2/16/22

Tom Brennan - The DH Was a Bad Joke in Baseball - Good Riddance

The Implementation of a Universal DH is a Winner in So Many Ways 

The extraordinary and erudite Reese Kaplan posted an article in Macks Mets recently on who might DH for the Mets, now that it seems like the DH is a definite in the NL for 2022 and beyond.

Some, perhaps many, love to have their pitcher up there at the dish, hitting, sacrificing, sometimes thrilling with an unexpected base hit (think Bart's blast in San Diego several years back), the managerial moves, etc.

I think those folks are sadly living in the past, perhaps even a touch delusional, and need to kiss the good old days goodbye and see that the idea of pitchers hitting is utter foolishness.  

Here's 10 reasons why:

1) It is very difficult for professional hitters to hit well enough.  Most guys signed as pro hitters never make the big leagues.  Why?  They can't hit superior pitching.  In fact, at any given point in time, I'd estimate there are only 250 men on Planet Earth capable of hitting major league pitching well for a sustained period of time.  

Why ask non-hitters, otherwise known as pitchers, to try it?

2) There may be 250 guys in the world who can hit well.  NONE of them, though, could hit major league pitching sufficiently well as soon as they were drafted or signed.  Yet, pitchers almost never get to hit in the minor leagues anymore - unlike their hitter counterparts, they do not get to face live pitching from a batters box.  In the old days, they did hit in games while in the minors.  For many years, though, they almost entirely have not.  

Try this exercise - pick any current Met, and picture back on the day they were first signed as a pro, and now also picture the club's GM telling them, "Uhh, there's been a bit of change in plans.  You're not going to the instructional league or low A ball, as we expected.  Tomorrow, you're the NY Mets' starting SS, and here are your plane tickets.  See you in Queens. Relax, relax, you'll hit fine - big league pitching is a breeze to hit."

It won't happen because they couldn't handle it.  Pete Alonso hit 53 HRs in 2019, but if you signed him out of Florida in 2016 and stuck him on first base for the Mets the very next day, he'd fail.  Because without extensive time to adapt to progressively better pitching, he would have been in over his head.

If Pete couldn't do it, if Francisco Alvarez couldn't do it, why ask a pitcher to try?

Jerry Koosman wasn't a great career MLB hitter, going .119/.151/.141. In the minors, he was worse... .093/.259/.206 in 178 plate appearances.  Can you imagine how bad he would have hit in the majors if he never got a chance to bat in the minors?  

Even with the minor league at bats he had, he still hit just .070 over his first 3 major league seasons. Heck, he might have hit .025 in his first 3 MLB seasons without some minors ABs as part of his player development.

3) A batting pitcher could get hit by a pitch and hurt.

4) A batting pitcher could strain himself swinging.  (Think Jake, think Thor).

5) A batting pitcher could pull a muscle running.  (Think Carrasco).

6) Pitchers who start rarely go more than 6 innings anymore.  Why have a pitcher get on base and tire out and, because he's tired, leave an inning earlier than otherwise?  Heck, on the Mets, when do their pitchers score a run, anyway?

7) Sacrifice bunting, a skill a pitcher might be able to master as well as a pro hitter, is a less-used tool in baseball than it was decades ago.

8) Pitchers we all remember who could hit pretty well in baseball in the 1950's, 1960's and 1970's were hitting against guys who I imagine averaged perhaps 90-91 MPH on fastballs.  Now they are firing 5 MPH faster, which is essentially the difference between night and day.  

Pitchers now hit worse, in part, because it is harder for a pitcher who is an amateur batter to bat against high heat.   Even real MLB hitters strike out far more these days than back in those 1950s - 1970s days for the same reason: high heat.

If hitters can't avoid strikeouts against fireballers, how can pitchers?

9) The DH in the minors means more minor leaguers hit each game per team - 9 vs. the former 8 - but the fact that MLB teams need more pitchers than in the past also means that the old standard of 15 position players per team is now 13 per team, sometimes 12.  More hitters training to hit, but less job openings....



I asked Eddie Griffin about that mismatch situation, and he said, "Nah, dat ain't right."

10) The NL pitchers' batting results speak for themselves:

In 2021, NL teams' pitchers on average hit a gosh-awful .111 with 1 HR and 11 RBIs, per team.  

That many 1's = a real zero in my book.  

And only about 27 sacrifices by pitchers each year per team, or 1 every week, for you purists who like to see pitchers lay down sac bunts.  Don't go to the kitchen for a beer, you might miss that week's pitcher bunt.

In 1969, NL pitchers hit 34 homers, or 20 more than NL pitchers hit in 2021, and the 1969 fellas hit closer to .140, or above (I'd give you more exact totals, but for some reason, I cannot copy MLB stats into a table to add totals, and I don't feel like doing all the math manually).  More HRs by pitchers, of course, were in part due to starting pitchers staying in games longer, and getting more at bats, I will concede that.

