Hitching a Ride on Bullpen Carts

Somewhat lost amid this difficult road trip for the Nationals, the team announced via press release Thursday that they will debut the WGL Energy bullpen cart during Friday’s game against Miami. This bullpen cart will be at all remaining 2018 home games, with both home and visiting pitchers able to use the cart to drive them from the bullpen to their dugout.

Originally introduced in 1950 by the Indians, bullpen carts were popular attractions at baseball games throughout the 1960s and 1970s. They gained their most mainstream notoriety from the famous scene in the 1989 baseball classic “Major League,” when Jake Taylor awkwardly drives the cart in pursuit of his love interest in the film. They slowly disappeared from the game during the 1980s, with the Brewers the last holdout, retiring theirs in 1995. Interestingly, they are still actively used today in Japanese baseball.

This season, in an effort to speed up pace of play or increase the sheer joy of their fans, the Diamondbacks reintroduced a bullpen cart. Many in NatsTown will remember Nationals relievers Sean Doolittle and Ryan Madson both using Arizona’s bullpen cart back in May, with Doolittle particularly complimentary of the experience. Doolittle noted that the cart took more actual time than jogging directly to the mound, yet he was not “out of breath and was in a better spot energy-wise.” Besides the obvious benefit of not running 300 feet, perhaps hitching a ride allows certain relievers to completely channel their energy toward producing outs.

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For fans like myself, I cannot see any negative to a bullpen cart. Obviously, they serve a practical purpose, shuttling relief pitchers from the bullpen to save them from exerting themselves physically. If this allows certain pitchers to improve, organizations could theoretically employ this as a strategy to optimize reliever performance. Could the next frontier in maximizing players’ performance be bullpen carts?

Yet simultaneously, bullpen carts are fun and often silly, bringing levity to the game often missing today. They appeal to both adults and kids and provide a marketing opportunity for the organization. The bullpen cart would immediately be the top attraction at Nationals fan events. I can only imagine the incredible demand and lengthy lines for “Bullpen Cart Rides with Jayson Werth” or “Race Trea Turner in a Bullpen Cart Challenge.” In a season filled with difficult moments, the WGL Energy bullpen cart should provide some humor and serves as a nice reminder that baseball is fun.

*Originally Published at MASNSports on 8/17/18*

2 thoughts on “Hitching a Ride on Bullpen Carts

  1. The bullpen cart are a total joke. There were about a dozen pitching changes Saturday night on both sides when I was there and not one reliever used them. All it did was wear tire tracks around the edge of the park and a couple times come dangerously close to hitting the guys who stand security between each half inning.

    Just another failed idea in a abject failure of a season.

  2. Hey Karl,

    As always, appreciate you reading/commenting.

    I like the idea of bullpen carts for the fans as I wrote, but you have a terrific point – Why did they get this if no one will use it? IF the relievers continue to shun it, I will concede and agree with your POV.

    Ryan

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