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#1
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They employ a huge shift against Mark Teixeira and I believe it was the year before last he tried to change his style to hit to the open area. Well his average went to crap and he lost power because he was confused at the plate (late and missing balls he should have been pulling). Pulling the bull to the right is something he has done all his life so trying to change at this juncture of his career was not possible (at least for him). Not sure how easy of a task this really is...
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#2
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I have to think that anyone can learn to bunt or drag a knubber down third base. Yesterday I watched Mark Reynolds (playing third) stand in shallow right field during a shift. The shortstop was playing pretty much on second base. You could have bunted for a double and the guy struck out.
Last edited by packs; 04-02-2015 at 11:53 AM. |
#3
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Agree! Most hitters are not George Brett, or Tony Gwynn or Wade Boggs or Ichiro. They don't have the eye or the talent to pick and choose where to hit a high 98 MPH fastball or a 92 MPH splitter. 95% of the league is atrocious at bunting. It's one thing to do it in Little League with little Jeremy throwing 55 MPH straightballs at you, it's another with Mariano trying to shear your bat off at your hands. |
#4
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#5
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Stubborn, lazy hitters like Tex infuriate me. I agree with George Brett. Pros have the talent and all the coaching resources at their disposal to learn to go the other way. The likes of Teixiera are just too stubborn or lazy, so they will continue to make outs trying to pull homers when a timely single could win a game.
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#6
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Sluggers aren't getting paid $20 million a year to drop a bunt or slap a liner against the shift.
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#7
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Yes but they must realize that if they would drop a bunt or slap a hit to the left side during a shift the team would stop shifting. That means more hits for the slugger and runs for his team.
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#8
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Yes, indeed. I agree. Players are primarily paid to help win games. Shoot a double or clutch single the opposite way occasionally, and opponents will ease up on the shift-- then more pulled balls fall for hits, too. Sluggers aren't getting paid to watch their averages drop from .295 to .216 the way Tex's have been going. The game's history is littered with elite sluggers who used the whole field and batted for good averages, in addition to power. Any hitter getting paid big bucks should try, with hard work, to add dimensions to their game that will help them and their team improve, bottom line. Stubbornly making out after out into the shift is not good.
Last edited by MattyC; 04-06-2015 at 05:12 PM. |
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