Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, June 20, 2026

A stickier baseball could have unintended consequences

Tuesday’s Say Hey, Baseball features a stickier baseball, a flooded ballpark, and massive public screw-ups.

St Louis Cardinals v Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
St Louis Cardinals v Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images

Rob Manfred is borderline obsessed with changing the game of baseball. He’s already gotten rid of the intentional walk, he’s seriously talking about changing the strike zone, and now? Now Rob Manfred wants to introduce a stickier baseball into the mix. You read that right. Manfred has commissioned Rawlings to make a baseball with a tacky leather surface to enhance grip, according to Jeff Passan at Yahoo! Sports. This is just the latest iteration of the project, which started last year with the use of bright white tacky baseballs for two days in the AFL.

This isn’t about pace of play, shockingly. That’s been Manfred’s baby, but this isn’t about that. It’s about better enforcement of the foreign substances rule, which has gotten lax in recent years. When a player like Michael Pineda is ejected for having pine tar on his hands, that’s an extreme situation, because every other lesser offense completely slides. Pitchers typically use a mixture that they feel helps them grip and control the ball better, and hitters usually agree. But Manfred has apparently grown tired of the players’ detente on this issue. A tackier baseball would mean that players would no longer need to use any foreign substance to help them with grip.

Passan points out that there could be a lot of unintended consequences. Players might be able to see the ball better, for instance. And if seeing the ball better is a consequence that leads to more offense, which something that falls under Manfred’s “pace of action” obsession, then I’m sure he wouldn’t object. But one unintended consequence has to do with the special mud that every baseball is rubbed with before it’s used. If MLB started using a tackier baseballs, they would no longer need to be rubbed with Lena Blackburne Rubbing Mud, the substance that every single MLB baseball is slathered with prior to games. And without MLB as their main customer, that would signal almost certain doom for the company.

Manfred wants to change the game, and he intends to do it with or without the players’ agreement or involvement. Hopefully he’s thought this one through fully before unleashing it onto baseball at large.

See More:

More in MLB

MLB
Oklahoma-Georgia gave us an incredible family moment at the Men’s College World SeriesOklahoma-Georgia gave us an incredible family moment at the Men’s College World Series
MLB

Kolby Branch’s final collegiate swing capped off a bittersweet night for the Branch family in Omaha

By Mark Schofield
MLB
Men’s College World Series 2026: Schedule, scores, and how to watchMen’s College World Series 2026: Schedule, scores, and how to watch
MLB

Here is everything you need to know about the 2026 Men’s College World Series, from the full schedule to how to watch

By Mark Schofield
MLB
Owen Hull and UNC knock off West Virginia to advance to the MCWS FinalsOwen Hull and UNC knock off West Virginia to advance to the MCWS Finals
MLB

UNC is headed to the Men’s College World Series Finals after knocking off West Virginia in Omaha

By Mark Schofield
MLB
Men’s College World Series: Joey Volchko dominates as Georgia knocks off TexasMen’s College World Series: Joey Volchko dominates as Georgia knocks off Texas
MLB

Georgia’s Joey Volchko was dominant as the Bulldogs knocked off Texas to open their MCWS

By Mark Schofield
MLB
Men’s College World Series: Gavin Gallaher, Colin Hynek deliver for UNC vs. Ole MissMen’s College World Series: Gavin Gallaher, Colin Hynek deliver for UNC vs. Ole Miss
MLB

Gavin Gallaher’s first career MCWS hit came at a perfect time for UNC against Ole Miss

By Mark Schofield
MLB
Men’s College World Series 2026: One key player for each teamMen’s College World Series 2026: One key player for each team
MLB

Here is one key player to watch on each team at the Men’s College World Series

By Mark Schofield