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This isn't a complaint. I'm looking for points of view. My son plays for a quality team with a good coach. It's a 16U feeder team to a prominent showcase team. Last night my son's coach told him he's walking too much. So far he's 4-10 and ten walks or HBP. He takes a lot of pitches. He's very patient. He has the vision to see a pitch is inches off the plate. The coach told him he bats third to drive in runs, not walk. He told him he's not going to walk his way to the next level (college). For what it's worth the lineup is loaded. He leads the team in runs scored. While this is stats in small numbers, he has a history of walking a lot. He's always led off, hit second or ninth until the power developed this year.

One theory is the coach is right about a #3 hitter. And the ability to drive the ball is there. Another theory would be he should move to the #2 hole given he's a lefty, takes a lot of pitches and runs well. What do you think? For anyone whose son is younger and not at this level yet, the goal of the team is to balance winning with development so players advance in the game.

** The dream is free. Work ethic sold separately. **

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My question is this - is he supposed to swing at balls, or pitches that are not "his" early in the count? I think not.

I can understand what the coach is saying, but on the other hand, if a scout sees a kid swinging at all kinds of crazy pitches just so he doesn't walk, I don't think they will be very impressed.

However, if they see a kid be selective and only hit the pitches that are "his" pitches, it would be more impressive.

I don't see Chipper Jones swinging at pitches he doesn't like very often. I don't think Bobby Cox would be mad if he walked everytime he got up.

How about Barry Bonds (steriod issue aside). He not only hit the most HR's, but he also has the record for most walks. Should they have moved him from #4 to #1 or #2? I think not.

I'm not an expert or a scout, but those are my thoughts on the subject.
I personally don't think drawing too many walks is a fair criticism no matter where he hits in the lineup. On the other hand, I think I know what the coach is trying to say and that is to bump up his aggressiveness at the plate. For example, I doubt all your son's walks are 4 balls and no strikes. Thus, assuming he is seeing "some" strikes, then for his development, maybe he can be a little more agressive in the strike zone. I am not talking about swinging at first pitch curve balls but many kids will throw a get-me-over strike to try and get ahead in the count. In the first at bat, it is a good idea to look at one before swinging but subsequent at bats, the first pitch might be an opportunity for him to be more aggressive. Similarly, maybe he does not like the pitch on the outer half, for example. Again, if this team is about developing, then they ought to encourage him to drive some of those balls the other way. I am a big believer in the Ted Williams philosophy of finding a good pitch to hit. On the other hand, at that age, the way to learn how to hit is to swing the bat. The actual stats should be a secondary consideration imho. Finally, why not just listen to the coach rather than debate with him whether or not he is ideally suited for the 3-hole? There are a lot worse problems to deal with in life.
Does he take a lot of hittable fastballs? Does he go full count alot?

If so he's a older version of my son. Best eye I have seen in a younsgter but taking too many strikes and driving me batty especially when boy refuses to adjust to an umpire with a Texas zone. He just won't swing at something he thinks is a ball.

Always seems to have two strikes on him in every at bat. Doesn't faze him at all.

He batted leadoff though and a very high OBP, stolen bases,runs scored, etc.

Now on another team not batting lead off he's bought into swinging a fastballs early and often and I think he enjoys the game more. We talked about it alot.

Depends on the situation too. With runners on you sure want your 3 hole driving the ball. I can see the coaches point.

I also think you learn how to hit by...hitting.
what do coaches look for in #2 batter? Could someone tell me what coaches look for at each spot of the lineup hitting wise.

I have always hit 5th or 6th till this school ball year was till we had a 1-7 record. Coach changed the lineup majorly and i ended up at the number two spot. With our new line up we went 12-12 when we started at 1-7.


I was hit 17 times and walk many times, In summer ball which i am currently playing i am 0-1 with 6 at bats 5 walks and 1 sac fly. In my opinion, if he is working the pitcher and getting on base. I would keep him where he is at.
Last edited by GR4Y
RJM--Curious, does your son foul off a lot of pitches? 10 walks in 20 at bats, are they pitching around him? The quality of pitchers can't be that bad, do his teammates also walk a lot to? Even with a great eye that is 50% walks that is bad pitching. I would guess their pitching around him. (you must have better umps than us we have a different zone every game no way to walk that much Wink--just kidding umps.). Agree 2 hitter.
quote:
Last night my son's coach told him he's walking too much. So far he's 4-10 and ten walks or HBP.


I'm interested in what you find out here since my son is also a soph/junior has developed similarly to yours....

My son heard 'you walk too much' all the time from his travel ball coach and thus they always left him in the lower half of the line-up. (Our lead-off hitter had the second most RBI's on the team..go figure... Razz) In HS he hit #2 as a freshman and #1 as a soph and now is #3 for summer ball and (I assume) next year.

