Fans Love the MLB Pitch Clock, Survey Says

Publish date: 2024-08-17

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The biggest winner of the first month of the 2023 MLB season isn’t a team or player, it’s a rule: the pitch clock. 

Introduced this season, the rule change is making MLB fans more interested in watching ballgames, according to a new Morning Consult survey. And those who have watched say the game is now more enjoyable than it used to be.

Nearly 7 in 10 self-identified MLB fans (69%) and more than 4 in 5 self-identified avid MLB fans (84%) said they are either “very interested” or “somewhat interested” in watching games that have incorporated the new technology to speed up games, increases of 7 percentage points each compared with a survey conducted in March before the start of the season. Under the new rule, pitchers have 15 seconds to throw the next pitch when bases are empty, 20 seconds with a runner on base and 30 seconds between batters.

And the pitch clock is having the intended effect to speed up games: The average time for a regular-season game through May 9 was two hours and 37 minutes. That’s 28 minutes faster than last year, according to MLB.

More on the new MLB rules

MLB sees upswing in metrics 

As of April 26, MLB league attendance was up 5% compared with 2022, with two-thirds of franchises noticing bumps in their figures. MLB is also seeing year-over-year gains in national TV viewership, which is likely in part because of the quickened pace. 

The ideal duration for an MLB game is two hours and 30 minutes, according to MLB’s own fan research shared with Morning Consult. The league previously surveyed 15,000 MiLB.TV subscribers and found that fan support of the pitch clock gradually increased as subscribers watched more games.

“Most importantly, players and umpires have adjusted beautifully,” Morgan Sword, MLB’s executive vice president of baseball operations, said recently on MLB Network. “It’s amazing that habits that have been formed over decades have been changed within a matter of weeks. The game really looks a lot more today like it did in the 1970s and ’80s.” 

Even some baseball traditionalists, like The Washington Post’s George F. Will, have written that fans should “rejoice” because MLB has turned back the clock, at least for now, to a former era of faster games.

The May 3, 2023, survey was conducted among a representative sample of 870 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of +/-3 percentage points.

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