One of the oft-debated topics among baseball fans is the
prospect of long ball vs. small ball. No
one can deny the thrill of watching a batter’s prodigious slugging result in a
ball off in orbit, landing well beyond the fence. Then there’s the “will he or won’t he” thrill
of watching an outfielder rush full steam towards the wall, leaping and
extending his glove to try to keep the would-be homer in the ballpark and
converted to an out. Finally, there’s
the straight away to centerfield or crushed to the opposite field types of long
balls that are seldom hit and surely worth attention. No one can deny the great pleasure of
watching this type of game.
Yet there are fans who also cherish the perhaps even greater
thrills of small ball. These instances
would include watching the baserunner attempt to beat the throw from the fielder. Or it could be that all-too-rare occurrence
of a stolen base attempt. Who could ever
forget the unworldly moment when a runner on third breaks for home and gets in
under the late and surprised tag attempt by the catcher? What about the hit and run, the hit against
the shift, the double play, the TRIPLE play?
What about the runner being gunned down at the plate trying to stretch a
sprint from 1st or 2nd into a go-ahead run?
The same principles apply to pitching. Yes, everyone loves to watch the strikeout
kings like Justin Verlander, Chris Sale, Max Scherzer, Clayton Kershaw and even
our own Jacob deGrom. There’s nothing
more impressive than watching a batter flair helplessly at a powerful ball too
fast for his swing or too precisely placed to make string contact. Yet it’s equally thrilling to see a guy with
a funky pitch or delivery that seems eminently hittable but batters routinely
hit weakly if at all. Guys like Tom
Glavine, Charley Hough, John Franco and R.A. Dickey had that ability.
Another unsung hero is the late inning substitution, whether
it’s in the field, on the base paths or pinch hitting. How many times could you see opposing
pitchers and catchers break into a sweat when Eddie Kranepool, Rusty Staub or
others who excelled in moments of heroism get the call to make it to first base
or to advance the existing baserunner?
What about the glove-only guys like Juan Lagares who would come in
during the 7th or 8th inning and then make a spectacular
catch in the gap or throw to the plate to nail a runner?
When the games return, we’ll all have our pet privileges of
fandom to appreciate, but it’s the totality of all of them that exceeds the sum
of the parts. You can’t win without
power, without small ball, without effective pitching nor without late inning
dramatics. It’s hard to say from game to
game who will be the hero and who will become the goat. However, missing baseball entirely all this
time will make that experience even sweeter when it returns.
5 comments:
Steals of home are illogical, and hence rare and incredible. But Ty Cobb did it 54 times. 54 times!
I love mammoth homers, but also “ gets by Buckner.”
Lot to love. Let’s get it going.
Think we will see some sort of baseball near July 4th. Minor Leagues we might not see at all in 2020.
Agree with John -- http://www.strat-o-matic.com/baseball-board-games/
If they play major league ball, I would like to see each organization field at least one advanced minor league team and one lower hot young prospects team. 35 guys each. Rest stay home.
Have teams play in Nebraska, N and S Dakota, and or other places that are remote with fields.
How many guys in any team's minors make the majors over time? Fifty? Most of whom don't play long.
That would be only 60 total teams playing.
Keep them developing. Careers are so short.
And do it voluntarily - so if a player is scared, he can stay home.
Hey guys.
Late to the game again. Noon tends to be my new 8am what with the increased meds being given me. Wish I could be better but at least I'm not Don Shula today.
We all could easily guess what Tom loved here :)
Me?
I love 2 things:
1. a catch in center and a throw to home catching a runner
2. a win
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