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Stats, I have never heard of a goal called, "See as many pitches as possible."  I am not trying to be a D, I am dead serious.  I get what your saying but I don't think a Old School Coach or a Stats Coach would actually label that as a goal.  Normally you are going to see a coach say 8+ pitch AB as a goal.  We have a Quality At Bat Chart we keep and 8+ pitch is considered a Quality AB.  I am not a big believer in OBP in HS Baseball because in order to have a high OBP you have to have a kid that has a great eye and is comfortable hitting behind in the count which is not par for the course in HS baseball.

Originally Posted by zombywoof:

Never heard of such a stat. Doesn't seem relevant to anything other than playing with numbers. As for Billy Beane, all those world titles he won should say how well Money ball works. Gotta be the most overrated GM on the planet.

6th most wins in MLB since he took over, bested only by the Angels, Red Sox, Yankees, Braves and Cards, 3 of whom have vastly more money to work with (not sure about "vastly" for the Braves and Cards, though both have more money). He's overrated in much the same way Jeter is.

Originally Posted by jacjacatk:
Originally Posted by zombywoof:

Never heard of such a stat. Doesn't seem relevant to anything other than playing with numbers. As for Billy Beane, all those world titles he won should say how well Money ball works. Gotta be the most overrated GM on the planet.

6th most wins in MLB since he took over, bested only by the Angels, Red Sox, Yankees, Braves and Cards, 3 of whom have vastly more money to work with (not sure about "vastly" for the Braves and Cards, though both have more money). He's overrated in much the same way Jeter is.

I think the point is nobody gets more out of less than BB.   

 

Just ask the cubs. 

IEBSBL,

 

Well, it just goes to show, you haven’t heard everything, because it or something very close to it is heard all the time around here.

 

Since you’re so into QABs that you actually keep a chart on them, is an 8 pitch K looking higher quality than a weak grounder with 2 outs that an error gets made on and subsequently pushes a run across? I don’t know about you definition of QABs, but none I’ve ever seen would count the latter as a QAB.

 

If you don’t believe in OBP as a good measure of hitting performance, what do you believe in? I don’t mind if you don’t agree with anything I say, but I asked for what people used to measure what was going on, not what they didn’t. In truth I wasn’t asking that question in general, such as, “What metrics do you use?” What I wanted to know is what metrics you use to measure that “aggressiveness/patience” of your hitters.

Originally Posted by jacjacatk:

Neither of those should be goals because achieving them (insofar as it's possible to do so) is the outcome of a quality approach, not an end of itself. Making either of them an actual goal is likely to be counterproductive.

Agree with jac & IEBSBL,

Assuming we're talking about HS ball...

As a P, there is simple math that gives validity to the concept. Let's use a safe assumption that your starting P is your best available and your best bet to win would be to have him throw a complete game.  A well-pitched game is typically 4-5 hits and 2-3 walks per game with maybe one error.  This gives you, on average,one baserunner per inning which equates to four hitters per inning.  Using a 100 pitch limit, this allows for about 3.5 pitches per hitter.  So it is good for pitchers to be aware of that number just to illustrate the importance of efficiency.  But if that number were top-of-mind, the pitcher would be more inclined to throw to the heart of the plate all day and this usually turns an average hitting team into a very good hitting team.  To maintain effectiveness, the average HS P must mix speeds and location, work ahead in the count most of the time, be able to hit spots with some regularity and have some movement and/or deception.  Those things are the focus.  As jac said, the quality of the approach will produce the desired results of low pitch count, not a focus on low pitch count itself.  The metric doesn't have to go much further than the running pitch count per inning, number of BB's and balls hit hard.

 

Regarding hitting - Similarly, if the hitter has a good approach, looking for the right type of pitches depending on the count, adjusting the approach with two strikes, learning pitch recognition, building a sound compact swing, etc., he will be more capable of running up a pitcher's count if the AB dictates.  That's just one way to accomplish a good AB.  Another is to crush a predictable first pitch fastball.

