Highway to Hell

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DOUGHBOYS
Posts: 13091
Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2005 6:00 pm

Highway to Hell

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Thu Oct 17, 2013 9:58 am

I've been a baseball fan my whole life. I've been through the golden age of baseball, the pitchers year of 1968, astroturf, cookie cutter ball parks, pitchers pitching on two days of rest to five days of rest.
I've understood it all. All seemed to have a time and a place in baseball history.
But now, there is something I don't get.
As I watch these playoffs, hardly a game goes by where an announcer does not laud a player for taking a pitcher deep into a count. They have things ass backwards, first of all, the pitcher is the one who goes deep in a count. He controls where the pitch is thrown.
Anyway, they applaud that the hitter sees six to eight pitches in an at bat. Their reckoning is that it gets the starting pitcher out of the game quicker.
Big Deal!
Look, we live in a baseball age of specialization. Who do you want pitching to Adrian Gonzalez, Joe Kelly or Randy Choate?
The trick for a batter is to be passive aggressive. By that, I mean to hit in as many cripple situations as possible.
2-0 and 3-1 counts. The batter does not create 2-0 and 3-1 counts, it is all the pitcher's doing. It is up to the batter to take advantage of these counts.
If those counts go to 2-2 or 3-2, the pitcher has already won a minor battle. But no matter the consequence, the batter gets an attaboy from the announcer. Even if he has hurt his team in the process.

Mike Napoli, Carlos Santana, Joe Mauer, Adam Dunn, and Jose Bautista saw the most pitches per at bat in the Majors this year.
Only Mauer hit over .300
In fact, only Mauer hit over .270
AJ Pierzynski, Jose Altuve, Alexie Ramirez, Sal Perez, and Erick Aybar saw the least amount of pitches per at bat.
All of these players hit over .270

Batting coaches are making stars out of bad pitchers. Batting stats are going down. Instead of using a hitters aggressiveness, they preach passiveness.
Do these hitters really have to take pitches or purposely go deep into a count vs. the likes of Jeremy Guthrie, or Bartolo Colon, or Locke,or Bronson Arroyo?
Each of those pitchers has a bullpen that I would fear more than them.
Everything is ass backwards. These hitters should be swinging at first pitches against these pitchers to keep them IN the game.
If your team is up 4-0 on Guthrie and he's only thrown 40 pitches, odds are, you'll get to feast on his arm for yet another 40 pitches!

Batters are playing into pitchers hands. Starting pitchers, now, are usually only going to throw six innings anyway. No matter how many pitches are fouled off or taken, the Starter most likely is thinking that if he gets a lead with five innings in the bank, he's done his job.
If he throws that sixth inning, it is because he is still effective. If he's not, then specialist number one comes into the game.
By taking pitches or fouling balls off, how has a hitter won?
Two words, HE HASN'T.

There seems to be more strikeouts than ever. The batter is helping pitchers net these strikeouts.
It's a strange phenomenon indeed. Most hitters hit below .200 with two strikes on them.
Hitting with two strikes is a Highway to Hell.
Yet, it seems hitters can't wait to get there.
And pitchers are more than happy to oblige them.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

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rockitsauce
Posts: 1095
Joined: Wed Mar 21, 2007 6:00 pm

Re: Highway to Hell

Post by rockitsauce » Thu Oct 17, 2013 5:17 pm

Very observant and very true Dan !

Drives me nutz too :evil:

Puig is great example in these playoffs. All of a sudden it seems imperative that he takes that 1st FB down the middle of the plate for strike 1....and he sucks every time he does this...robs him of what makes him great, his aggressiveness. I read a stat that he was hitting some ridiculous number over .500 on 1st pitches he hit in play. Why change that ? Instead of swinging at that meatball in his wheelhouse on the 1st pitch, he'll look at it so that he can swing & miss at a shitty slider in the dirt that would make Alphonso Soriano proud :roll:
Always be closing.

DOUGHBOYS
Posts: 13091
Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2005 6:00 pm

Re: Highway to Hell

Post by DOUGHBOYS » Sat Oct 19, 2013 4:35 pm

Thanks Dave.
If there is a polar opposite to Joey Votto, it would be Puig.
Votto is patient, professional, hardly ever seems rattled.
Puig bats like he's firing a gun at the OK Corral.
It's amusing that Cespedes last year and Puig this year were the 'next big things'.
Physically, they're monsters. They are.
Mentally, as far as baseball sense, they need babysitting.
Both, on the field and owning them in fantasy.
Both will drive any owner crazy. I have enough crazy. I don't need to draft more.
On my tombstone-
Wait! I never had the perfect draft!

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