He still walks a lot and gets HBP a lot too and I actually hope that doesn't change. The HS coach has never said anything about it and seems perfectly content to have him walk and then steal (which he never did in travel since he was hitting behind the slowest player), pull the ball down the line (in travel he 'pulled too much'), go with the pitch and hit the ball to right (no power going that way)...etc...

Actually his biggest problem in travel was he was one of the 'small guys' (6'2" now). Funny how the three 'small' kids (late bloomers) on the team are now all 6'+, starting on varsity teams as sophs, and are all-state selections....

IOW...every coach has an opinion and that's all it is....doesn't make it right or true....
Have a similar issue with 34. Tends not to swing until he has a strike. Does not expand the zone. He feels he is a pretty good two strike hitter,(I would not argue with that) so feels confident taking pitches, but I wonder if he was more aggressive if the production would be better. Last night, started with a bse hit and walked the next three time. With each of the walks he got there was at least one fastball strike that was hittable.

Not sure I want to change.......

None of his coaches have said anything to him, yet.
quote:
Originally posted by CPLZ:
According to the Domincans... You can't walk off the island.

......


!! If a player is on a showcase team or playing at a showcase event its in his best interest to show he can swing the lumber. 1st and formost the showcase is for the player and scouts! Players need to give a scout a reason to come back and watch him play again. Swinging at "fringe pitches" or the first pitch/strike doesn't automatically make a hitter an easy/easier out. I certainly wouldn't advocate swinging at pitches a hitter can't do anything positive with.

If you are a 3,4 or 5 hitter I think the coach would rather see you swing at the slightly high/marginal pitch that might result in a sac fly etc rather then taking it for a ball.

Too many kids have been preconditioned from playing little league and reading "money ball", to take the first strike etc.

You can't become a better hitter with your bat on your shoulder!
If this were a high school team I would move him in the order.

This being a showcase team regardless of where he hits in the order I want him to hammer the first good pitch he can drive. We walk when we have no other choice. We hit because we are here to hit.

It sounds like the coach is trying to get him to be more aggressive. Now if he is getting nothing to hit then he walks. But if he is getting pitches to hit he needs to hit them. Unless the pitching is just horrible your son in the coaches opinion is too passive and not aggressive enough. Or he is fouling off the good pitches and ultimately getting walked. Only you know the answer to that question.

What I have found in showcase baseball when your facing top quality opponents you will struggle big time by being too selective at the plate. You will find yourself down in the count a lot and you will end up being a defensive hitter. The guys that have the most success are looking to hit not looking to walk and they are very aggressive in the zone and early in the count. Why? Many times you have a high school strike zone with top tier guys on the hill. This puts the high school hitter at a disadvantage going in.
good post CoachM:
I will say that if I'm hitting a guy 3rd he's there to drive the ball; if he's 6-9 he can't walk too much.
If he's got the ability; we want some doubles and shots in the gap. I understand this sounds greedy and a walk is still a good thing; but.... I guess i am greedy; I want to see that ball in the gap where my runners can run around the bases.
Coach

I agree that there is a difference between HS and "select team" play and hitting theories.

A big problem we find in our region is that many HS coaches like to have their players take the first pitch regardless of where it is, even if right down the middle of the plate.

We are a first pitch you like swing at it team (select travel)---we want our batters swinging---scouts don't want to see walks---trying to break some of these kids of the habit can be a tough job because it is so ingrained in them to take the first pitch

We firmly believe that even at the select team level the pitcher wants the first pitch more than the batter does. We know all our kids are the "studs" on their team and are good hitters--this being the case why get in a 0-1 or 0-2 hole? Swing at the first good pitch you see

We like our players to read the strike zone and be selective but not overly !!!

Interesting side bar---one of our players from the past two seasons is in his state playoffs was quoted in the papers after hitting a bomb in the game " I knew I wanted the first pitch and he grooved it"--nice to see that attitude
quote:
regardless of where he hits in the order I want him to hammer the first good pitch he can drive.


Of course....

However, what we have here is a #3 hitter who, so far, walks a lot and hits .400 when he doesn't. Looks to me like he's hitting the right pitch...

I would assume in a showcase that the pitcher, who also is trying to impress, will try to throw strikes and won't be walking too many...In that case, if the hitter is just looking for pitches to hit, he should be OK. If, in reality, his goal is to walk, then he's in trouble.

I agree that the hitter should be looking to swing the bat. I just disagree with criticizing a hitter who does walk when his numbers outside of walks are acceptable...

Nothing is worse that the kid swinging 3-1 and popping up....
If your son's coach thinks he needs to swing more, I wouldn't argue with the coach! Its an opportunity. The coach is apparently looking for something more from your son because he believes your son is capable of more. Go with the flowSmile After all , showcasing isn't about numbers, its about how hard you hit the ball and how well you look swinging the bat. If you aren't swinging, you aren't showcasing. Coaches and scouts don't watch entire games waiting for players to swing.