 

 

Last edited by cabbagedad

cabbagedad,

 

Why is it that as soon as anyone even mentions stats, the 1st thing that comes to many minds is how counter-productive it would be? I ‘d say the same thing if I thought for a second anyone would have that as the foremost thought in their mind prior to throwing a pitch, but I daresay it would take someone of extremely weak mental awareness who would do that, the same way it would be problematic for pitchers to concentrate more on a runner than the batter.

 

But I really don’t know what the big deal is. All I asked was how anyone who believed there was some validity to the thought that fewer pitches per batter for a pitcher were a good thing, measured it. You’re mental exercise in math is a great theory, but have you ever tested it to see if what you’re saying is what’s happening for the pitchers? I’m not advocating having some sort of contest where the pitcher with the lowest PPBA gets an award! All I’m asking is, what do you do to see if your pitchers are following what you believe should be taking place, and the same for your hitters.

 

All I see right now is people saying, “We don’t need no stinking stats!”

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

cabbagedad,

 

Why is it that as soon as anyone even mentions stats, the 1st thing that comes to many minds is how counter-productive it would be? ...

 

I don't believe anyone said anything about stats being counter-productive, just that the goals you state in your OP would be.

 

But I really don’t know what the big deal is.

 

I don't see where anyone is saying it's a big deal.  Folks are just responding to your post with their POV.

 

All I asked was how anyone who believed there was some validity to the thought that fewer pitches per batter for a pitcher were a good thing, measured it.

 

"Believed there was some validity to the thought that fewer pitchers per batter were a good thing" is quite a different and softer statement than your original OP - "If you believe a pitcher’s goal should be to get rid of a batter in 3 pitches or less..."

 

You’re mental exercise in math is a great theory, but have you ever tested it to see if what you’re saying is what’s happening for the pitchers? ... All I’m asking is, what do you do to see if your pitchers are following what you believe should be taking place, and the same for your hitters.

 

With pitchers, as I said, we keep them aware of and monitor the running pitch count and they know we will not go beyond what is considered a safe number for them on that day.  We preach hard on first pitch strikes (occasional hitter-specific exceptions), working ahead and minimizing wasted pitches.  We find a direct correlation to pitch count per inning and effectiveness, although there are certainly exception occasions there as well.  We teach that there are situations where weak contact is as effective as trying to K everyone.  Part of the education process is presenting stats such as MLB hitting stats by pitch count, which clearly illustrates the effectiveness of pitching ahead.  We don't use HS numbers for that illustration for reasons that have been beat to death here.

 

Hitting is a bit different.  I believe there are more exceptions... a wider variety of successful approaches.  As I stated in my earlier post, you want to develop hitters so that they have a full arsenal.  But that takes time.  And many hitters can be successful at the HS level with only a few weapons.  Some are good FB only or first pitch FB hitters or pure pull hitters or pure see-ball hit-ball, etc.  So, asking those hitters to work the count as deep as possible would be taking away their strength.  With some, over time, you help them advance and add weapons.  With others you play on their strength and put them in a position to succeed with what they have.

Also, if you face a P who you know has exceptional control and/or never wavers from a pattern of FB's until ahead, even your patient hitters may be better off swinging it early.

 

All I see right now is people saying, “We don’t need no stinking stats!”

 

I don't see that anywhere either.  In fact, I'm pretty sure I use stats more than you would imagine and I'm pretty sure IEBSBL does as well.  I will say this, however...  These are HS kids and HS coaches.  There are certainly areas where expanded stats and new technology can be helpful but beyond all the usual points about HS stats being too small in sample size, range of competition too wide, biased or incompetent keepers, etc., there is also the POV that things at this level need to be kept reasonably simple to be most effective.

 

Last edited by cabbagedad

My RHP kid loves Ks.....especially the backwards kind but he just wants to get out of the inning with no runners on/no runs. Sometimes that works and sometimes he walks a few. Being an infielder too, he loves it when great plays are made behind him. Last year in the elite 8 we faced a n. atlanta team and their whole roster was coached with the QAB concept, they get the pitch they can handle and grind out hits/walks, consequently the starter left earlier than normal. They went on to win both games and we went home.

