Major League Baseball Recommends Safety Netting Between Dugouts
Major League Baseball recommended teams have protective netting between the dugouts for any field-level seats within 70 feet of home plate.
The guidelines were announced Wednesday at the winter meetings following a season in which several fans were injured by foul balls, prompting MLB to study fan safety. Most teams are expected to expand their use of netting.
The recommendation also applies to spring training ballparks.
Boston, the Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia immediately said they will follow the recommendation. The Phillies hope to install thinner material that is less noticeable.
“We anticipate that such compliance will require us to expand our protective netting behind home plate about 10 feet in width on both sides,” Philadelphia Chief Operating Officer Michael Stiles said. “”We understand that our fans differ in their opinions about sitting behind protective netting and we will do our best to accommodate those different preferences,”
Boston is “in the process of evaluating different design options to identify the best solution for Fenway Park and is proactively reaching out to the ticket holders most affected by the planned changes,” the Red Sox said.
MLB said it will work with teams and ticket sellers to identify which seats are behind netting.
- Allstate Insurers Sue Hyundai, Kia to Pay for Claims From Defective Cars
- Verisk: A Shift to More EVs on The Road Could Have Far-Reaching Impacts
- T-Mobile’s Network Breached as Part of Chinese Hacking Operation
- Allstate Thinking Outside the Cubicle With Flexible Workspaces