To develop players often times need to step out of their comfort zone and try something new.
Last edited by CollegeParentNoMore
I guess it depends on the coaches philosophy. My son was considered an aggressive hitter by his coaches in high school..

He had his share of strikeouts but for an aggressive hitter, he didn't strikeout a lot and made lots of contact. His walk totals were usually very low. Maybe 4-6 walks a year in HS. He probably lost a few walks by fouling off ball four but none of his coaches tried to change his aggressive approach to hitting. He didn't let too many 2-0, 3-1 fastballs in the zone go by. He was expected to drive in runs. He hit 3rd on the varsity.
Last edited by zombywoof
quote:
If your son's coach thinks he needs to swing more, I wouldn't argue with the coach! Its an opportunity. The coach is apparently looking for something more from your son because he believes your son is capable of more. Go with the flow After all, showcasing isn't about numbers, its about how hard you hit the ball and how well you look swinging the bat. If you aren't swinging, you aren't showcasing. Coaches and scouts don't watch entire games waiting for players to swing.




Great thoughts also from Cleveland Dad and Coach May. They echo what my son's college coach told the team's 3-hole hitter this year: be more aggressive at the plate.
My son is always looking for his pitch to hammer until he has two strikes. He often walks after being down 1-2 and fouling off two strike pitches. He's looking to hit on 2-0 and 3-1. He's faced some good pitching. I don't know if he's just off pitches since he's hammered his hits and a few of the outs.

Tonight the coach batted him fourth and told him to swing the bat. Result: two walks and a bunt single Smile. In the first at bat with a runner on second, two outs, he hammered the 2-0 pitch just foul. After 3-1 they walked him. The next at bat he led off and walked. The third time there were runners on first and second, none out, down two. He beat out the sac attempt.

In the past I've seen him walk to the point where he was taking too many 2-0 and 3-1 pitches to get on. It ultimately affected his swing from not getting enough in game cuts. But he was at the top of the order. I don't think the teams we play know enough about how he hits now to know to pitch around him. The corners are still up early in the game trying to take away the bunt/speed. After growing he's a different hitter than previous years. He's mostly given up bunting for hits. But he has about 25% of the team's walks. He also had a lot of confidence in the hitters behind him if he gets on.

My view is he's an ideal #2 hitter. I also believe he has to hit enough balls hard to be noticed by the college coaches. I told him if the coach hits him third he's looking for rbi's.
Last edited by RJM
This is an interesting question.

Can a player walk "too much?" Probably not, but depending on the situation I do think a player can pass up pitches that can be hit hard if he has a mindset of getting the BB.

It depends on situation, too. Nobody on, I would give a kid some slack in passing up a driveable pitch if he was ahead in the count and we were behind, late innings and needed baserunners.

Men on base, I would be mad if a kid watched a fastball in the zone go by on a 2-0 or 3-1 count.

My guess is that your kid's coach senses that he is passing up too many good pitches in situations and on pitches that warrant a hard swing.
Thanks Coach. I needed this. My son is playing showcase ball this summer and even though he is batting very good this summer he is walking 2 plus times a game batting the #4 hole. His coach told him to start swinging and quit walking. I guess we were still in high school mindset.

For those of you who are not familiar with showcase ball it is not about winning as much as showcasing. It is about showing what you can do and as has been said, the scouts are not there to see a #4 walk every other bat. They want to see that he can hit the long ball.

Showcase ball was hard for us to understand to start with. You have to play the game from the scouts point of view and not the regular tournament and especially high school point of view. It is a different kind of mindset for this game.

Thanks again Coach for helping me remember what we are doing. Help your team and show what you can do.
quote:
Originally posted by RJM:
...
One theory is the coach is right about a #3 hitter. And the ability to drive the ball is there. Another theory would be he should move to the #2 hole given he's a lefty, takes a lot of pitches and runs well. What do you think?


Is the 4-hole hitter a cream-puff? Maybe he's not commanding enough good pitches for the batter in front of him?
We had a double header last night. Son is now batting in the three hole for the first time since LL. No walks last night, nine RBI's. He was quite proud that he drove in every baserunner.

It makes a big difference when they have to pitch to you...

quote:
Go with the flow After all, showcasing isn't about numbers, its about how hard you hit the ball and how well you look swinging the bat. If you aren't swinging, you aren't showcasing. Coaches and scouts don't watch entire games waiting for players to swing.


This is fine as long as you don't start chasing a lot of marginal pitches....
From a scouting or recruiting standpoint, people need to see a player swing the bat and hit.

