher in for an extra inning, maybe, if he’s up to 90 pitches and he’s doing well but you’re down one run and have the bases loaded in the sixth inning: “Do you pinch-hit for the pitcher?” I get that aspect of it, as well.

But if there’s a DH rule, all the pitchers need to worry about is pitching.

If I’m a fan, I’d rather watch Max Scherzer pitch and someone else hit.

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP-Sports

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