quote:
Originally posted by northwest:
Our coach actually signals to our scorekeeper how to score it, so he must have had the difference of opinion. Also, I got pulled, so he must have thought it was my fault they were getting on.
Allow me to address your last statement 1st.
Don’t think you can read the coach’s mind. If you really want to know why he pulled you, the only way to do that is to ask. He may have had you on a pitch count, noticed something you were doing mechanically wrong, remembered your history with the next hitter, seen something in your body language that told him to get you out of there, or it may have been his “gut feeling”.
But what ever it was, you need to understand that coaches sometimes pull a pitcher to “protect” them as opposed to punishing them for failure.
Now for your 1st statement. There isn’t a decent SK I’ve ever run into that takes signals from a coach about how to mark something. Now there are times I’ll walk over and ask the coach about a particular play because I have some question in my mind and I think he had a better view of the play. There is also plenty of room for discussion after a game too. But not during the game!
If the coach wants that much control, he may as well keep the book in the dugout and have some player score things exactly as the he says.