Once the player proves he can hit and it results in being drafted or signed with a college... Every coach/manager would take a walk in every at bat. In the end it is impossible to walk too much. Unless you are a RBI guy taking some good pitches to hit, looking for a walk, in an RBI situation. The other potential problem is if the guy who walks all the time is a base clogger. Base on balls and speed fit together nicely. Problem is if you walk too much in the beginning, you don't create any interest.
My son went thru the same situation walks alot hit .460 in high school led the league in walks. His coach would get on him at times in certain situations. His coach said that it is all about the aproach to each at bat sounds like his coach is more concerned about his quality of each at bat, once this was explained to my son he seemed to hit the ball gap to gap much better. When he strikes out is it looking? That was my sons problem 8 KS 6 looking.

My only advise would be that you put your son with this coach for a reason, trust him and allow him to make your son better. GOOD LUCK
Maybe he's still in the smaller / faster mentality he had before he grew? Meaning he knew he could still hit, but he also knew he was one of the faster / better base runners and wanted to get on however he could to score...which is a GREAT mentality. But if it's about getting noticed..maybe he needs to swing a little more freely.

Have you asked him what pitch(s) he's looking for early in the count or in a hitter's count?
quote:
Because the guy who walks all the time has three bases in front of him "all the time".


Well, he's one base closer than the guy who strikes out... Razz

And guys that are on base tend to score more often than guys that aren't...

quote:
But it would be the same for a hitter who never gets an extra base hit.


Then I wouldn't put him in the 3 hole...

And we've come full circle.... Cool
My son has been a leadoff batter his whole baseball life who I instilled a disciplined approach in from the beginning. He actually walked his first 9 ab's in select ball when he was twelve. He used to litterly draw about 2.5 walks per hits and that was great in the lower age leagues. He was just like many of you describe great eye, refused to swing at pitches an inch off the outside. At about 14 years old I noticed he was getting rung up many times on slightly outside pitches especially down and away. He often took so many pitches he passed up the chance to drive the ball for extra bases and would go 3-2 numerous times. I talked it over with him and finally he agreed to start swinging at those pitches slightly off the plate with two strikes. With his great eyes and reactions he usually fouls the pitch off until he gets something he can drive. As a senior, he more than doubled his extra base hits and now walks at more of .75 to 1 walks to hit ratio. As you face better pitching, I believe you can have too passive of an approach. Like Coach May said, select ball is about showing your hitting skills and while you can still be disciplined don't be looking for walks all the time. Hit first but take a walk if they give it to you. A third place hitter is there to drive the ball and should be possibly the best hitter on the team with an aggressive approach. Actually my sons K's decreased as he didn't take as many third called strikes that he felt weren't perfect.
My son has never had problems getting rung up on pitches just outside the strike zone. He knows umpires zones may vary. But he's not swinging at those pitches with less than two strikes. I believe it's why he gets deep in the count a lot. He's struck out once (swinging) in twenty-seven plate appearances this summer.
Per the NCAA web site for the ACC here are top average walks per game:


Tyler Holt, Florida St. -- 0.87
Kyle Wilson, North Carolina St. -- 0.85
Brad Miller, Clemson -- 0.83
Dustin Ackley, North Carolina -- 0.8
Stephen Cardullo, Florida St. -- 0.75
Luke Murton, Georgia Tech -- 0.74
Anthony Sosnoskie, Virginia Tech -- 0.74
Steve Bumbry, Virginia Tech -- 0.73
Jason Hagerty, Miami (FL) -- 0.72
Stuart Tapley, Florida St. -- 0.7
Kyle Seager, North Carolina -- 0.69
Jason Stidham, Florida St. -- 0.69
Chris Herrmann, Miami (FL) -- 0.68
Scott Lawson, Miami (FL) -- 0.68
Mike Freeman, Clemson -- 0.66
Jeff Schaus, Clemson -- 0.66
Mike McGee, Florida St. -- 0.64
Michael Belfiore, Boston -- 0.61
Nate Freiman, Duke -- 0.61
Mark Fleury, North Carolina -- 0.61
Phil Gosselin, Virginia -- 0.59
Last edited by CollegeParentNoMore
I guess I am too old, and so is my son.
Are 16 year olds really this good? Are umpires really this good?
I watched 3 years of Milb umpires call pitches3-4-5 inches off the plate strikes.
I watched high school umpires call just about anything a strike, and there wasn't anything consistent to their calls.
From what I saw, I just don't think any hitter can consistently be taking pitches which are inches off the plate.
Most importantly,I don't think umpires that I saw from high school, to college, to summer league to Milb called balls and strikes with the level of precision that I am reading in this thread.
Mine just tries to foul that outside pitch just off the plate. Last year he fanned 4 times in 112 plate appearences as a junior in high school but sure enough 2 were on strikes called probably 4-6 inches down and away. Actually You may have less k's if you expand your zone a little outside the strike zone with 2 strikes the way some of these high school umps call. Last year we had some really good ones umping but this year a couple of guys were flat out jokes.
quote:
Are umpires really this good?
Summer games are at night and on weekends. The scout league gets college umpires. The travel tournaments get the best high school umpires. It's the high school season where the weak umpires appear. It's the 65-70 year old, immobile, half blind umpires that are available at 3:30 in the afternoon. My son did get rung up (called) four times in sixty-five plate appearances in high school. None were within five inches of the strike zone. In summer ball, I'm amazed at some of the two strike pitches he's taken just off the plate that have been called balls.

