Exactly. Strange things can happen if you let it play out the way it was designed.
Why change a game that was perfect to start with?
Run rules, pitch clocks, designated hitters, - why?
Pitchers and batters began to abuse the game by excessive fiddling with their garments and equipment between pitches. Numerous mound visits by managers. Brining in many relief pitchers. Lots of TV commercials between half innings. Prior to this, your average 9-inning game took 2-2¼ hours to complete.
Now there are some changes which are fine. Contemporary aluminum bats are okay. Night baseball is fine. Signing the distance to the outfield fences in meters to help us join the rest of the world and metricate, And have it be a whole number of meters and fractionalize the feet. Distance between bases and home will still need to be 90 feet (~27.4 meters doesn't work).
The way to solve the designated hitter nonsense is for pitchers to take more batting practice. And this might also reduce the number of high scoring games, thus eliminating any need/desire for a run rule. Or maybe allow it if both teams consent (think 03/19/2023 in Athens when USC was beating UGA 12-2. If the Dawgs agreed to throw in the towel, call it a game - that was the last Gamecock baseball game I attended).