Stats,

   I never said stats were counterproductive or I didn't believe in theM, I never said I kne everything.  All I said was that I had never heard of a stat called, see as many pitches as you can.  Stats have to have something measurable and "see how many pitches you can see" is not measurable.  We reward our hitters with a quality AB when they see 8+ pitches and take a 0-2/1-2 count and run it to a full count.  I think ther is a relevance to being resilient at the plate when your back is against the wall.  

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

If you believe a pitcher’s goal should be to get rid of a batter in 3 pitches or less, but that hitters should see as many pitches as possible, how do you test your philosophy, and what metrics do you use to measure what’s going on.

 

 

If it happens it's nice, but it should not be the goal.

 

Pitcher could wind up throwing too many pitches down the middle just to obtain the goal.  His PPAB could be one, but every one of the ABs is a hit.  Not a good thing.  Here's part of his line.  10 batters faced.  10 pitches, 10 hits, 8 runs, no outs.  He accomplished his goal of having a low PPAB count, but failed in every other measurable that really counts.

 

Batters may take a lot of pitches, but wind up getting struck out looking because they are trying to extend an AB.  Or they wind up with two quick strikes on them and wind up having to swing at an undesirable pitch because they have not swung at a really good pitch early due to trying to obtain the goal of seeing a lot of pitches.

 

Low PPAB by a pitcher and seeing as many pitches as possible as a batter are not bad things to have happen, but definitely should not be a goal within itself.

Originally Posted by cabbagedad:

I don't believe anyone said anything about stats being counter-productive, just that the goals you state in your OP would be.

 

Well, I don’t know how else to interpret you saying But if that number were top-of-mind, the pitcher would be more inclined to throw to the heart of the plate all day and this usually turns an average hitting team into a very good hitting team. It seems to me the 1st assumption you make is some pitchers will be focused on stats to their detriment. Well, if in fact someone were thinking only of that rather than pitching, and they would then be inclined to do what you said, and the result was what you said it would be, I’d agree. But I wouldn’t even know how to go about proving what a pitcher was thinking, let alone how to figure out why, so it seems to me what you’re doing is making another guess with no proof.

 

And that’s fine! Heck, we all do it to some degree. But I still fail to see why anyone would see a pitcher wanting to get rid of hitters in 3 pitches or less as counter-productive. I’ve never agreed with the idea that HS hitters should be taking lots of pitches just to run up the count or see more of what the pitcher can throw.

 

I don't see where anyone is saying it's a big deal.  Folks are just responding to your post with their POV.

 

How is there a point of view when the question wasn’t asking for one?

 

"Believed there was some validity to the thought that fewer pitchers per batter were a good thing" is quite a different and softer statement than your original OP - "If you believe a pitcher’s goal should be to get rid of a batter in 3 pitches or less..."

 

Well, all I can say is you sure seem to be picking a nits, but I’ll accept it.

 

With pitchers, as I said, we keep them aware of and monitor the running pitch count and they know we will not go beyond what is considered a safe number for them on that day.  We preach hard on first pitch strikes (occasional hitter-specific exceptions), working ahead and minimizing wasted pitches.  We find a direct correlation to pitch count per inning and effectiveness, although there are certainly exception occasions there as well.  We teach that there are situations where weak contact is as effective as trying to K everyone.  Part of the education process is presenting stats such as MLB hitting stats by pitch count, which clearly illustrates the effectiveness of pitching ahead.  We don't use HS numbers for that illustration for reasons that have been beat to death here.

 

Ok, You monitor the running pitch count. I assume that’s a raw count where you believe say 80 is safe, and when he gets close to that you start watching closer.

 

How do you measure 1st pitch strikes, and how do you factor in those “exceptions”? Do you monitor how many pitches are thrown in each count, and how do you show it?

 

I’d really be interested in seeing how you measure “effectiveness” related to pitch count per inning.

 

Why is it you don’t use HS numbers and instead use ML numbers? I’ve found more often than not, that the only reason HS numbers aren’t used is because so few people have them, not that they aren’t valid.