He didn't walk as much in high school games. He couldn't trust the umpires on pitches just off the plate. Also being the only soph starter he batted 9th and saw a lot more strikes.
Last edited by RJM
My own son just finished his first season of PONY Colt (13-14 YO.) Coaches were adherents to the "Swing if it's close" philosophy. As a consequence, we had a lot of strikeouts and low team OBP. Only two players had more walks than strikeouts, and this was against pitching that was mediocre at times.

Keeping the scorebook and the stats, I had a good perspective of what was going on. The kids that had low walk/high strikeout frequencies swung at a much higher percentage of pitches - hardly surprising. But the two players mentioned above tended to put the ball in play on the first or second pitch of an AB, or else drew the walk. They did not go deep into the count because they did not swing at pitches out of the zone.

My son was one of those two. Despite being the second slowest kid on the team, he had an OBP of .541, second best by .003 to the other player mentioned, who was the fastest on the bases. Did okay when he swung the bat too, hitting .298.

That slowness was one reason they had him moving around between the 6 - 10 slot, based on what the manager was trying to do. He wasn't a slugger, so he couldn't be up in the order where he might clog the bases - but put him lower and you're wasting a batter hitting .100 better than the players around him. No easy answer. Because the spot in the order behind him hit .130 (sigh) for the season, he was stranded a lot. That did not bug him too much on an individual basis, as he learned some time ago that RBIs are an important stat. But it sure didn't help the team's offensive output!

One more thing worth noting. I had observed that his second AB in a game always seemed better than his first - he was more focused the second time through. Checked the book and found he was hitting .200 his first ABs, and .450 the second. Told him this and in his final games he hit the ball much better his first times up.

He will likely grow some over the summer and we are going to work on his running, as well as improving his power re hitting. But for this season, I can appreciate the challenge the manager and coaches faced in setting an order so as to maximise offense.

John
I think from what everyone has said, that it is a very fine line between being very disciplined and being not aggressive enough. I do think once a batter reaches a certain age he is what he is no matter how much people try to change him. Just look at Francore of Atlanta. Everybody but him realizes he has to actually take a pitch once in a while but he just can't change. Many guys who hit their way off the Islands like Pudge Rodriguez just never can comfortably learn to take walks. This is a killer to their careers when their average drops to .270-.280 and the onbase percentage is .310 or less. Luckily for Pudge he had the great defense going for him. If they don't have great power they are useless offensively unless they hit .320 or more. A guy like Juan Pierre or Willie Tavares makes 450-500 outs a year unless they hit .320 or more but this year Pierre seems to have changed a little and is actually taking some walks which I admire him for since very few guys change in their 30's.
quote:
Many guys who hit their way off the Islands like Pudge Rodriguez just never can comfortably learn to take walks. This is a killer to their careers when their average drops to .270-.280 and the onbase percentage is .310 or less. Luckily for Pudge he had the great defense going for him.


Geez, three bagger,

You’re being a bit rough on Pudge IMO.

He is a life time .300 hitter (19 seasons in the Big Leagues) He’s also hit 300 homeruns and has over 1200 RBI. He’s also a cinch hall of famer.
quote:
Except for one year Ichiro has always had more strikeouts then walks.


Why pitch around and walk a guy who hits mostly singles (he's has over 1500 singles in his 1877 hits)? Sure he'll get a lot of hits, but most of them are no worse than a walk.

This is also the reason to simply go after the 7-8-9 hitters in a youth line up. Even if they are reasonably good hitters they probably don't have a lot of power or they'd be hitting higher up in the order.

I've seen teams where that isn't true, but not very many...
College Parent makes a good point re working the count at the younger ages. Even a kid who has a good swing and a quick bat should be looking for their pitch to hit early in the count. With 13-14 YO pitchers, it may be the first, the fifth or never.

Unless a kid has good coaching or a dad to throw to him, a lot of BP will be "try to put the bat on the ball." Not a lot of emphasis on pitch recognition or knowing where in the zone you can best hit the ball. My son has finally learned to not hack at high stuff, and he lays off low and away - the result was minimal strikeouts. As the pitching gets better, he will walk less and strikeout more, but he is starting from a better position than some of his peers.

John
PGStaff, I agree he's a hall of famer, although he mysteriously lost a lot of bulk about three years ago, but he is a guy that in the years he didn't hit .297 or better, his onbase percentages were .276, .300, .315, .290, .294, 319, and so far this year .304. This is not impressive even for a catcher and the last four of the above have occurred in the last 5 years. Eight unintentional walks and eleven in another season with over 500 AB's actually hurts your teams offense.
quote:
Originally posted by Three Bagger:
PGStaff, Eight unintentional walks and eleven in another season with over 500 AB's actually hurts your teams offense.


