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#22 Will be trying out for the High school baseball team this spring. I was wondering how the rest of you felt about this subject. I understand that some of the coaches have signs to "plunk" batters. #22 is a pitcher and its kind of worrying me that he might be asked to intentionally plunk a batter when he will be hitting in the lineup himself. At what age is it o.k to be asking a player to do this. Is it a common occurence at this early age. He is trying out for J.V.
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Hello dad,

My son is also a pitcher, freshman in college. Up until this point, I did not see any reason for any pitcher to throw at any batter, although there were several coaches who condoned this, even at 9 and 10.

Last summer, I saw a college wood bat game. The score was 1-0, a real pitcher's duel. The only run scored on a solo homer. The next time the home run hitter came up to the plate, he was promptly plunked on the hip with a curve ball. Message sent, but was it the right move? It was a close game, and you just gave someone a free base.

High school is somewhat of a gray area. Many kids are still learning the proper way to play the game. Pitchers are learning how to pitch, and not just how to throw. I'm sure enough kids get hit without it being intentional. Why would any coach want to put additional pressure on a player by asking him to hit someone? Talk to your son, and see how he feels about it. Then make sure he knows the "proper" way to hit a batter.
Well first I think you may want to take a deep breath and settle down. Find out first if this coaching staff does things like this. No sense worrying over something that won't matter.

As to when it's something that needs to be done I think if you're being paid to play then it opens up this door. Pro players have to ability to send a message but amateurs - especially high school and down - don't have that ability. I would hate to know I told my pitcher to hit a kid in the thigh / rearend and he misses and hits him in the head.

If your son is presented with this situation as a high school player then tell him he needs to do what he thinks is right. Even if it means going against the coach your son should not feel pressured to do something like this if he doesn't want to.
quote:
Last summer, I saw a college wood bat game. The score was 1-0, a real pitcher's duel. The only run scored on a solo homer. The next time the home run hitter came up to the plate, he was promptly plunked on the hip with a curve ball. Message sent, but was it the right move? It was a close game, and you just gave someone a free base.


I've never understood why this warrants getting hit by a pitch. Either the pitcher messed up or the hitter did an amazing job of hitting - where is the bush league in that? Now if the hitter crushed a pitch and stood at the plate and flipped off the pitcher or took his sweet time going around the bases then I can see plunking him. But for him hitting a homerun - that's what he's supposed to do.
quote:
The next time the home run hitter came up to the plate, he was promptly plunked on the hip with a curve ball. Message sent


I would say you're probably reading the situation wrong. Plunked on the hip by a fastball is one thing...he may be sending a message, or he may be trying to back the hitter off the plate a little so he can work the outside. But by a curve? It probably just didn't break.
Big hitters generally see offspeed pitches and in HS this is generally a curve. After hitting a home run the next time up I would venture to guess that 90% of the time the batter will see a curve. Pitchers don't hit batters with curves, if they want to "send a message" it is always with a FB up and in, or in the back/bottom. BTW I have only seen this once in my son's HS career.
quote:
Originally posted by #22's dad:
#22 Will be trying out for the High school baseball team this spring. I was wondering how the rest of you felt about this subject. I understand that some of the coaches have signs to "plunk" batters. #22 is a pitcher and its kind of worrying me that he might be asked to intentionally plunk a batter when he will be hitting in the lineup himself. At what age is it o.k to be asking a player to do this. Is it a common occurence at this early age. He is trying out for J.V.


I bet there is a little excitement in the air at your house. What great times are coming.

I have never experienced a JV HS Coach that would advocate his Pitchers throwing at hitters. I'd tell Junior to put that thought out of his mind. The last thing a hitter should ever think about is being plunked! A player that can't get over the fear of being hit by the baseball won't generally make it to the HS level.

Best of Luck to you both..
Last edited by Prime9
I coached my son up until he was in 14 U right before he started high school ball. One time in 14 U did I order a pitcher to drill a kid. I hate to say this about a teen age boy, but he was a real A-hole. Biggest one we ever played against. Did bush league stuff, whined if a pitch was called a strike, whined when he grounded out, played shortstop and players would say he was talking all kinds of **** when a runner would get on second. I told the pitcher the next time he was up to drill him either in the butt or thigh. He did, and when he got to first, our rather large first baseman had a chat with him about what just happened. I had no problem with that. It was late in the game and they were from out of town so I have no idea the effect of the pitch.

In high school I think the players start to police things themselves. He played JV the next year and the catcher called for him to hit a guy that was acting like an a-hole. Drilled him in the butt and again the first baseman kinda let him know the story. I remember later in the year my son was hitting and he got hit in the thigh by a kid that was kind of a rival of his for a few years. I chuckled about it and thought nothing of it.

