⚾ What I Would Do as MLB Commissioner for One Year
By Joseph Ashcraft Jr.
If I were granted just one year as Commissioner of Major League Baseball, I wouldn't waste a single inning. I’d use that time to restore tradition, deepen fan engagement, and hold the game to a higher standard of integrity.
Here’s my vision — tough, fair, and unapologetically baseball-first:
๐ฅ 1. Abolish the DH in the National League
Baseball is a thinking game. Managers used to out-strategize each other through double switches and intentional walks to the 8-hole. The universal DH takes the soul out of the National League. I'd bring it back — pitchers hitting, bunting, and sometimes even surprising us with a clutch double. That's real baseball.
๐ฐ️ 2. Remove the Pitch Clock
Baseball isn’t meant to be timed like a microwave dinner. The pitch clock, while well-intentioned, rushes the game and chips away at its timeless rhythm. I’d eliminate it and let pitchers and hitters settle into the flow the game has always known.
๐ 3. No More Ghost Runners in Extras
Extra innings should be earned, not handed out. That runner on second to start extras? It’s a shortcut that cheapens the strategy and endurance that define great games. We play it straight — earn your runs, or go home.
๐ธ 4. Enforce a Salary Floor
Parity doesn’t come from capping success — it comes from requiring commitment. I’d work with owners to implement a salary floor, ensuring every team spends enough to compete. Fans in smaller markets deserve more than hope — they deserve investment.
๐ง 5. Put Kids First
Baseball is a childhood memory waiting to happen. I’d make sure:
- Every team hosts “Run the Bases” events for kids.
- Players are required to sign autographs for young fans on select game days.
- Teams offer affordable family ticket packages, especially during weekday games.
Because if we don’t capture the next generation now, we risk losing them forever.
๐งพ 6. Make Official Scorers Accountable
Ever see a blown call on a “hit” that should’ve been an error? Under my leadership, official scorers would be required to explain questionable decisions publicly. Fans deserve transparency. Pitchers deserve fairness. And the scorecard deserves respect.
๐ง Final Thoughts:
I’m not here to reinvent baseball. I’m here to restore its heart.
“Baseball belongs to the people — not just to networks, spreadsheets, or automation.”
Give me one year as commissioner, and I’d remind the world why baseball is America’s game — slow, smart, stubborn, and beautifully human.
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Joseph Ashcraft Jr. is a sportscaster, baseball fan, and believer in the timeless values of the game. He believes baseball is for everyone — especially the kids in the stands who dream of being the next voice or hero of the game.
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