I don't think Pudge's inablity to work a count for a walk is due to his upbringing, rather its a reflection of skills the pro teams want (pay for). Pro teams simply pay alot more for guys that can hit then guys that can work a count and get a walk.
A True Story

In 1977, my 1st year as an observer with the USA International Baseball event in Ohio. Marshall Brant, who I will honor in Sonoma County August 1-2-3 invited me to attend the Triple A Columbus game with Rochester.

The #3 hitter stood at the plate; the first pitch a fast ball strike on the inside corner. the second pitch a slider, call for strike 2 on the outside corner. The 3rd pitch again called a strike on the inside corner. I knew the reputation of this hitter
and secretly said "he is not that good".

The second AB, this hitter "handcuff" the right fielder with a "screaming" line drive double.
the 3rd time AB, the hitter hit the inside fast ball
far over the left field fence and the 4th time he hit a double to left center.

His name Cal Ripken. "a true story"

The batter's box is a hitter's classroom, a place to build up knowledge. If you swing at the 1st pitch, what have you learned.

Bob
This thread caused me to look more closely at my son's AB's Saturday. He had a walk and a HBP. The walk was B, Swing and miss, foul, B, B, B. After strike two, the catcher was set up outside. I assume that they thought he would chase with two strikes since although both ball two and three were 'to the glove' they weren't called strikes and then ball four missed badly up and in with the catcher set up inside.

The HBP was an 0-2 curve that didn't. Son isn't going to move on an offspeed pitch that misses by that much.... Wink

So, how much walking/HBP is too much? My perception was that he walks/HBP a lot but looking back at the stats I have he walked about 25% in youth travel and less than 20% in HS this year (19/103) leading off and only 10% last year batting 2nd....So maybe this is normal since a couple of posts allude to walking 50% of the time.
I'm not really sure you can attach a number or percentage to what is too much with regards to walks, its just in my sons case I noticed when he was 14 or 15 as the pitching was getting better it seemed he needed to upgrade the aggressiveness in his hitting approach. He very rarely swung at the first pitch and it was partly my fault since as a leadoff batter type who was on the smallish side I stressed working the pitcher for long counts. As he gained size and power he had the capability to drive the ball much more often for extra bases. I think by always taking the first pitch he missed out on some that was the best pitch he would see and also he had to hit in the hole more often. After a little bit of argument, he hit his first HR on the big field at 14 when he swung at a first pitch fastball. Problem solved. This year (senior year) I wanted to see if he could upgrade his power output by being even more aggressive, even telling him not to worry if he K'd more and walked less and not get so many hits as a result of his speed alone. It worked as K's went 4 to 10, BB's went 24 to 14, average went up from .473 to .536, Extrabase hits in 21 games from 9 to 15, HR's from 2 to 5 against better pitching in less games. All as a result of getting more aggressive and not taking as many walks. We saw more hard throwers and more polished pitchers in or new district and against the higher level teams we played in non-district this year. Actually his onbase percentage increased a little as he had more hits and all this was done in less total plate appearances.
I was talking with my son's coach tonight. He's coached a lot of 16U kids into 17U showcase programs and on to college ball. His son will be drafted this week. He said he would tell anybody who wants to hear it my son can beat you with his eye, bunting and speed. But he wants him to show anyone watching he can drive the ball consistantly. So tonight there's a showcase coach watching the warmup and the first few innings. JR walked on four pitches in his first at bat and got hit by a pitch in his second at bat. It wasn't his fault. He didn't see a good pitch. At least he was moved to second in the order. After the guy left he hit two line drive singles and pitched four shutout innings in relief for the win.

In last weekend's tournament he didn't walk once. He said he saw a lot of first pitch meat. Six of his twelve at bats were one pitch at bats. So I know he's not looking for the walk to the point of losing aggressiveness.
Last edited by RJM
I think you guys are on the right track especially if the player has already shown he has skills to be a disciplined batter. Its comes down to this that your only going to see a couple good pitches to hit so you better be swinging at them like your wanting to drive them some where rather than taking a carefully swing as your wondering if its truely going to be a good pitch to hit as if you do take to carefull approach your not going to get good aggressive swings on the ball. Remember this too that the ball has movement and any little hesitation or slowing down of the swing is going to get more hits that makes contact only partially with the bat for a weak grounder or popup. So you got to be aggressive, is my read on all of this, or you will not be able to get all of the ball with a hard aggressive swing for more extra bases hits. I like the comment be ready to hit every pitch deep and only pull back at the last moment will make for a little more aggressive approach.
RJM,
I also think your son is on the right track and will be fine. If a guy walked 140 times after he was in pro ball while hitting .280, no one would think he was walking too much. Its just while you're trying to showcase your hitting ability and get your first notice by scouts that the approach may have to be somewhat more aggressive. But there's no perfect way to solve this puzzle. I would think if your son is a leadoff type, then more walks are quite necessary as long as he takes some swings in front of the scouts and college coaches also.
In my view, the coach should explain the role of the hitter in certain slots. We oftentimes take for granted that kids know these things.