 

I don't see that anywhere either.  In fact, I'm pretty sure I use stats more than you would imagine and I'm pretty sure IEBSBL does as well.  I will say this, however...  These are HS kids and HS coaches.  There are certainly areas where expanded stats and new technology can be helpful but beyond all the usual points about HS stats being too small in sample size, range of competition too wide, biased or incompetent keepers, etc., there is also the POV that things at this level need to be kept reasonably simple to be most effective.

 

I’m sorry, but I find that paragraph very difficult to come to grips with. You say you use stats more than I can imagine, then say the sample size is too small. And as for the POV that things at the HS level need to be kept simple, why is automatically assumed that using stats suddenly complicates everything, and even if that were true, then why on earth do you use them so much?

 

I know you think I’m just arguing for the sake of argument, but that’s not true at all! Like so many others, you’re saying two very different things. I honestly believe lots of coaches out there either already use stats in many different ways, or wish they had them in order to use them, but just won’t admit it.

 

I’ve posted this link before, but this seems like a good spot to post it again. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwrW2FWe_rg

 

As you can easily see, there are lots of different metrics that are very much in the range of being attainable by HS players during their time in HS. The regulars here get 100+PAs in the spring season, 75+ during the summer, and 50+ during the fall. That’s 175-250 a year. So by the time they’ve played 3 years, they’ve got 525-750 PAs, and that more than enough of a sample size for many hitting metrics, and would show a definite tendency for all but a very few.

 

Unfortunately, how many programs track their players from Fr thru their Sr years? I could do it to a fair degree, but since no one here uses the numbers as drop dead things, using only the V numbers seems to work for our purposes.

Originally Posted by old_school:

the only goal i have been aware from a pitch count perspective is 15 pitches or less per inning. if you can do that you will a whole lot of ball games.

 

to say 3 per batter seems silly and short sighted to me.

 

Well, at least on my part none of this has been about pitch counts, but why do you think its silly and shortsighted? All it is to me, is a matter of precision. Pitches per season, pitches per game, pitches per inning, and pitches per batter will all give the same final number. The difference is, by using the most precise, you have the ability to see how the numbers came about.

 

And just to satisfy my curiosity, where did you come up with 15 pitches per inning as the standard? How do you check your pitchers against your standard?

Originally Posted by IEBSBL:

Stats,

   I never said stats were counterproductive or I didn't believe in theM, I never said I kne everything.  All I said was that I had never heard of a stat called, see as many pitches as you can.  Stats have to have something measurable and "see how many pitches you can see" is not measurable.  We reward our hitters with a quality AB when they see 8+ pitches and take a 0-2/1-2 count and run it to a full count.  I think ther is a relevance to being resilient at the plate when your back is against the wall.  

 

I never said there was a stat called "see how many pitches you can see"! It’s a goal or a philosophy if you will, and can easily be measured by how many pitches hitters see.

 

Think about it. Why do you “reward” your hitters on an 8+ pitch AB? Because your basic philosophy is the more pitches seen, the better.

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by cabbagedad:

 

I don't see where anyone is saying it's a big deal.  Folks are just responding to your post with their POV.

 

How is there a point of view when the question wasn’t asking for one?

 

 

Here's the root of the issue, you post things on a discussion board and then aren't interested in (or are get belligerent about) people's opinions on the things you post.

 

What's the point? Unless TPM is right, of course, and this all just about starting pointless arguments.

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by old_school:

the only goal i have been aware from a pitch count perspective is 15 pitches or less per inning. if you can do that you will a whole lot of ball games.

 

to say 3 per batter seems silly and short sighted to me.

 

Well, at least on my part none of this has been about pitch counts, but why do you think its silly and shortsighted? All it is to me, is a matter of precision. Pitches per season, pitches per game, pitches per inning, and pitches per batter will all give the same final number. The difference is, by using the most precise, you have the ability to see how the numbers came about.

It's not about which is more precise, it's about which contains the most useful information for your purpose. That's like saying miles per hour, miles per day, miles per year, they all give the same final answer, except that nobody's giving speeding tickets based on miles per year.

Last edited by jacjacatk
Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

 

Well, at least on my part none of this has been about pitch counts, but why do you think its silly and shortsighted? All it is to me, is a matter of precision. Pitches per season, pitches per game, pitches per inning, and pitches per batter will all give the same final number. The difference is, by using the most precise, you have the ability to see how the numbers came about.

