quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
And those who reply to those who ressurect the dead are just as guilty. I guess the dead horse wasn't all that high and mighty.
Good point.
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
And those who reply to those who ressurect the dead are just as guilty. I guess the dead horse wasn't all that high and mighty.
quote:Originally posted by jerry weinstein:
Guys:
68% of all fairly hit balls are outs in the Big Leagues. Pitch to contact. One of the biggest problems in baseball today is that pitchers corner pitch away from contact too frequently.You wold be amazed how many outs you would get by working down over the middle of the plate with more than one speed(7-10 speed spreads)& elevating an occasional 4 seam fastball.
Also as far as a goal for hitting your target with the fastball is concerned, the Inside Edge data base shows that Major League pitchers only hit their target 24% of the time with their fastballs.(catcher does not have to move his glove)
One of the major tennants when establishing goals is that they are realistic & attainable.Also goals are relative to the abilities of the individual.They need to be behaviorable, measurable & short term.
JW
quote:Originally posted by Gingerbread Man:
Don't forget that all that keep bringing in the points about the dead horse are just as guilty also. In fact, at this point, all who have contributed to the entire post have taken their club to the horse.
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
…
I agree 150,000% with you on your post if we're talking about all levels of pro ball. I think with the new bat regulations college and high school will start coming back towards what you're saying. For the past decade pitchers at the lower levels HAD to nitpick to try and survive due to the hot bats. This made it's way up to the pro levels on it's own. Plus, if you remember back in the early 90's when the strike zone went from outside edge of the batter's box to the middle of the plate it forced pitchers outside more. Remember Eric Gregg's strike zone?
The new bats will help stop the nit picking at the college and high school level......I hope.
quote:In the end, I suspect that the hot bats had much more of an effect on the game for what damage everyone THOUGHT they would do
quote:Originally posted by jerry weinstein:
Guys:
68% of all fairly hit balls are outs in the Big Leagues. Pitch to contact. One of the biggest problems in baseball today is that pitchers corner pitch away from contact too frequently.You wold be amazed how many outs you would get by working down over the middle of the plate with more than one speed(7-10 speed spreads)& elevating an occasional 4 seam fastball.
Also as far as a goal for hitting your target with the fastball is concerned, the Inside Edge data base shows that Major League pitchers only hit their target 24% of the time with their fastballs.(catcher does not have to move his glove)
One of the major tennants when establishing goals is that they are realistic & attainable.Also goals are relative to the abilities of the individual.They need to be behaviorable, measurable & short term.
JW
quote:Originally posted by CADad:
I read Jerry's post as saying location is good but don't ruin yourself trying to be perfect. In other words, change speeds and use what you've got that day. Some days you can locate fairly well, some days you try to throw it down the middle and hope it misses in a good location. So Stats I think you misunderstood what Jerry was trying to say, or more likely didn't want to understand.
The only place I'd disagree is wrt to the percentages on balls put in play. That's for all balls put in play. The numbers for line drives tend to be a lot higher. MLB hitters make a living on mistakes over the plate although even they don't always square them up.
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
Are you seriously saying what I think you're saying? You believe at the high school and college level the BESR bats had no effect on the game other than what people THOUGHT it did? If that's what you're saying then are very wrong. The BESR bats and the ones before them that basically had no regulations set back pitching at the high school and college level due to there being more of a chance of some sort of hit than what you would with a wood bat.
I believe Jerry (and if I'm wrong Jerry please correct me) was speaking of baseball from the profession point of view. I brought up my response from the amateur point of view. Reason is until the metal bats truly perform as wood bats then it is two seperate games. With metal bats the pitchers have to be more fine with their pitches or there is a greater chance of giving up a hit. Pro ball is what he said it should be - throw to contact but if you do that at the high school level and even college level you will get burned more than you would at the pro level due to the hot bats. With the new BBCOR standards I think the overall aspect of pitching to contact will start making it's way back down to the amateur levels as it should.
You really don't think the hot bats affected the amateur game?
quote:In the end, I suspect that the hot bats had much more of an effect on the game for what damage everyone THOUGHT they would do
quote:In the end, I suspect that the hot bats had much more of an effect on the game for what damage everyone THOUGHT they would do, and therefore ended up walking or getting behind in counts many more times than necessary, than what they actually did.
quote:Originally posted by CADad:
I read Jerry's post as saying location is good but don't ruin yourself trying to be perfect. In other words, change speeds and use what you've got that day. Some days you can locate fairly well, some days you try to throw it down the middle and hope it misses in a good location. So Stats I think you misunderstood what Jerry was trying to say, or more likely didn't want to understand.
…
quote:Originally posted by infielddad:
GBM,
Here is one right down the center, just about right at the catcher's glove. And then...
http://i2.cdn.turner.com/si/20...ert-pujols-ap-t1.jpg
quote:Originally posted by TPM:
There ya go!
quote:Originally posted by NDD:
I think poor defense is a major factor in the fear of pitching to contact. Defense is under-rated, under-taught and not as easy as people seem to think.
quote:Originally posted by CADad:
They're from the Pitch/FX section of fangraphs.com. If I had to guess I'd say the front of the plate but I don't know what part of the plate they use for this. There's very little difference between the front and back of the plate as far as location even with an extremely hard breaking curve only moving up to 4 inches as it goes from the front to back of the plate. A fastball might sink an inch or two at the most across the plate and would tail far, far less. A pitcher throwing across his body as much as Weaver, and nobody else comes close to him, might get somewhere close to an inch of difference horizontally from front to back. These are quick, back of the envelope calculations. I think I did more detailed calculations somewhere else on here in the past. The curve assumption is 6' of total drop so it would have to hit the plate to get that much drop as it crosses the plate. Anything else is going to be dropping much more slowly and a curve that ends up in the strike zone will be moving a lot less as it crosses the plate.