For older fans, let's go further back in the time machine and consider the 1955 NL season.  NL teams' hitting by pitchers that season averaged .177, 4 HRs and 27 RBIs, a very far cry from 2021's .111, 1 HR, and 11 RBIs.  

Baseball has changed in that regard, period.  Pitchers without minor league hitting development, going in against harder throwing pitchers, are just going to hit worse.

But, back to focusing on 2021 - why on earth does any "traditionalist fan" want to see the pitchers on the team he loves hit an abysmal and dreadfully boring .111 with 1 HR and 11 RBIs over a whole season, while risking pitcher injury in the process?

I sure as heck do not.

Give the hitting jobs to the hitters, not to amateurs.  

VIVE LA UNIVERSAL DH! 

Do you agree, Monsieurs et Madames?

16 comments:

Tom Brennan said...

I will come up as designated hitter and commenter for this article - I for one like it, and I think the author hits it out of the park. LOL

RealityChuck said...

Agree.

I do prefer playing without one, but you've hit the nail on the head: pitchers have to face major league pitching when they've never hit since Little League. They just can't be expected to do anything offensively.

Tom Brennan said...

RealityChuck, thanks for your input. You've realized the reality of the situation.

Check out my article tomorrow AM, with a look at a specific former Mets pitcher looked at from the perspective of your point above.

Paul Articulates said...

There's still a lot of old school in me that doesn't want it...but it is difficult to refute these 10 points. The evolution of baseball has made most pitchers (sorry Jake) unable to hit or even execute fundamental hitting skills like bunting and putting balls in play behind the runners.

The argument for the universal DH is so strong that even the owners and players can't bring themselves to argue about it!!

So, as Tom says, "Vive La Universal DH!"

Tom Brennan said...

Paul, I try to come at things without a pre-conceived bias.

As a Mets fan, for a team that probably has been a bottom half scoring NL team for 75% of their seasons, I want more offense.

That might make a good article.

But if you want pitchers to hit, they are ill-served not hitting in the minors. They don't want to allow them to hit in the minors. Meanwhile, your average hitting prospect who does make the majors has probably been to the plate 1250-2000 times, which no pitcher will ever get. If those guys needed less than 1250-2000 PAs to be ready, they'd be called up sooner. They're not because they're not ready to hit MLB pitching.

To me? Case closed.

Raw said...

This has nothing to do with your article. Even though I agree.

Why don’t you get together and publish a 2022 Mets prospect list?

nickel7168 said...

SA said "pitchers don't even know how to bunt anymore"
between that and the fact that it helps the Mets out tremendously,
I'm finally OK with it. Years ago, I did an analysis that told me that
teams with a DH got one more hit per game, and team without it got one more K per game.

nickel7168 said...

I know this is off-topic but, why am I not hearing that Eppler, Buck, and all the coaches are not sitting in a large location watching and dissecting tape on every player on the Mets and exchanging thoughts about what they see? Have Buck ever said that he has been studying tape on the players?

Remember1969 said...

Yup, I'm a late convert, but it's time to change.

I did enjoy a pitcher helping himself with a well timed and well placed sac bunt, but they can't even or will not even do that anymore.

I hope some team comes around sometime and decides they can win playing the old fashioned way and the pendulum will swing back a bit. I thought maybe the 2015 Royals might be that stimulus, but it didn't last

Tom Brennan said...

Raw, it is something on the to-do list.

Tom Brennan said...

Nickel, the DH stats are horrific, and gradually more so over the years. 20 years ago, not that big a deal - now, it is.

And I sure hope they are digging in on their players, video and all.

Tom Brennan said...

Bill, I love SBs and well-executed bunts, giving up an at bat to advance a runner, etc.

I just hate the pitcher not hitting. Remember those teams with a Collin COwgill and de Dekker and then the pitcher. Offense-killer

Hobie said...

I prefer forcing all participants in a game of base-ball to at least attempt to (a)catch a ball, (b)throw a ball & (c)hit a ball (with a bat). The logical extension of not requiring (a), (b) and (c) is to have an offensive platoon of 6 batters, a defensive platoon of 8 gloves and a plethora of pitchers throwing an inning or 2 each. Oh, 3 pinch runners round out the squad. We could cll it... football if it included a dedicated long-snapper.

Alas, though a fear the above is an evolutionary trajectory, the only thing worse than having a DH is to have some teams required to hve them and others not. It's here...I'll get used to it.

Tom Brennan said...

Bobbie, a reasoned argument…but I believe we’ll all be the better for it. If the want pitchers to hit every game, make a hitter pitch an inning every game…fair and balanced.

Those pitchers could sure hit in the 50s tough

Tom Brennan said...

And who could forget Tony Cloninger’s 9 RBI game?

nickel7168 said...

a collection of greatest hitting games by pitchers would be fun list
to collect, now that it appears to be over. Any votes?
"Tony Cloninger’s 9 RBI game"
I vote for Big Sexy Colon's HR