If a batter is the biggest, strongest guy in the order and batting third or fourth, he is up there to make contact and make big things happen.

The table setters would be the one, two guys. These guys would usually have occasional power, good speed and a good eye at the plate.

The 'meat of the order' are the big guys who have the ability to produce big. If a batter is 6'5", 220 pounds and bunts most of the time, his options will be few.

A batting order is like a script where the performers are expected to meet the expectations.

It may not seem fair or reasonable, but it is the nature of the game.
IMHO--Baseball is a team game--when up to bat the goal is to get on base and score runs. It seems a bit selfish to swing at pitches out of the strike zone, shows you have no confidence in batter after you to drive you in. Can't see benifit of swinging at pitches off plate--there is a reason there is a strike zone that is were a hitter can hit the ball---makes sense to me Smile
here's another side that shows baseball "smarts"... regardless of how fat a pitch is shouldnt a aplyer take the first pitch if the previous two batters walked on 8 straight? Shouldnt he take the first pitch if the previous two batters swung at the first pitch and grounded out.. especially if one of those batters was hi pitcher?

I hope this is the type of thing scouts and colleges are looking for as we begin this journey because its how my son has been taught the game.

Maybe I am old fashioned but this reminds me of the story about John McGraw who fined a player who hit a HR because he had given him the bunt sign!
bothsportsdad,
I understand what your saying about taking a first pitch if a batter walks a couple of guys. But on the other hand he most likely will be trying very hard to get that next first pitch over the plate. Maybe take a little off to accomplish this. This can lead to a meatball right down the middle. As a 3-4 or 5 hitter you are looking to drive in runners. Although he should not swing at a pitch over his head.
I don't think you have to automatically take the next pitch after 8 straight balls because yes he might take something off and lay it right in there. It does kill me and makes me feel a kid is not thinking if he swings at anything other than one right down the middle in that situation.

Baseball Dad46,
During his career, the great Ted Williams was often criticized because he would not swing at a pitch even a fraction off the plate even if the winning or tieing run was sitting on third where he could have easily pulled a fly or grounder to get the run in. Instead he took the walk and during the 50's he often had inferior hitters behind him. He always said he wouldn't be a .344 career hitter if he let down his guard even in those situations but I think sometimes you've got to sacrifice your average to win games. He was a stubborn guy and no one was going to convince him otherwise.
TR.. what would be your position on the Williams quote above. I had read that one before. Do you think Williams was right or should he have widened his strike zone a bit with runners in scoring position? I recall Whitey Herzog basically saying the same thing about Keith Hernandez... "he walks too much for a three hole hitter". Of course, he went on to have great sucess with the Mets after Herzog traded him.
quote:
here's another side that shows baseball "smarts"... regardless of how fat a pitch is shouldnt a aplyer take the first pitch if the previous two batters walked on 8 straight?


What's the difference in a fat pitch whether it was thrown after 8 balls or 6 of 8 were strikes?. I cringed everytime I see hitters let meatballs go by. If a hitter sees a first fat pitch to drive and is looking for that pitch considering the mindset from the hitter might be that the pitcher might groove one to get a strike, why let it go? All the years watching my son play, moreso as a teen, from Babe Ruth thru high school, his approach was to attack the first pitch because it might be the best pitch in the AB. I would think if his HS coach had a problem with his approach, he'd of have had a sitdown with him.
Last edited by zombywoof
the difference is in playing the percentages...

This reminds me of 3 players who played for the Pirates in the 70's, all developed in the Pirates system and all who played the same position: 2B. Dave Cash, Rennie Stennet and Willie Randolph. The Pirates thought so much of Stennet that they traded a proven commodity in Cash and then traded Randolph as a skinny kid prospect to the Yankees as a throw in. It was a classic case of "buying the blue jeans". If watched them and judged them on the 5 tools alone you would certainly choose Stennet. Cash went on to play successfully for the Phils and Randolph became a fixture in pin stripes. Cash I know managed in the minors and of course Willie managed the Mets. Who was the best "baseball player"?

In retrospect if you look at it from a stats perspective Randolph is the easy choice today. He was the most likley of the three to work the count and be patient. Its probably safe to assume he did more than Stennet as far as the little things that helps your team win. My point is that its easy to "hack" and it in fact makes it harder to be a productive player for your team over the long term.
I would say from a team standpoint, having a mix of pitch takers and aggressive hitters would make for a successful offense because the guys who take lots of pitches wear down the pitcher, then you get your hackers ready to feast on meatballs being served up by a tired pitcher.