 

And just to satisfy my curiosity, where did you come up with 15 pitches per inning as the standard? How do you check your pitchers against your standard?

3 pitches per batter doesn't take into a account any game situation. you have a 0-2 count and are going after hitter is not smart and for me it is short sighted and silly.

 

 15 pitches or less means you are working ahead in the count, it means you don't have many base runners, it means you can get 7 full innings in on a real nice pitch count...it means your fielders are in the game...you are a stat guy you should know this

15 pitches per inning is typically a win, 17 or 18 is close to 500 depending on your D and O - over 20 you had better be hitting - alot!!

 

I didn't create those numbers, i read them somewhere and then checked the score book for a couple of seasons...and there you go! This was for travel base at 12-14 yrs old. i doubt the numbers change much as you get older.

Originally Posted by bballman:

If it happens it's nice, but it should not be the goal.

 

I truly don’t understand. If it’s a positive thing, why wouldn’t it be something to shoot for?

 

Pitcher could wind up throwing too many pitches down the middle just to obtain the goal.  His PPAB could be one, but every one of the ABs is a hit.  Not a good thing.  Here's part of his line.  10 batters faced.  10 pitches, 10 hits, 8 runs, no outs.  He accomplished his goal of having a low PPAB count, but failed in every other measurable that really counts.

 

Isn’t that just a bit of a stretch? 10 pitches, 10 hits, 8 runs, no outs goes back to the myth that if every pitch was thrown right down the middle, every batter would get a hit every time. That doesn’t even happen in BP, so why do you think it would happen in a game? If a pitcher was able to and did that, I’ll concede hitters would probably perform better, but your example is ridiculous.

 

I really think many of you are getting bogged down in semantics and myth.

 

Batters may take a lot of pitches, but wind up getting struck out looking because they are trying to extend an AB.  Or they wind up with two quick strikes on them and wind up having to swing at an undesirable pitch because they have not swung at a really good pitch early due to trying to obtain the goal of seeing a lot of pitches.

 

Which is exactly why I’ve always been against it as a philosophy.

 

Low PPAB by a pitcher and seeing as many pitches as possible as a batter are not bad things to have happen, but definitely should not be a goal within itself.

 

As I said earlier, I think you’re caught up in semantics. Every player I’ve ever seen has a goal of at least a .300 BA because it’s the “standard”. But I’ve never seen one go to the plate with that as the sole thought in their mind.

Originally Posted by Consultant:

How about less than 14.4 pitches per inning= a "win".

This was the the average pitches for Michigan State Baseball team recorded over three years by the Assistant Coach.

Believe it or not this was 60 years ago!

 

He did recognize the 6th tool.

 

Bob


or i could have just posted this...but i didn't know who figiured it out!!

 

Thanks Bob

Originally Posted by Consultant:

How about less than 14.4 pitches per inning= a "win".

This was the the average pitches for Michigan State Baseball team recorded over three years by the Assistant Coach.

Believe it or not this was 60 years ago!

 

And if the number of pitches was divided by the number of batters, you’d have exactly what I was talking about.

 

The attachment is part of what I produce after every spring game. As you can see, between the 3 reports, there’s a measurement for just about everyone.

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Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by bballman:

If it happens it's nice, but it should not be the goal.

 

I truly don’t understand. If it’s a positive thing, why wouldn’t it be something to shoot for?

 

Pitcher could wind up throwing too many pitches down the middle just to obtain the goal.  His PPAB could be one, but every one of the ABs is a hit.  Not a good thing.  Here's part of his line.  10 batters faced.  10 pitches, 10 hits, 8 runs, no outs.  He accomplished his goal of having a low PPAB count, but failed in every other measurable that really counts.

 

Isn’t that just a bit of a stretch? 10 pitches, 10 hits, 8 runs, no outs goes back to the myth that if every pitch was thrown right down the middle, every batter would get a hit every time. That doesn’t even happen in BP, so why do you think it would happen in a game? If a pitcher was able to and did that, I’ll concede hitters would probably perform better, but your example is ridiculous.