Look at Fister "Pitch Location By Type" Perhaps the difference between "down the middle" and "not" is different to them and us.quote:Originally posted by TPM:quote:Originally posted by CADad:
They're from the Pitch/FX section of fangraphs.com. If I had to guess I'd say the front of the plate but I don't know what part of the plate they use for this. There's very little difference between the front and back of the plate as far as location even with an extremely hard breaking curve only moving up to 4 inches as it goes from the front to back of the plate. A fastball might sink an inch or two at the most across the plate and would tail far, far less. A pitcher throwing across his body as much as Weaver, and nobody else comes close to him, might get somewhere close to an inch of difference horizontally from front to back. These are quick, back of the envelope calculations. I think I did more detailed calculations somewhere else on here in the past. The curve assumption is 6' of total drop so it would have to hit the plate to get that much drop as it crosses the plate. Anything else is going to be dropping much more slowly and a curve that ends up in the strike zone will be moving a lot less as it crosses the plate.
I am assuming it's taken at the plate, as the height would be the correct distance it would cross the plate?
Good stuff CADad. I am assuming that most of these pitches ended up very close to where intended. That's what makes them better than most.
BTW, here's Fister's game from last night, appears to me that he was really trying hard to stay out of the zone, not something you would normally do in a regular game,JMO.
http://pitchfx.texasleaguers.c...11&to=10%2F11%2F2011
Also here's Marcum vs Pujols from Monday.
http://pitchfx.texasleaguers.c...11&to=10%2F10%2F2011
quote:Originally posted by TPM:
He was awesome, left nothing up (as far as I can tell). There was nothing in the middle if I am reading it correctly.
quote:Originally posted by TPM:
Stats,
You just got done trashing CADad and IMO you just turned around did the same thing.
Go back page 2 and read the post that GBM made about Albert.
quote:Originally posted by CADad:
Stats,
I don't know for certain what Jerry was thinking. I could be wrong. It happens often enough. I stated my opinion as to what he was trying to say as it seemed fairly straightforward.
I don't have a better idea what you're thinking than you do. I simply think you are wrong.
quote:Originally posted by coach2709:
As for the quote the bats before BBCOR did affect the way a lot of pitchers approached most hitters. No I'm not trying to say ALL pitchers threw differently to ALL hitters and if you took it that way then I think you're looking to stir some trouble. The guy we had that just graduated that was drafted who throws in the mid 90's with pretty good control for a high school stud had a few homeruns hit off him from BESR bats on pitches in good locations that never would have left the infield with a wood bat and probably a BBOCR bat. Obviously his velocity is what allowed it to be launched over the fence but the live bats allowed the hitter to put the ball in play.
quote:A normal high school pitcher might not provide the velocity on that same pitch to get it out of the park but it could end up in the gap or over the OF heads or even to an OF for an out.
quote:Here's the difference - my guy who had the homerun hit off his 92 MPH fastball in a good location will throw to the same spot at 95 and blow him away. The normal pitcher who had his 87 MPH fastball hit hard doesn't have it in the tank to blow the ball by the hitter with the same location. Now he's got to change location (or feel he has to) in order to get a better outcome on the pitch.
quote:All that with the normal pitcher could POSSIBLY lead to more walks from nibbling. That is a fact and I've seen it happen to my pitchers and other pitchers my teams have competed against. So it's not that people thought the live bats caused more nibbling on the outer edge - it is a fact and I've seen it happen many times. It can be fixed and you just get them a bullpen to start the process there. It might not be one pitch that causes them to nibble but several good pitches that get hit hard.
quote:I'm a big believer in pitching to contact but sometimes with the BESR bats it would lead to more hard hit balls than if you were pitching to wood bats.
quote:So to restate no me and all these other people were NOT over-reacting at all. I possibly did create this misunderstanding by using the term "hot bat" when I don't mean illegal bats.
quote:Originally posted by cabbagedad:
…I do buy the whole 50% thing but there is a reason. There are many instances where a pitcher will miss a target on purpose. …
quote:So, while he may only hit the glove 50% of the time, he is succeeding in hitting his location more often.
quote:Regarding hitters' success with mistakes, I think that goes back to the count and the predictability of the pitch. Hitters may fail to hit safely with mistakes 67% of the time (or whatever that number was) but they have much higher success when they get the pitch type they are looking for and the pitch is in thier zone (mistake). If a pitcher hangs a curve but the hitter was looking FB, the pitcher is much more likely to get away with that mistake.
quote:I do grant that there are some pitchers that are power pitchers or big movement guys who are less fine with their location but these are more the exception IMO.
quote:Originally posted by Gingerbread Man:
... it appears there are quite a few pitches in the middle of the plate.