Okay. Looks like I am in the minority here, but I like the double-hook rule. It effectively gives us the DH, but it also keeps the excitement (and importance) of a good bench. Whatever they decide, we need it to apply to both leagues.
Think I kinda like the idea too. It would seemingly take away what is typically given as the main reason for many that favor the DH - not wanting your SP to get hurt doing something you're not paying him to do.
AL teams have spent huge amounts of money over the years for people like Cruz, Big Papi, etc, to do nothing but step in the box 3 times each night. That's fine with me, but it's a strategy choice (and one that should be available in BOTH leagues no matter what IMO). Lots of people have talked about how bad an idea it is to have a pure DH over the last few years - unless you've got an elite one. Many times it's a better idea to get your main pieces off their feet and give them extra rest. This would be a great idea in the Braves' situation when everyone's healthy - use Ozuna, Freeman, and d'Arnaud as your DH twice a week, with Acuna taking it the other day and almost none of the main guys ever has to take a day off. Panda plays 1B twice a week to cover for Freeman, Adrianza plays once a week at 2B and once a week at 3B to cover for Ozzie and Riley's days off, and Arcia covers Dansby's day off. Arcia and Adrianza can also take a second day at 3B in the event you want Riley to play in the OF one of the days Ozuna is the DH (or you need to give Ozzie, Dansby, or Riley an extra day at times).
I think everybody understands that pushing a SP to at least start through the lineup a third time is asking a lot (for some of them), but let's be realistic here - if you're a team paying a Pitcher $10 million plus and are so worried about his ability to stay healthy when throwing 90-100 pitches, YOU'RE a huge part of what's making the game so boring for the fans. Is developing SPs that go 5-6 innings every start
optimal from a metrics standpoint? Of course not. I think anyone that argues that is more or less stupid. I'm probably the old-school guy that's come the farthest when it comes to not barking so much about the new "stathead game". I understand the points many make about the new metrics - even if I don't fully grasp all those metrics separately. I get it - and arguing the points you guys make is stupid since the numbers back up your points.
The problem is that the DH, 12+ man pens, SPs that aren't allowed to go beyond a certain number of pitches no matter how well they're pitching on a certain night, and 3+ hours worth of teams that can't score without hitting the ball over the fence has just sucked the fun of watching the game away from a lot of people.