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Fans Should Pay Attention To Foul Balls, But It’s Not That Simple

Tags: ball netting foul

Ballpark Netting and fan safety is unfortunately a hot topic today. In a game between the Cubs and Astros on Wednesday night, a young girl was struck with a foul Ball line drive off the bat of Albert Almora Jr.

From reports I’ve seen, the girl is going to be alright. Almora was distraught immediately after it happened, and again when asking security for an update between innings. Most of the players on the field looked stunned, clearly affected. The girl and her family had to deal with the physical and emotional trauma of the event.

As expected, many took to social media to voice their opinions. All 30 ballparks extended the netting two years ago as part of an effort to improve fan safety. Today, some are advocating for netting to be extended even further, baseball journalists included. Sung Min Kim pointed out that in the Korean Baseball Organization (KBO), all ballparks have extended netting farther down the foul lines.

Joe Sheehan alluded to the possibility of legal action being taken in the future, which I’ll come back to later.

And of course, with social media being what it is, there were less sensible arguments being made.

“Pay attention” seems to be the most common sentiment from the other side, so let’s examine this further.

Over the past seven days, Statcast has tracked 5,177 foul balls. While Baseball Savant doesn’t produce a tidy leaderboard of foul balls sorted by exit velocity, we can find those by exporting the data into a spreadsheet. It turns out, the hardest hit foul ball in the past week was off the bat of Marcell Ozuna on May 26th. The Cardinals were hosting the Braves and the conditions were good – partly cloudy, 83° (23° C) at game time with a light breeze, and no rain.

I happened to be watching this game live, and the sound the ball made against the Webster University sign in left field echoed through the whole stadium. You could hear the announcers chuckling to themselves, in awe of how hard Ozuna hit it.

Statcast measured Ozuna’s foul ball velocity at 115.9 mph. For our purposes, that converts to about 170 feet per second. The distance from home plate to third base is 90 feet. The protective netting in ballparks extends just past third base.

An image of Busch Stadium from RateYourSeats.com grants us the perspective of the first seat unprotected by the netting down the third base line.

Source: Tyler Perkowitz

Let’s estimate that these seats are 30 feet past the bag, making it 120 feet from the batter at home plate, give or take. Had Ozuna hit a line drive towards section 108 where the protective netting ends, a spectator there would have less than three-quarters of a second before a ball hit at 170 ft/sec. arrives. Balls hit this hard in play are often difficult for Major League players to field cleanly. Yet fans are expected to have the physical skills of professional athletes in order to keep themselves safe.

In 2017, Zach Cozart spoke about kids in the stands left unprotected by netting.

No matter how locked in their parents are in protecting them, the ball comes so fast that you can’t react sometimes

He expressed concern again. Remember, this is an athlete who is exceptionally gifted and trained to catch baseballs at tremendous speeds:

if they hit a hard line drive to me at shortstop sometimes, I’m like, ‘man, that ball was hit hard.’ And I play the game for a living at the highest level. These people have no chance

Cozart’s not wrong. Observe this 110 mph line drive off the bat of Joey Gallo.

That’s Shed Long, a 23-year old second baseman for the Mariners. Baseball America labelled him as a “fringe-average defender” in their scouting report this year. Even at 205 feet from home plate he was unable to catch Gallo’s line drive, even hurting himself in the process. He was, presumably, “paying attention”.

This should illustrate the logistical impossibility, and thus the logical fallacy, of the fan’s ability to protect him or herself by simply paying attention. The speeds are so great, and distances are so short, that an additional step is needed to protect spectators.

So you would think it would be a no-brainer for teams and the league to want netting extended even further. Well, it turns out that it’s not that simple. Sheryl Ring wrote about fan safety from a legal perspective at FanGraphs in February 2018.

If a foul ball comes your way at a ballpark, the law basically says you should have seen it coming. You’ll probably find language on your ticket saying you assume the risk of injury by foul ball, like the Yankees have on theirs.

On the other hand, an entirely different set of rules exists where there is netting. That’s because, in those instances, the team has voluntarily assumed the duty to protect its spectators by erecting the netting.

In this silly set of legal circumstances, teams are not incentivized to voluntarily extend the netting. Sheryl mentioned that she’ll be publishing a new article on this topic next week – keep your eyes out for that at FanGraphs.

So the next time you’re sitting at the ballpark close to the action, pay attention. This should be printed right on your ticket stub. But also know that that might not be enough to save you, or someone near you, from serious injury. Sure, the likelihood of that is slim. But we’re reminded every season that bad things still happen. And with the ball livelier this year than perhaps any season in history, the risk to fan safety is not going to be mitigated on its own.

The post Fans Should Pay Attention To Foul Balls, But It’s Not That Simple appeared first on Blue Jays Beat.



This post first appeared on Blue Jays Beat, please read the originial post: here

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