Dr. Gregory K. Hillis, an associate professor of theology known around Bellarmine
University's campus as a pretty passionate baseball fan, has a proposal for Major
League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred: "Don’t run from baseball’s leisurely pace.
Embrace it. Teach about it. Market it."
In a column for Commonweal Magazine, Hillis makes the case that baseball's "pace of play" issue - which the league has
attempted to fix with pitching clocks and other rule changes designed to make the
sport attractive to younger fans - isn't really a problem at all.
Drawing on the work of 20th-century German Catholic philosopher Josef Pieper, Hillis
believes baseball "has something to contribute to a society of people who (maybe without
even knowing it) both need and want the cyclical rhythms and pastoral pace of a game
that doesn’t entertain so much as provide opportunities for training the contemplative
gaze."
Read his column here.
Bellarmine News
Greg Hillis column: quit trying to 'fix' baseball's pace of play
March 28, 2018
