Showing posts with label rule-change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rule-change. Show all posts

Friday, June 3, 2011

DESIGNATED HITTER = LOAD OF CRAP


Tony La Russa made a move in the bottom of the eighth last night that raised quite a few eyebrows, including mine. Jake Westbrook, a pitcher, was sent up to pinch hit, while the Big Puma Lance Berkman sat on the bench. Apparently Tony was saving Lance for later, but of course he never got into the game.
It's not so much that Westbrook came in to pinch hit that bothers me, it's how he looked at the plate that made me want to hide my head under the covers. The word embarassing doesn't do his swing justice, unfortunately.
This is the case with most pitchers in baseball. They focus on pitching, which is their main duty, and that's understandable. With that being said though, most pitchers that come up to the plate look like a fish out of water. They swing like the bat is too heavy, and I think they would have a better shot at making contact if they were to close their eyes. It's uncomfortable to watch.
Now let's examine the game for a minute. In Little League everyone plays everywhere. Sure, the coach puts the kid who picks dandelions and chases butterflies out in right field and hopes that no one can hit the ball that far, but no player has it written in stone yet that he's a catcher, shortshop, pitcher, etc.
In college, most starting pitchers will throw every 5th or 6th game. In games when they aren't scheduled to pitch, more than likely they are playing in the field, which means they have to know how to hit. The announcers always say that pitchers aren't athletes. Actually they are: major league athletes who make millions of dollars. Just because most are lanky and awkward looking doesn't mean they have to avoid the batting cages!
What happens between college and the majors? It seems like most pitchers completely forget how to swing the bat. I know that they use a DH in the minors sometimes, but come on. There's batting practice before every game, would it kill you to take advantage of it once in a while?
The fact that the American League uses a designated hitter and the National League makes pitchers bat for themselves is absolute crap in my opinion. It seems like every time a National League pitcher comes to the plate (usually hitting in the 9th spot, I wonder why...) it is a guaranteed easy out. This happens a lot when runners are on base, say in the early innings, with 2 outs. You know you aren't going to be pinch hit for so early in the game, but because you hold the bat like you're afraid of it, the team squanders a scoring chance when you strike out on 3 ugly swings.
American League games should always be high-scoring affairs, simply because they have a hitting specialist on their team who doesn't have to play the field. Big Papi is a perfect example. Do you remember Vlad Guerrero trying to play right field in the World Series last year? The Rangers needed his bat in the lineup, so they put him in the outfield with the other nose pickers and he messed up, badly, and more than once.
To sum up my ramblings, I think that if the pitcher has to hit, then he should spend more time in the cages or with the hitting instructor, so that he isn't going to be an automatic out every time that he steps into the box. I also think that both leagues should have the same rules: both have a DH, or make American League pitchers swing the bat too. That would be even more entertaining to watch...Bud Selig has done some amazing things for the game during his tenure as Commissioner, like interleague play and the Wild Card, but this is something that should be examined soon. I don't know if I can handle another at-bat like Westbrook's last night. Garcia is pitching tonight though, and he at least looks like he knows what he's doing when he comes to the plate.




Wednesday, June 1, 2011

BUSTED @ HOME PLATE

There has been a lot of talk in Major League baseball recently about changing the rule for plays at home. As most of you know, last year's NL Rookie of the Year is out for the rest of the season thanks to a collision with Scott Cousins of the Florida Marlins. We've all seen the replay a dozen times or more. This erupted an onslaught of opinons from all over the game, with everyone putting in their 2 cents.
Here's mine:
Scott Cousins did nothing wrong. He was trying to do his job and score a run. Buster Posey was trying to do his job as well: keep that run from scoring. Buster was clearing blocking the plate, even though he didn't have the ball yet. Cousins saw the throw coming in, thought it was going to beat him, and had to make a split-second decision.
Watching the Cardinals-Giants game on ESPN last night, the commentators once again opened up this discussion. However, they made several points that I would like to re-iterate here. Mike Piazza and Jorge Posada were All-Star catchers for several years in the majors. Do you recall many bone-crushing collisions that they were involved in? Let me answer that for you: NO.
Piazza, Posada, Pudge, and the Molinas have all mastered the art of the sweep tag. They were and some still are valuable members of their teams, and know that their teams can't afford for them to be on the DL. Because of this, they don't stand in the middle of the basepath without the ball, waiting to be knocked into the next zip code. They wait for the ball to come to them and do their best to apply the tag.
Does everyone remember when Nyjer Morgan of the Nationals took out Marlins catcher Brett Hayes last year? Vaguely maybe. Why is that? Probably because Hayes is a backup catcher, not the reigning Rookie of the Year. That hit looked a lot worse that Buster's mishap, yet you didn't hear the Baseball higher-ups making as big of a fuss about rule-changing as they are now that the face of the Giants franchise is out for the rest of the year.
Don't get me wrong, I think Buster Posey is an excellent ball player. He's exciting to watch, and he will truely be missed. I'm simply getting a whiff of favoritism, and I don't like the smell. In football, you always hear QB's like Big Ben saying that some of the hits they take would be penalized more if they happened to Tom Brady or Tony Romo instead of them. This is what I see here.
I just don't think that a rule change is necessary. If you don't agree with my opinions, then tough. Start your own blog. :) Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for tomorrow's highly opinionated posting.