Last spring, Baseball Prospectus’s Michael Ajeto wrote about the fact that Tyler Mahle was trying one of the trickier (but niftier) things a pitcher can do to counteract a platoon-split problem: working from different spots on the pitching rubber according to the handedness of his opponent.
By May, Mahle abandoned the effort. Guess what, though? He’s back at it.
We’re not talking about a difference of a few inches, but a little over a foot. Against lefties, Mahle is setting up at an extreme angle, with only the front half of his right foot touching the rubber at the first-base end. Against righties, he’s right in the middle of the rubber.
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