Keep it low, and if it is warranted, no biggie.
I have a feeling this topic could take off and become a long thread here. For now I'll bite, but I'd prefer to not really get into the moral argument of intentionally hitting a batter here. There are obviously many opinions on that.

I am a college pitcher and view intentionally hitting a batter a few ways. Have I done it? Sure, several times. The first time I hit someone intentionally was in high school, when I hit him with a pitch in his first at bat (not on purpose) and he proceeded to walk to first base with the bat in his hand staring at me. The next play, he slid well out of range of the bag and took out our shortstop on a double play ball. So his next time up, I reared back and put it right in between his shoulder blades as hard as I could. He took his base and the game went on.

Looking at intentionally hitting someone from strictly a situational coaching aspect:
1. Hitting someone might not be appropriate for the situation of the game. Let's not forget that an HBP puts a runner on base for the opposition.
2. Intentionally hitting someone is, in concept, difficult. Pitchers are taught from a young age to pitch to the glove, and as they continue to progress in the game, it becomes more difficult to suddenly shy away from this. If you've thrown 10,000 straight pitches attempting to throw the ball over a 17 inch wide plate at the same level as the batter's knees, it is tough to suddenly throw the ball 2 feet inside and 5+ feet high. As a young pitcher who might not have full control of his own mechanics, intentionally hitting someone could alter his rhythm and affect his future performance.



Disclaimer: I feel that intentionally hitting someone, if done, should NEVER be done to intentionally inflict pain on an individual. When I am on the field, I want to beat every opponent I have. But I would never want anyone from another team to be physically injured because of any occurrence, especially not something that I have control over. I have never and will never intentionally throw a baseball at someone's head.
It seems to me amateurs have enough trouble getting the ball in the catcher's mitt properly let alone attempting to precisely "hit" someone in a "spot" where they won't be injured. What young ballplayer can be expected to carry out that order with perfection?

What if you throw at a kid's hip and while he attempts to get out of the way of the pitch, he tears his ACL or some other ligament in his body? Are some messages worth that kind of damage? What if attempting to hit a kid, you miss and hit him in the face? Would that message be worth it?

I submit this is a potential criminal activity. Order a kid to intentionally hit someone, the kid misses and does some real damage, and the person who ordered it could go to jail for criminal assault. It all sounds harmless enough in theory to "send a message" but it perhaps might be the most irresponsible thing an adult can do imho - no matter how much someone might deserve it.

For young pitchers out there reading this thread, you must refuse to follow this instruction imho - even if it means the coach will punish you for it.

Someone could get seriously injured (or worse) where you might not ever be able to forgive yourself if you cause that kind of damage. It would be better to walk away from the game imho than to potentially seriously injure someone by "sending a message."

Accidents and injuries will always be part of the game but that is the domain they should remain - as acceptable risks that are part of the game. I understand the need for pitchers to back a kid off the plate and sometimes the kid might get plunked because of it. That is far different in my mind than intentionally trying to hit someone.

Perhaps I am in the minority on this one and there isn't much difference from "backing a kid off the plate" and "sending a message"
The original posters question didn't seem to question the ethics of hitting a batter...

it seemed to ask if it was ok to be scared to throw at a batter since that might incite the other team to throw at him....

...boil it all away and it's fear. Is it ok to disobey the coach because you're scared?
Last edited by CPLZ
Maybe I come at this from a little different perspective, but here goes.

I have seen my younger son hit a kid in the mouth with a 90 mph fastball. Four teeth and 50 stitches later his teammate is ok. My older son hit a kid in the chest with a 90 mph fastball and after the ambulance took the batter to the hospital for a 24 hour stay he was ok. I was less than 20 feet away when Mike Coolbaugh was killed by a batted ball that struck him in the back of the neck.

Is the coach going to take the responsibility for the damage that may be caused? If the batter rushes the mound will the coach be the first one there to protect the pitcher?

I don't think scared has anything to do with it. I would phrase it as responsible. I will always tell my son to pitch inside. I will tell him that accidents will happen. I will always have his back if one gets away and catches a batter.

Strike him out the next time up that sends a bigger message than giving him first base.
I don't believe there are very many coaches that tell their pitchers to intentially hit a batter.

That said, I think there are lots of coaches that will tell pitchers to get him off the plate, buzz him, throw inside, or something similar to that.

In any event, it doesn't accomplish much by hitting the batter with a soft curveball or changeup. If a pitcher does "accidently" hit a batter, it should hurt! Kind of embarrassing if it doesn't.

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