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Posted
13 hours ago, Mark G said:

Overall, I wonder why the strategy is considered taboo; heck, I can't even convince anyone on this site it is still sound.  :)  The strategy I described would have been normal for a century.  What happened recently to change that?  It's almost like when they decided not to actually throw the 4 balls outside before he took his base, they all said what's the use?  :)  

It is not taboo. There have been 80 intentional walks in MLB extra innings this year, at ten times the frequency of the next highest inning. It’s just not a strategy chosen in every game.

I don’t think you are considering strikeouts enough here. Strikeouts are extremely common in the modern game, much more than double plays. And strikeouts rarely allow base runners to advance and virtually never allow the batter to reach. On average, Jake Cave strikes out in a third of his plate appearances, with Tim Beckham not far behind — and Jordan Romano strikes out more batters than an average pitcher. There is a huge cost to passing up those opportunities hoping for a much rarer double play.

And the Jays strategy did not require perfect execution to work, as you claim. Batters fail to reach base on a strikeout, what, 99.9% of the time? That was a massive fluke. Judging the soundness of their strategy on that outcome is like judging the soundness of an intentional walk based on the pitcher committing a balk right after it. Once a fluke event like that happened, they were going to be between a rock and a hard place regardless of their strategy choice.

Posted
13 hours ago, h2oface said:

Check out Arraez and Correa's last 7 and 15 games. Cave and Beckham bring a much hotter bat from St.Paul, and Cave is still hot. Arraez and Correa are almost automatic outs right now. I would, as a manager, always figure in the moment as well as reputation.

“Almost automatic out” Luis Arraez went 3-for-5 in the very next game. So do you have any predictive power about these “moments”, or do you just learn about them after they’ve started or ended?

And Tim Beckham’s “hot bat from St. Paul” was 2-for-13 with 5 Ks, and Cave’s hot bat actually struck out. Was that a triumph of “moment” or “reputation”?

Look, the Jays were likely to lose just like every other team heading into the bottom of the 10th tied. There is no managerial malpractice in pitching to Cave or Beckham in that situation.

Posted
3 hours ago, Otto von Ballpark said:

And Tim Beckham’s “hot bat from St. Paul” was 2-for-13 with 5 Ks

I pointed out when he was called up that Beckham's "hot bat" was built on the foundation of a .522 (!!) batting average on balls in play,  Now in the majors, the BABIP is a below-normal .222.  Odds are that his traditional numbers with the Twins may come up a little from where they are now, but there's no way his numbers with the Saints were anything but an unsustainable mirage.  (With no definable defensive skills anymore, he's no longer a major league player, but there was a roster need.  But I digress.)

So yeah, the opponent should go right after a bat like his, in that situation.

Posted
8 hours ago, Otto von Ballpark said:

“Almost automatic out” Luis Arraez went 3-for-5 in the very next game. So do you have any predictive power about these “moments”, or do you just learn about them after they’ve started or ended?

And Tim Beckham’s “hot bat from St. Paul” was 2-for-13 with 5 Ks, and Cave’s hot bat actually struck out. Was that a triumph of “moment” or “reputation”?

Look, the Jays were likely to lose just like every other team heading into the bottom of the 10th tied. There is no managerial malpractice in pitching to Cave or Beckham in that situation.

Look, I just wait for you to use the "predictive power" you are trying to chastise me about after they've started or ended, even a game later and the next day, or two, if they help you in an isolated instance. I even count on it.

Nothing I said was out of line to consider in the least. And thank you for reminding me and all yet again that the statistical odds say "the Jays were likely to lose just like every other team heading into the bottom of the 10th tied." One can never say it too many times.

Posted
10 hours ago, Otto von Ballpark said:

It is not taboo. There have been 80 intentional walks in MLB extra innings this year, at ten times the frequency of the next highest inning. It’s just not a strategy chosen in every game.

I don’t think you are considering strikeouts enough here. Strikeouts are extremely common in the modern game, much more than double plays. And strikeouts rarely allow base runners to advance and virtually never allow the batter to reach. On average, Jake Cave strikes out in a third of his plate appearances, with Tim Beckham not far behind — and Jordan Romano strikes out more batters than an average pitcher. There is a huge cost to passing up those opportunities hoping for a much rarer double play.

And the Jays strategy did not require perfect execution to work, as you claim. Batters fail to reach base on a strikeout, what, 99.9% of the time? That was a massive fluke. Judging the soundness of their strategy on that outcome is like judging the soundness of an intentional walk based on the pitcher committing a balk right after it. Once a fluke event like that happened, they were going to be between a rock and a hard place regardless of their strategy choice.

The perfect execution I was talking about was 2nd and 3rd, no out, and no force anywhere.  At that point he was going to see the top of the order no matter what, and a force at every base would be simply more advantageous than no force anywhere.  That doesn't change no matter how many times a guy strikes out, or how many strike outs a pitcher has.  That is not my opinion, it it the opinion of almost every manager in the game for over a century.  The computers apparently say different.  Oh well.

A question:  if the batter was Buxton in either of the at bats I was referring to, do you pitch to him or walk him?  He strikes out just as often as the others, and is only hitting .220.  That would mean you pitch to him, as you describe it.  But I will bet they walk him.  I am asking a macro question, not a micro one, when I ask about the strategies used in todays game.  If there are 10 time more IBB's in extra innings than in any other inning, why have we only issues 4 all year?  And only received 5, not all of which were in extra innings?  It is just another example of things that don't happen much anymore.  Strike outs and home runs appear to be all anyone cares about.  I have wondered why for a while, now, and I appear to be a loner there.  Again, oh well.  :)  

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