Been talkin’ to some FPSB folks about catchers. It turns out that one very different aspect of the two games is that catchers are much more important to controlling the running game than they are in baseball. The reason is, “closed bases”, or no lead offs. As in LLI baseball, SB rules force runners to stay in contact with a base until a pitch crosses the plate.
That doesn’t stop base stealing, but it does mean trying to advance when a ball isn’t put into play becomes a much more difficult task. Even advancing on a passed ball or wild pitch is more difficult because the distance from the plate to the backstop on a typical SB field is half the distance it is on the typical full sized baseball field. Also, since the distance from home plate to 2nd on a SB field is 90’ and on a full sized baseball field 127’.
So, even taking into consideration the arm strength and running speed differences between men and women, it’s a lot more difficult to advance a base in SB without a ball being put into play or having a base awarded. That got me to thinking that unlike BB where the pitcher is the main factor in stealing bases, it’s the catcher in SB, and therefore the skill of blocking a pitch in the dirt is much more valuable in SB than in BB. Because of that, it only made sense to me that blocking as a metric might be somewhat useful, at least in SB if not in BB.
Next came the question, what is a block? After thinking about it for a bit, it seemed a good definition was a pitch in the dirt with runners on, that doesn’t allow any runner to move up a base.
It sounds so simple, am I missing something?