 

I really think many of you are getting bogged down in semantics and myth.

 

Batters may take a lot of pitches, but wind up getting struck out looking because they are trying to extend an AB.  Or they wind up with two quick strikes on them and wind up having to swing at an undesirable pitch because they have not swung at a really good pitch early due to trying to obtain the goal of seeing a lot of pitches.

 

Which is exactly why I’ve always been against it as a philosophy.

 

Low PPAB by a pitcher and seeing as many pitches as possible as a batter are not bad things to have happen, but definitely should not be a goal within itself.

 

As I said earlier, I think you’re caught up in semantics. Every player I’ve ever seen has a goal of at least a .300 BA because it’s the “standard”. But I’ve never seen one go to the plate with that as the sole thought in their mind.

A HR is a positive thing, trying for one every AB would be a terrible goal.

 

Pitchers should never throw a pitch with the intention of creating contact, they should generally being attempting to throw the best possible strike, and be willing to accept as a consequence that the hitter will often put the ball in play. Setting as a goal to keep pitch count/inning below a threshold may induce pitchers to throw more hittable pitches in order to keep the count down which may be counterproductive.

 

There are plenty of problems with QABs, but having a goal of seeing more pitches is pointless. You need a hitting approach that works to your strengths and the pitcher's weaknesses. If that involves taking/seeing more pitches, that's a positive side-effect of working the correct approach, not a goal in its own right.

 

Most good hitters I know aren't particularly focused on BA (your mileage may vary). They're interested in getting the best pitch to hit that they can, and hitting it as well as they can. Or in the words of a wise 16yo I know when asked about his hitting philosophy, "Every at bat, first I try to see the ball, and then hit it as hard as I can."

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by old_school:

the only goal i have been aware from a pitch count perspective is 15 pitches or less per inning. if you can do that you will a whole lot of ball games.

 

to say 3 per batter seems silly and short sighted to me.

 

Well, at least on my part none of this has been about pitch counts, but why do you think its silly and shortsighted? All it is to me, is a matter of precision. Pitches per season, pitches per game, pitches per inning, and pitches per batter will all give the same final number. The difference is, by using the most precise, you have the ability to see how the numbers came about.

 

 

You're going to pitch the #3 hitter with men on base different that the #9 hitter with nobody on.  So the focus on 3 pitches per batter is precise but not necessarily helpful. 

 

Statistics are a dubious business.   

Originally Posted by old_school:

3 pitches per batter doesn't take into a account any game situation. you have a 0-2 count and are going after hitter is not smart and for me it is short sighted and silly.

 

WHEW! Once you get dug in on something, you refuse to give an inch. That’s ok by me though, as long as you’re consistent about it.

 

15 pitches or less means you are working ahead in the count, it means you don't have many base runners, it means you can get 7 full innings in on a real nice pitch count...it means your fielders are in the game...you are a stat guy you should know this

 

Yep, I am a stat guy but 15 pitches or less means no such thing to me. I can show innings where there were 3 runners an less than 10 pitches, and innings where there were no runners and more than 20.

 

FWIW, 15PPI is 105 per 7 inning game. Check you HS team and see how many games there were 15 PPI for both teams. It won’t be a lot.

 

15 pitches per inning is typically a win, 17 or 18 is close to 500 depending on your D and O - over 20 you had better be hitting - alot!!

 

Well, I’ll sure agree that the lower the PPI, the better chance for a win, but if you look at the comppct.pdf link, I think you’ll see that its far from a sure thing.

 

I didn't create those numbers, i read them somewhere and then checked the score book for a couple of seasons...and there you go! This was for travel base at 12-14 yrs old. i doubt the numbers change much as you get older.

 

You did what most people have done. You heard 15PPI used as a standard, and assumed it good for every age and every level. FWIW, I did the same thing, but research showed me it was based on MLB.

 

So you just opened the scorebook and counted the pitches, but didn’t track anything? That’s too bad, I’d like to see those numbers.

