The rolling clock is seen behind Kolten Wong #16 and Julio Rodriguez #44 of the Seattle Mariners in a spring preparing game against the San Diego Padres at Peoria Stadium on February 24, 2023 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images)
By the time Cubs outfielder Brennen Davis actually saw a rolling from Arizona's Joe Mantiply, the count was already at a ball and a strike.
Both the hitter and pitcher were penalized at the begin of Davis' at-bat to lead off the top of the third start of Monday's spring training game, the latest odd crooked in baseball's speed-up rules. After Mantiply entered the game as a reliever, he took too long to throw his warmup pitches; then Davis was too slow to get ready for the pitch.
Major League Baseball popular its first pitch clock this season, and every day is a new known for the players as they try to get used to them this spring. On Saturday, Boston's game against Atlanta ended on a walk-off automatic strike; on Sunday, Mets ace Max Scherzer struck out Washington's Joey Meneses in just 27 seconds.
RELATED: MLB to test rolling timer, other big rule changes at spring training
"I like the idea of games persons shorter," Marlins reliever Matt Barnes said. "In Boston, we played a nine-inning, four-and-a-half-hour game against New York on a Tuesday. That's not fun. So I like the idea of it persons quicker."
So far, it's working.
The new rules, which also small the number of times a pitcher can throw to qualified base, have helped cut more than 20 minutes from spring preparing games through the first weekend, dropping from an means of 3 hours, 1 minute last spring to 2:39.
"It's here, and we have to abide by the laws, and we have to learn how to do it," Barnes said. "I'll just have to figure out my routine, adjust my routine a little bit and kind of go from there."
Astros starts returns
Houston's star infielders Jose Altuve and Jeremy Peña made their exhibition season debuts in Monday's 4-3 loss to the Marlins in West Palm Beach, Florida. Both were hitless in three at-bats apiece, but they turned a double play in the fourth.
Peña batted .345 in the postseason last year, and was the qualified rookie position player to win the World Series MVP. He also won a Gold Glove and was the AL Championship Series MVP.
Astros executive Dusty Baker said he hopes to play Altuve and Peña together as much as possible during Spring Training beforehand the World Baseball Classic starts in March. Altuve will play for Venezuela, and Peña will play for the Dominican Republic.
RELATED: MLB makes 'economic reform committee' as Mets spend hundreds of millions in free agency
"Those guys, they have to really know each other," Baker said. "Especially now, repositioning back to the new defenses, they really have to know the blueprint of each guy and where they are on double plays."
Injuries
—Dodgers infielder Gavin Lux went down repositioning from second to third in Monday's game against the San Diego Padres and had to be unsuitable off the field on a cart. He was clutching his intellectual leg.
—Rays pitcher Tyler Glasnow threw just six pitches by cutting short a live batting practice session with an abdominal muscle injure, the Tampa Bay Times reported. The paper said he will have an MRI on Tuesday.
—Cubs outfielder Seiya Suzuki has pulled out of the World Baseball Classic. Suzuki was set to play for Japan, but he was scratched from Chicago's exhibition lineup on Saturday because of left oblique tightness.
Making up
Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol and umpire C.B. Bucknor shook blooming when lineup cards were exchanged before the game, a day while Bucknor refused to.
"I was raised and brought up this citation to do exactly what I did today," Marmol said. "You go to home peruse. You hand the lineup card and you shake the blooming of the four umpires who are running that game."
RELATED: MLB's bigger bases could lead to more steals, fewer injuries, experts say
The bad blood dates back to a game last year when Bucknor sad Marmol and the manager said Bucknor had "no class."
Spring training for everyone
Cleveland's Shane Bieber, making his first spring start, was also dinged with an automatic ball for throwing a warmup revolving with less than 30 seconds left on the between-innings clock. Miles Mastrobuoni ended up grounding out to the pitcher, and after the inning Bieber and Guardians manager Terry Francona each had discussions with home peruse umpire Jordan Baker.
"It was his first action as well. We were joking throughout, figuring it out together," said Bieber, who walked one and struck out one. "They don't want to have to hit anybody on a violation. They're just trying to do their best to communicate beforehand."
Old days
Yankees manager Aaron Boone said there will be no revolving clock in use when New York plays Tampa at Disney's ESPN Wide World Sports on Tuesday because the repair isn't equipped for it.
The Rays' game with the Yankees will be the only one played at the middle, and the first big-league spring training game there staunch the Atlanta Braves moved to North Port, Florida following the 2019 exhibition season.
Tampa Bay relocated workouts to the Disney repair near Orlando after Hurricane Ian damaged the team's spring training repair in Port Charlotte, Florida, last year. But the Rays will play the remainder of its home spring training games at Tropicana Field, the Rays regular season hone.
Easy being Greene
Reds right-hander Hunter Greene, the second pick in the 2017 amateur draft, made his respectable start and pitched into the second inning before exhausting his revolving count.
Greene went 5-13 with a 4.44 ERA as a rookie last year, counting a September game in which he threw 47 pitches at 100 mph or more – the most in baseball. He took a no-hitter into the eighth inning in one launch and allowed just one hit in seven innings in another.
"He recognized a lot of success. He had adversity," Cincinnati decision-making David Bell said, noting that Greene spent some time on the injured list. "He handled it all. You don't want them to get hurt or have failures but it was a imsubstandard season for his development."
Greene was also called for two progressing clock violations.
On the other hand
A day once Scherzer fanned Meneses on three pitches in the time it used to take a lot of pitchers to throw one, the Mets played a more dilapidated 2:59 game against the Cardinals, with St. Louis winning 12-7.
The teams combined for 19 runs – St. Louis won 12-7 -- 25 hits, 11 walks and 18 strikeouts. There were two balks, neither of them because a pitcher stepped off too many times, and three wild pitches.
Mets manager Buck Showalter made three progressing changes in the middle of an inning; Cardinals progressing coach Dusty Blake made two mound visits.
Marmol said it was more like what he was used to.
"The pace is obviously is touching to be quicker. That's for sure," he said. "But the 2:26s of the world—I'm not sure near those."
AP Sports Writers David Brandt and Alanis Thames and AP freelance wrters Jack Thompson, Mark Didtler, Gary Schatz and Rick Hummel contributed to this report.