The controversial new MLB pitch clock made its Spring Training debut Friday in a game between the Seattle Mariners and the San Diego Padres. Padres starting pitcher Nick Martinez was the first to work under the new timing guidelines, facing Seattle's Kolten Wong as the large countdown ticked backwards from 15 seconds before each pitch.
The game was televised by Bally Sports as Padres broadcasters Don Orsillo and Mark Grant — Grant himself a former MLB pitcher — described the action with equal parts humor and awe.
![march madness logo](http://staticg.sportskeeda.com/skm/assets/march-madness-logo.png)
"And Martinez is on the clock," Grant said, taking a page from the famed draft day quote from a number of professional sports teams.
"Gotta go," Orsillo said multiple times during the first pitch clock at-bat.
Baseball fans' reactions were all over the map as they made their feelings known upon seeing the spectacle.
MLB's pitch clock, one of a number of new guidelines that the league is implementing for 2023 and going forward to speed up the game, is also one of the most divisive. Many fans are applauding the new technology.
Of course, many fans are on the opposite side of the fence with varying degrees of displeasure. The clock makes some fans itchy, while others are seemingly becoming nauseous.
Several MLB fans are concerned as to how the sudden quickening of the game — not to mention the large clock — will affect their viewing experience. Will the clock become the focal point of viewers, rather than the interaction between pitcher and batter?
But there is still going to be quite a long educational curve regarding the pitch clock and what it means if the timer hits zero. It's just a ball. Nothing else bad happens to the pitcher.
MLB set on picking up the pace in 2023 and beyond
![Commissioner Robert D. Manfred Jr. on the field prior to Game Two of the 2022 World Series](https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=190 190w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=720 720w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=640 640w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=1045 1045w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=1200 1200w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=1460 1460w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg?w=1600 1600w, https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/editor/2023/02/b35c8-16772734583316-1920.jpg 1920w)
For the record, here are the guidelines behind the new MLB pitch clock:
- There will be a 30-second timer between batters.
- Between pitches, a 15-second timer will be in place with the bases empty and a 20-second timer with runners on base.
- A batter must be in the box and ready to receive the pitch by the 8-second mark.
- Pitchers that violate the timer will be charged a ball, batters that violate the timer will be charged a strike.
- The timer is reset if the pitcher steps off the rubber or attempts a pick-off throw with a runner on base, but the pitcher is limited to two attempts.