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A few years ago at the College Coaches Convention in Houston, I along with 1,000 college coaches listen to Nolan Ryan speak. It was outstanding one hour talk, "you could hear a pin drop".

 

Nolan said, that when he pitched, he realized that the opposition in the first three innings would take "good" pitches to increase his pitch count. If they could 'run" his pitch to 20 pitches per inning then Ryan's team would need a relief pitcher in the 5th or 6th inning.

 

It is a game of adjustment and the successful player and team makes the quickest adjustment.

 

Bob

 

 

Originally Posted by Golfman25:

You're going to pitch the #3 hitter with men on base different that the #9 hitter with nobody on.  So the focus on 3 pitches per batter is precise but not necessarily helpful. 

 

Statistics are a dubious business.   

 

Well, typically every hitter faced is going to be pitched differently, otherwise the hitters are given quite an advantage. But that’s what averages are all about. No one’s talking about every batter being pitched to the same in order to get to the 3 PPB. But why wouldn’t you want your pitcher to throw strikes to the #3 hitter, especially with men on base?

 

I’ve never once tried to say stats are the all and end all of managing a baseball team. To me they’re just information that helps anyone who cares to look at them understand the game and what’s going on better. There’s nothing dubious about that to me.

 

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by Golfman25:

You're going to pitch the #3 hitter with men on base different that the #9 hitter with nobody on.  So the focus on 3 pitches per batter is precise but not necessarily helpful. 

 

Statistics are a dubious business.   

 

Well, typically every hitter faced is going to be pitched differently, otherwise the hitters are given quite an advantage. But that’s what averages are all about. No one’s talking about every batter being pitched to the same in order to get to the 3 PPB. But why wouldn’t you want your pitcher to throw strikes to the #3 hitter, especially with men on base?

 

 

 

Really? 

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by cabbagedad:

I don't believe anyone said anything about stats being counter-productive, just that the goals you state in your OP would be.

 

Well, I don’t know how else to interpret you saying But if that number were top-of-mind, the pitcher would be more inclined to throw to the heart of the plate all day and this usually turns an average hitting team into a very good hitting team. It seems to me the 1st assumption you make is some pitchers will be focused on stats to their detriment.

You stated it as a goal, not a stat.

 

. But I wouldn’t even know how to go about proving what a pitcher was thinking, let alone how to figure out why, so it seems to me what you’re doing is making another guess with no proof.

 

If we want to know what a pitcher is thinking (and we often do), we just ask him.  No guesswork involved.

 

 

I don't see where anyone is saying it's a big deal.  Folks are just responding to your post with their POV.

 

How is there a point of view when the question wasn’t asking for one?

 

See jacjac's response... couldn't have said it better.

 

 

With pitchers, as I said, we keep them aware of and monitor the running pitch count and they know we will not go beyond what is considered a safe number for them on that day.  We preach hard on first pitch strikes (occasional hitter-specific exceptions), working ahead and minimizing wasted pitches.  We find a direct correlation to pitch count per inning and effectiveness, although there are certainly exception occasions there as well.  We teach that there are situations where weak contact is as effective as trying to K everyone.  Part of the education process is presenting stats such as MLB hitting stats by pitch count, which clearly illustrates the effectiveness of pitching ahead.  We don't use HS numbers for that illustration for reasons that have been beat to death here.

 

Ok, You monitor the running pitch count. I assume that’s a raw count where you believe say 80 is safe, and when he gets close to that you start watching closer.

 

We don't wait until P is getting close to his game limit.  we assess inning by inning and discuss with P as needed.

 

 

Why is it you don’t use HS numbers and instead use ML numbers? I’ve found more often than not, that the only reason HS numbers aren’t used is because so few people have them, not that they aren’t valid. 

 

We used ML numbers in that instance because it clearly illustrates the point, is readily available and there is no question about validity.

 

I don't see that anywhere either.  In fact, I'm pretty sure I use stats more than you would imagine and I'm pretty sure IEBSBL does as well.  I will say this, however...  These are HS kids and HS coaches.  There are certainly areas where expanded stats and new technology can be helpful but beyond all the usual points about HS stats being too small in sample size, range of competition too wide, biased or incompetent keepers, etc., there is also the POV that things at this level need to be kept reasonably simple to be most effective.

