I see some news/comments about players being put on the 10 day DL. Is this new to MLB? Does Flea flicker have this status yet to allow us to put those players on DL? League I'm in now shows 7day and 15 day but not 10 day? Thanks for your help.
Its new. Our league is still adjusting on how to deal with this.
See from MLB.com:
10-day DL
Definition
The 10-day disabled list -- or "DL" -- allows clubs to remove players from the 25-man active roster while keeping them on the 40-man roster. Players can be placed on the 10-day DL for any type of injury, though players with concussion symptoms are first sent to the 7-day DL. Players on the 10-day DL must remain out of action for at least 10 days, though a player can also stay on the list for considerably longer than 10 days, if necessary.
Players may be placed on the 10-day DL "retroactively," meaning the DL stint is backdated to the day after the last date on which the player appeared in a game. For instance, if a pitcher is diagnosed with elbow inflammation on June 4 after feeling soreness during his June 1 start, he could be placed on the 10-day DL on June 4 retroactive to June 2. In that case, he would be eligible to return from the disabled list on June 12.
History of the rule
As part of the 2017-21 Collective Bargaining Agreement, the 10-day DL replaced the 15-day DL as the shortest DL option for non-concussion injuries. Clubs have three disabled-list options: The 7-day DL (solely for players experiencing concussion symptoms), the 10-day DL and the 60-day DL. Baseball had a 10-day disabled list at various points through its history before it was dropped in 1984.
SnowmannKCSun 4/2/17 2:10 AM
I see some news/comments about players being put on the 10 day DL. Is this new to MLB? Does Flea flicker have this status yet to allow us to put those players on DL? League I'm in now shows 7day and 15 day but not 10 day? Thanks for your help.
NJC1979Fri 5/5/17 6:14 PM
Its new. Our league is still adjusting on how to deal with this.
See from MLB.com:
10-day DL
Definition
The 10-day disabled list -- or "DL" -- allows clubs to remove players from the 25-man active roster while keeping them on the 40-man roster. Players can be placed on the 10-day DL for any type of injury, though players with concussion symptoms are first sent to the 7-day DL. Players on the 10-day DL must remain out of action for at least 10 days, though a player can also stay on the list for considerably longer than 10 days, if necessary.
Players may be placed on the 10-day DL "retroactively," meaning the DL stint is backdated to the day after the last date on which the player appeared in a game. For instance, if a pitcher is diagnosed with elbow inflammation on June 4 after feeling soreness during his June 1 start, he could be placed on the 10-day DL on June 4 retroactive to June 2. In that case, he would be eligible to return from the disabled list on June 12.
History of the rule
As part of the 2017-21 Collective Bargaining Agreement, the 10-day DL replaced the 15-day DL as the shortest DL option for non-concussion injuries. Clubs have three disabled-list options: The 7-day DL (solely for players experiencing concussion symptoms), the 10-day DL and the 60-day DL. Baseball had a 10-day disabled list at various points through its history before it was dropped in 1984.