I suppose if you compare a free swinger to a patient hitter, the percentages might favor of the patient type hitter but if you got a runner on 3rd less than 2 out in a tie game, that hitter's job is to make contact to get the run home rather than try to reach on a walk.

In the end ,IMO, it comes down on the type of hitter you're dealing with and what works for them. Play to the hitters strengths and weaknesses and put them in the best position in the lineup where they have the best opportunity to succeed.
Last edited by zombywoof
After 8 straight balls, it is exactly the fat pitch that I would want a batter to be looking to hit hard. There is a good chance the pitcher steers one in the zone just to get a strike. Great opportunity to drive the ball!

Can a hitter walk "too much?" This question can't really be answered. Not enough context. I can think of plenty of situations in which I would prefer the batter not have walked (men on base, lets two meat pitches go by but still works a walk.)

But if a hitter is swinging at good pitches and letting balls go by, I don't think he can walk too much.

But if his approach is to pass up driveable pitches in order to seek a walk, then yes, he can try to walk too much.
I dont think the discussion is to let a bunch of hittable pitches go by in order to draw a pass. No "ballplayer" is going to do that. The question is really the Willaims scenario... do you expand your strike zone with runners in scoring position? Williams batted third... are you willing to take a pass with runners on second and third to load the bases and let the cleanup guy do his job?

I am sure that most on here are familiar with Williams book on hitting. In it he has a chart or grid where he has divided every pitch location within the strike and assigned it a corresponding batting average. Pitches low and away and up an in are of course low averages.. the lowest being .220 as I recall. Are you better off swinging at a pitch that you are generally going to hit about .220 if you offer at it less than two strikes or are better off being patient?

Last night in a junior legion game this exact scenario we have been talking about reared its head. team is down by two with runners on second and third, one out last at bat. Kid who is a starting varsity C as a freshman is sent up to PH. Kid is a very good natural athlete... but a total free swinger. He has played sparingly behind another junior varsity catcher most of the season so when he comes to the plate the pressure to produce is on. He swings at the seond pitch, a low and away breaking pitch and pops up to first. It illustrates my point perfectly: if you go to a combine this kid shows well because hes a very good athlete.. but frankly he's a lousy baseball player.

BTW, William's RBI numbers were, shall we say.. respectable (lol) I dont think he let to many good pitches go by.
My son went through this year as he bounced back and forth between Varsity & JV.

He batted #3 on the JV (very strong 4 hitter behind him). He took some slack for walking to often for the JV coaches liking from the 3 hole and was repeated told he needed to be a run producer from that spot. He has always been a kid who will not swing at a pitch he doesn't like w less than 2 strikes.

He finished the season batting .407; he had 22 hits and 25 walks. He also struck out only 7 times. All this said, he had much fewer RBI than I think he could have. There times that he saw fastballs early in the count that he could have driven.

This topic is interesting to me only because it was a topic discussed regualrly in our house this spring.
Last edited by fsmjunior
In one HS game last year, my son went 0-4 w/ 3 rbi. He obviously benefitted from the 8,9,1& 2 hitters getting the job done and getting on base all day. He had it all set up for him to knock in aa lot of runs that day but it didn't work out that way. His best AB that day was a sac fly to the opposite field warning track. The other AB's were routine grounders that produced runs. In another AB, he hit into a 6-4-3 DP that scored another run, no rbi. It wasn't a good day with the bat but was still able to produce 4 of the 9 runs scored that day. As a 3-hitter, his job was to knock in runs.
Last edited by zombywoof
quote:
It wasn't a good day with the bat but was still able to produce 4 of the 9 runs scored that day. As a 3-hitter, his job was to knock in runs.


It's difficult to make any type of judgement based on one game and you leave out important information. If he is grounding out with RISP with less than two strikes then I would say he's only being marginally productive. However, if he's putting the bat on difficult pitches with two strikes then he has had a good AB.
His production could've been higher with a hit or two but even the best players can go hitless in a game now and then but his 3 rbi's were tied for the team high that day. Production is production. That game as I mentioned, he had quite a few RISP and his best AB was the sac fly to the opp.field. That AB, he was down 0-2, fouled off a couple and took a 1-2 or a 2-2 pitch the opposite way. The sac fly was to the warning track, just getting under it and just missed hitting a 2-run HR The runner easily scored from 3rd for the game's first run.

Regardless of the hitless day, bottom line is he produced, got the runs in and before losing in extra innings, those runs were important at the time. Again, not his best day with the bat but still produced runs. If he drove in 5 runs that day they may have won but he was a total team player and could care less about stats and I mentioned that game to him the other day and he simply said "I moved runners over and had important RBIs".
Last edited by zombywoof

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