 

I’m sorry, but I find that paragraph very difficult to come to grips with. You say you use stats more than I can imagine, then say the sample size is too small. And as for the POV that things at the HS level need to be kept simple, why is automatically assumed that using stats suddenly complicates everything, and even if that were true, then why on earth do you use them so much?

I know you think I’m just arguing for the sake of argument, but that’s not true at all! Like so many others, you’re saying two very different things. I honestly believe lots of coaches out there either already use stats in many different ways, or wish they had them in order to use them, but just won’t admit it.

 

I didn't say I use them "so much".  I said we use them more than YOU would imagine.  This is based partially on past posts which you have stated that I and HS coaches in general are afraid of, don't understand, are reluctant to change, rely too much on what we see, etc., etc.

The paragraph in it's entirety is saying a HS coach has to find a balance. There is valuable statistical info out there and there are always new tools and measurements to consider.  But don't go overboard to the point where you are bogged down by numbers, not taking care of the primary business at hand, not seeing what is happening in front of you or recalling what you have seen in the same situation in the past and don't confuse the heck out of the players with excessive number crunching.  And I know this is a point which we disagree but it usually doesn't take several spreadsheets to identify that a player is a pure pull hitter or is a base stealing threat or has a weak arm or slow release or can't hit a curve, etc., etc.

 

...

Last edited by cabbagedad

Got to disagree. There have definitely been some strawmen and canards floated here, but Jacjac and Cabbage  have both taught me stuff in their replies. 

 

As for Stats - you know it would be interesting to know how you would go about being head coach of a HS team if you had the opportunity.  Exactly what metrics would you use and how would you use them to help your players develop and help your team win games?

Originally Posted by Stats4Gnats:

Originally Posted by old_school:

...

 

15 pitches or less means you are working ahead in the count, it means you don't have many base runners, it means you can get 7 full innings in on a real nice pitch count...it means your fielders are in the game...you are a stat guy you should know this

 

Yep, I am a stat guy but 15 pitches or less means no such thing to me. I can show innings where there were 3 runners an less than 10 pitches, and innings where there were no runners and more than 20.

 

FWIW, 15PPI is 105 per 7 inning game. Check you HS team and see how many games there were 15 PPI for both teams. It won’t be a lot.

 

15 pitches per inning is typically a win, 17 or 18 is close to 500 depending on your D and O - over 20 you had better be hitting - alot!!

 

Well, I’ll sure agree that the lower the PPI, the better chance for a win, but if you look at the comppct.pdf link, I think you’ll see that its far from a sure thing.

 

I didn't create those numbers, i read them somewhere and then checked the score book for a couple of seasons...and there you go! This was for travel base at 12-14 yrs old. i doubt the numbers change much as you get older.

 

You did what most people have done. You heard 15PPI used as a standard, and assumed it good for every age and every level. FWIW, I did the same thing, but research showed me it was based on MLB.

...

Actually, Stats, I reviewed both docs you attached in this thread and they indicate that Old School is right on with the numbers he states. 

The spreadsheet with just the P stats from your HS team shows that each successful pitcher averaged just over 15 PPI.  The other spreadsheet that shows several games over the last few years shows that the team with lowest PPI almost always wins and that if your PPI gets up over 17, 18, your offense better be scoring some big runs to win.  Most often, the winning team had 16 or fewer PPI or they won in a blowout.  Not sure what you are basing your argument on.  What is your take from your numbers?

Last edited by cabbagedad

stats IMO are reflection of the game. you can't play by them pitch by pitch all the time becuase game situations dictate going the other direct...I do think they are good indicator of intent...and as learning tool.

 

example you want to see a lot of pitches right? ok great but do you want every batter starting 0-2? of course not so you have to be more aggressive at the plate, assuming the other pitcher is pounding the zone...not any revelation there. the opposite holds true for pitchers right?

 

so your actions are somewhat going to be somewhat influenced by the game and opponent regardless of the stats.

 

every action has a reaction...(stats I already know the actual quote was equal and opposite reaction but I like simple better!! )

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