Disabled list
In Major League Baseball, the disabled list (DL) is a method for teams to remove their injured players from the roster in order to summon healthy players.
General guidelines
Players are placed on either the 10-day (prior to the 2017 season, 15-day)[1] or the 60-day disabled list, usually depending on the severity and/or recovery time of the injury. A player may be shifted from the 10-day to the 60-day DL at any time, but not vice versa. The player may not rejoin the team until 10 or 60 days has elapsed; however, a player's time on the DL may exceed the specified number of days, and, further, if a player is transferred to the 60-day DL after August 1, he may not return to the active roster that season. The rule about rejoining the team only applies to active duty. Players are permitted to stay with the team and attend games, though players may leave the team for short term minor league rehabilitation assignments to prepare for their return to the active roster.
The 10-day DL does not count the player on the active roster (comprising the 25-man roster until September 1), whereas the 60-day DL does not require the player to be counted on either the team's active roster or its 40-man roster; however, a team's 40-man roster must be full in order for the option of a placement on the 60-day disabled list to be available.[2]
Placing a player on the disabled list opens a spot on the active roster. Another player from the minor leagues, free agent pool, a traded player, or a recovered player coming off the disabled list may be used to fill this spot. This allows a team to avoid being penalized because it avoids the disadvantage of playing with a reduced roster.
Retroactive placement may be made at most 10 days after the time of injury.[3] When a player is listed as day-to-day before being placed on the disabled list, it therefore may pinpoint the date of the injury.
Concussion List
Starting with the 2011 season, Major League Baseball instituted a new disabled list, a 7-day list specifically for concussions. The idea is to prevent long-term brain damage which may take up to 7 days by current standards.[4] If a player is not activated from the concussion DL after those 7 days have passed, he is automatically transferred to the 10-day DL.
Paternity List
Also in 2011, Major League Baseball instituted a paternity list. This allows a team to replace a player who is an expectant father for 1–3 days on the roster to be available for the birth of his child.[5]
Bereavement List
A player may be placed on the bereavement list upon attending to a seriously ill member in the player's immediate family or to a death in the family. The bereavement list may span from a minimum of three to a maximum of seven games.[6] Umpiring's bereavement list for death in the immediate family may span up to a full season.[7]
Minor League Baseball
Minor League Baseball uses a 7-day disabled list for all injuries. Players who are on the 40-man roster but get hurt in the minor leagues are placed on the minor league DL, but not on the major league DL. One problem this poses is that a player who is injured in the minors and who would be placed on the major league 60-day DL cannot be placed on the 60-day, meaning the 40-man roster spot is not freed up.
The freed-up roster spot can be strategically valuable, leading to occasional creative use of disabled lists by MLB teams and their affiliates (similar to teams appealing or dropping the appeal of a suspended player to maximize player contribution). Players who are performing poorly and are slightly injured might be put on the DL so they can go to the minors on rehab, when the MLB club might only want them in the minors because they are playing poorly. There are rules against blatantly "gaming the system" in the Collective Bargaining Agreement between the players and the league.
A team may keep an injured player on the roster but keep him listed as 'day-to-day' to indicate that the medical staff is unable to determine when the player can resume normal playing activities again. If the injury turns out to be minor, then the player may resume playing without having to wait to come off the disabled list; however, depending upon the circumstances, the team may find itself effectively shorthanded in the meantime.
Players recovering from an injury may appear in a limited number of minor league games while still on the disabled list in order to prepare for reactivation. Non-pitchers may stay in the minor league club for up to 20 days; pitchers for up to 30 days.[8]
History
The categories and variety of disabled lists have changed numerous times over the years. The 15-day disabled list was introduced in 1966, joining a 10-day, 21-day and 30-day options, and the 60-day disabled list in 1990. Prior to 1990, the number of players who could be placed on each list was limited, players with major league contracts were not allowed to go to the minor leagues for rehabilitation, and there was less flexibility about when they could return to action. The 10-day disabled list was dropped in 1984 but restored for the 2017 season (replacing the 15-day option), and the 21-day and 30-day options were dropped in 1990 with the introduction of the 60-day disabled list.[9]
See also
References
- ↑ "CBA ending All-Star link to World Series' home-field advantage". ESPN.com. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ↑ "MLB Miscellany: Rules, regulations and statistics" MLB.com
- ↑ "Scout.com: MLB Roster Rules"
- ↑ MLB institutes 7-day DL for concussions ESPN
- ↑ Bay returns, appreciative of paternity leave MLB.com
- ↑ "MLB Status Lists".
- ↑ Imber, Gil (20 March 2015). "Off Bereavement, Sam Holbrook Returns to Field". Close Call Sports & Umpire Ejection Fantasy League.
- ↑ "Transactions Primer"
- ↑ Dawkins, Corey. "The Disabled List: A History". Baseball Prospectus. Retrieved 22 September 2013.